Business
Qatar interest rates witness 4.25% hike since Jan 2022
The Qatar Central Bank (QCB) has kept the key rates unchanged, but a cumulative 425 basis points hike has been witnessed since January 2022 in view of the fixed exchange parity with the US dollar.
February 07, 2023 | 11:16 PM
The Qatar Central Bank (QCB) has kept the key rates unchanged, but a cumulative 425 basis points hike has been witnessed since January 2022 in view of the fixed exchange parity with the US dollar.Although the US Federal Reserve recently hiked the reference rate by 25bps early this month, the QCB chose to continue with the current deposit, lending and repo (repurchase) rates of 5%, 5.5% and 5.25% respectively as it aims to support sustainable economic growth.The repo rate in Qatar has increased by a cumulative 4.25% or 425 bps from the beginning of 2022. Since January 2022, QCB repo rate has risen from 1% to 1.25% in March, then to 1.75% in May, 2.5% in June, 3.25% in July, 4% in September, 4.75% in November and the latest 5.25% this month. In 2021, the average repo rate was 1%.The central bank’s move (in increasing repo rate) has been necessitated by the fixed exchange parity with the US Greenback; otherwise higher-yielding dollar-based investments could put downward pressure on the local currency, market sources said, adding it may lead funds flow to bank deposits with higher returns and lower risk.Total domestic deposits in the country’s commercial banks have seen a 2% growth on an annualised basis during 2022 (as per the latest available data) with private sector deposits soaring 13.2% and public sector deposits by 20.67%.The QCB lending rate has cumulatively increased by 3% or 300bps from the beginning of 2022. It was seen jumping from 2.5% in January to 2.75% in May, 3.25% in June, 3.75% in July, 4.5% in September, 5% in November and the latest 5.5% in December. The average lending rate in 2021 was 2.5%.Similarly, the QCB deposit rate has cumulatively jumped by 4% or 400bps, increasing from 1% in January 2022 to 1.5% in May, 2.25% in June, 3% in July, 3.75% in September, 4.5% in November and the latest 5% in December 2022. The average deposit rate stood at 1% in 2021.The weighted average overnight interbank interest rate (on riyal) stood at 5.75% in December 2022 compared to 1.35% in January 2022. The GCC economies, barring Kuwait, follow fixed exchange parity with the US dollar, and hence depend on the US monetary stand.Although, non-oil sector is expected to slowdown, the overall economic growth in the country will be largely bulwarked by strong receipts from the hydrocarbons due to higher than average prices, sources said.
February 07, 2023 | 11:16 PM