by Executive Contributor

Capital Intelligence Raises Shamil Bank’s Rating to BBB-

Capital Intelligence (CI) rating agency has raised SBB’s (Shamil Bank of Bahrain) long-term foreign currency rating and financial strength rating from BB+ to BBB-. The bank’s short-term foreign currency rating and support rating were kept at A3 and 2 respectively whereas a stable outlook was assigned to all the ratings. The agency noted that this upgrade is attributable to the strong growth in profitability and continuing reduction in non-performing financing. CI added that its ratings were based on SBB’s strong corporate-only balance sheet, full coverage from financing-loss reserve, its solid capital position in addition to the fact that investment account holders in Islamic banking share their own risk.

NBK Awarded “Bank of the Year” in the Middle East

In its annual Bank of the Year Awards given to banks in 133 different countries, The Banker magazine, an affiliate of the Financial Times Group, has named National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) as the best bank in Kuwait and the Middle East for the third time in a row. The Banker attributed this achievement to the bank’s excellent performance, innovation and regional expansion. The magazine added that NBK continued to post strong results in 2004 as its profits in the first half of the year reached record levels following a 27.7% return-on-equity registered at the end of 2003.

Country Profile: Jordan

An IMF report published in September 2004 demonstrates the recovery of Jordan’s economy from the disturbance caused by the war in Iraq. It shows that real GDP grew by 6.9% in the first quarter of 2004 amid a 29% yearly increase in exports. This upsurge in exports is attributable to the growing demand from the Iraqi market in addition to the continued rise in textile exports especially from the Qualified Industrial Zones (QIZ) to the United States. On the other hand, inflation was restrained at an average rate of 2.8% in the 12 months through March 2004 while the unemployment rate remained relatively high at 14.5% compared to a 5% growth in the Amman Stock Exchange index during the same period. On the fiscal side, the government’s better budgetary management, tighter government spending in addition to higher foreign grants led to the achievement of a 137 million Jordanian dinars ($194 million) budget surplus in the first quarter of 2004, equivalent to 1.8% of expected GDP. This fiscal surplus reduced net government debt by 8 percentage points to 93.5% of expected GDP.

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