Bahrain pushes ahead with Muharraq city redevelopment plan Halliburton wins multi-year Aramco gas development contract Saudi: Kent secures long-term deals with Aramco for future EPC projects Oman and Jordan launch $100mln investment firm Modon, ADIB introduce Abu Dhabi’s first off-plan home financing solutions Abu Dhabi launches maritime investment guide to attract global businesses Saudi Arabia inaugurates over 900km of roads to boost connectivity Gulftainer unveils $2bln global trade infrastructure strategy Saudi Arabia's trade surplus surges 60% to over $24bln in Q1 2026 UAE, Panama discuss boosting trade, investment, supply chains as part of 'UAE Trade Days' Sharjah Chamber registers 30,000 memberships in H1 Saudi tourism spending reaches record $81bln in 2025 Dubai's AMIS breaks ground on Jacob & Co.’s villa community; targets $10bln IPO in three years UAE's new government work model to deploy Agentic AI in public services Indonesia, Kuwait strengthen strategic energy partnership Kuwait unveils framework for 15-year residency for expat investors Riyadh Air takes off on first domestic route to Jeddah Bahrain issues laws to protect investments Qatar's Hamad Port sails into the world's top eight Kuwait air traffic returns to normal, flights resume QatarEnergy announces new oil discovery offshore Namibia UAE developer Alef launches $1.1bln mixed-use development in Sharjah ADNOC eyeing Canada upstream and LNG opportunities via XRG arm, executive says Dubai real estate deals in April surge to $18.7bln Saudi's SAMA mandates advance notification of investment rounds by financing companies Qatar maritime trade activity accelerates in May Oil steadies as uncertainty over US-Iran talks keeps markets on edge Qatar: Relatively hot daytime conditions expected, moderate night Dubai Centre for Family Businesses explores ways to strengthen business adaptability Saudi Crown Prince, UAE President discuss regional security and cooperation

Log in

عربي

Media Centre

Home » Media Centre

Qatar’s banking credit facilities see 3% rise in Q1

Qatar’s banking credit facilities see 3% rise in Q1

Qatar’s banking credit facilities see 3% rise in Q1

May 23, 2025

Doha, Qatar: The banking credit facilities in Qatar bounced back and showed the biggest quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) growth in nine quarters during the first quarter (Q1) of 2025 at 3%.

The increase was led by a strong growth in lending to public sector at 7.9% followed by a similar increase in lending to contractors. Lending to general trade and real estate increased by 1.5% followed by 0.8% increase in lending to services according to Kamco Invest.

Additionally, banks in Qatar registered the biggest increase in revenues with a q-o-q gain of 2.1% among the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries.

After registering a healthy growth in revenues during the previous quarter, the sequential growth in total bank revenues for the GCC banking sector was flattish with a marginal growth of 0.04%, reaching $34.6bn during Q1-2025. The report noted that the Qatari banks witnessed growth in revenues with an increase of 2.1% followed by Saudi and UAE-listed banks with growth of 1.6% and 0.6%, respectively.

The data from GCC central banks highlighted the resilience of regional economies with continued growth in outstanding credit facilities. Total credit facilities, as seen from central bank published data, continued to show growth during Q1-2025 led by growth in all countries in the region.

The GCC banking sector bottom-line growth remained steady during Q1-2025 witnessing a q-o-q growth of 7.1% and a y-o-y growth of 8.6% to reach $15.6bn during the quarter, a new record high for the sector.

The increase came despite a decline in net interest income during the quarter and was mainly led by higher non-interest income, lower operating expenses as well as a sharp seasonal decline in impairments during the quarter. The decline in net interest income reflected the impact of rate cuts during the second half of 2024 with aggregate yield on credit for the GCC banking sector falling by 5 bps to 4.16% in Q1-2025 as compared to 4.21% in Q4-2024.

Meanwhile the aggregate lending by listed banks in the GCC continued to show q-o-q growth during Q1-2025, backed by growth in all GCC markets. The aggregate gross loans at the GCC level reached a new record high of $2.25 trillion, recording the highest q-o-q growth in 15 quarters at 3.6% in Q1-2025 versus 2.4% during the previous quarter.

The year-on-year (y-o-y) growth continued to remain steady in double digits at 12.5%. Banks in Saudi Arabia reported the biggest q-o-q growth in gross loan in the GCC during Q1-2025 mainly led by healthy lending in almost all sectors. Gross loans growth for Saudi-listed banks came in at 5.5% or $41.9bn to reach $801.5bn during Q1-2025.

UAE and Qatari banks were next with lending growth of $20.1bn (+3.2% q-o-q) and $14.4bn (+3.6% q-o-q), respectively, while banks in Oman and Bahrain registered marginal increase.

In terms of type of banks, conventional banks in the GCC registered a relatively healthy growth in lending during the quarter with gross loan growth of 4.2% to reach $1.6 trillion while growth in Islamic bank lending came in at 2.4% to reach an outstanding gross loan of $677.9bn at the end of the quarter.