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Underpinned by Vision 2040, Oman aims to reduce its economic reliance on the hydrocarbon sector by diversifying its economy. Reforms are targeted to develop a well-diversified, private-led, sustainable, and inclusive economy where innovation and knowledge play a more prominent role. This requires the existence of a well-developed, inclusive, and stable financial sector that can navigate the country’s transformation and fund the new economy. As the economic transformation gains traction and entrepreneurship and innovation take center stage, Oman’s financial sector will face a more complex environment where it needs to develop innovative financial and risk management solutions to cater for the emerging and expanding financial needs of the different players in the economy. Against this background, this note provides an assessment of the development of Oman’s financial sector, identifies areas for potential improvement, and proposes policy actions to foster further financial development and inclusion.
Asset Pricing • Trading Volume • Bond Interest Rates --- Banks --- Bonds --- Capital market --- Capital markets --- Corporate Finance and Governance --- Depository Institutions --- Economic Development: Financial Markets --- Economic History: Financial Markets and Institutions: Asia including Middle East --- Finance --- Finance: General --- Financial Institutions and Services: General --- Financial institutions --- Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy --- Financial markets --- Financial sector development --- Financial services industry --- General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data) --- Industries: Financial Services --- International agencies --- International Agreements and Observance --- International Economics --- International institutions --- International organization --- International Organizations --- Investment & securities --- Investments: Bonds --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Monetary economics --- Monetary Policy --- Monetary policy --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Mortgages --- Saving and Capital Investment --- Securities markets --- Sovereign bonds --- Stock exchanges --- Stock markets --- Oman
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Amid a pegged exchange rate to the US dollar and an open capital account, Oman’s policy rates move closely with US monetary policy. In this analysis, we show empirically that transmission from policy rates into effective lending and deposit rates remains subdued in Oman, even compared to GCC peers that similarly face a high oil price environment with persistent excess liquidity in the banking system. A cap on personal loan rates and low exposure of banks to SMEs and riskier borrowers limit passthrough into effective lending rates and credit conditions. The note documents ongoing actions by Omani policymakers to strengthen transmission and provides further recommendations on liquidity management, reserve management, and relaxing the interest rate cap.
Asset and liability management --- Banking --- Banks and Banking --- Central bank policy rate --- Credit --- Currency --- Deflation --- Deposit rates --- Economics --- Excess liquidity --- Finance --- Finance: General --- Financial services --- Foreign Exchange --- Foreign exchange --- Inflation --- Interest rate ceilings --- Interest rates --- Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects --- International agencies --- International Agreements and Observance --- International Economics --- International institutions --- International organization --- International Organizations --- Investment Decisions --- Liquidity --- Monetary economics --- Monetary Policy --- Monetary policy --- Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Money --- Portfolio Choice --- Price Level --- Oman
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This paper assesses the state and resilience of corporate and banking sectors in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) in a “higher-for-longer” interest rate environment using granular micro data to conduct the first cross-country corporate and banking sector stress tests for the MENA region. The results suggest that corporate sector debt at risk may increase sizably from 12 to 30 percent of total corporate debt. Banking systems would be broadly resilient in an adverse scenario featuring higher interest rates, corporate sector stress, and rising liquidity pressures with Tier-1 capital ratios declining by 2.3 percentage points in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and 4.0 percentage points in non-GCC MENA countries. In the cross-section of banks, there are pockets of vulnerabilities as banks with higher ex-ante vulnerabilities and state-owned banks suffer greater losses. While manageable, the capital losses in the adverse scenario could limit lending and adversely impact growth.
Asset requirements --- Banking --- Banks and Banking --- Banks and banking --- Banks --- Business enterprises --- Capital adequacy requirements --- Capital and Ownership Structure --- Commercial banks --- Corporate Finance and Governance: General --- Corporate Finance --- Corporate sector --- Credit --- Currency crises --- Depository Institutions --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Economic sectors --- Economics of specific sectors --- Economics --- Economics: General --- Finance --- Finance: General --- Financial crises --- Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation --- Financial institutions --- Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy --- Financial regulation and supervision --- Financial Risk and Risk Management --- Financial risk management --- Financial sector policy and analysis --- Financial services law & regulation --- Financing Policy --- Firm Performance: Size, Diversification, and Scope --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Goodwill --- Informal sector --- Macroeconomics --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Monetary economics --- Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Money --- Mortgages --- Ownership & organization of enterprises --- Stress testing --- Value of Firms
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Using high frequency interest rate shocks, we find that falling rates in a low interest rate environment favor industry leaders. A fall in interest rate near the zero lower bound leads to a stronger decline in the borrowing rate for industry leaders, who also borrow more, invest more aggressively, and acquire assets at a faster pace. This advantage from falling rates enjoyed by industry leaders diminishes in a higher rate environment. We estimate a "competition-neutral" nominal federal funds rate of about four percentage points, a level at which industry leaders and followers are impacted equally from an interest rate change.
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Against the backdrop of a rapidly digitalizing world, there is a growing interest in central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) among central banks, including in the Middle East and Central Asia (ME&CA) region. This paper aims to support ME&CA policymakers in examining key questions when considering the adoption of a CBDC while underscoring the importance of country-specific analyses. This paper does not provide recommendations on CBDC issuance. Instead, it frames the discussion around the following key questions: What is a CBDC? What objectives do policymakers aim to achieve with the issuance of a CBDC? Which inefficiencies in payment systems can CBDCs address? What are the implications of CBDC issuance for financial stability and central bank operational risk? How can CBDC design help achieve policy objectives and mitigate these risks? The paper provides preliminary answers to these questions at the regional level. A survey of IMF teams and public statements from ME&CA policymakers confirm that promoting financial inclusion and making payment systems more efficient (domestic and cross-border) are the top priorities in the region. Payment services through CBDCs, if offered at a lower cost than existing alternatives, could spur competition in the payment market and help increase access to bank accounts, improve financial inclusion, and update legacy technology platforms. CBDCs may also help improve the efficiency of cross-border payment services, especially if designed to address frictions arising from a lack of payment system interoperability, complex processing of compliance checks, long transaction chains, and weak competition. At the same time, CBDCs could negatively impact bank profitability while introducing a substantial operational burden for central banks. However, the exact economic and financial impacts of CBDCs need further study and would depend on estimates of CBDC demand, which are uncertain and country- dependent. CBDC issuance and adoption is a long journey that policymakers should approach with care. Policymakers need to analyze carefully whether a CBDC serves their country’s objectives and whether the expected benefits outweigh the potential costs, in addition to risks for the financial system and operational risks for the central bank.
Banking --- Banks and Banking --- Banks and banking --- Banks --- Central Bank digital currencies --- Clearinghouses --- Commercial banks --- Depository Institutions --- Digital financial services --- Distributed ledgers --- Economics --- Finance --- Finance: General --- Financial inclusion --- Financial institutions --- Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy --- Financial markets --- Financial services industry --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Government and the Monetary System --- Industries: Financial Services --- International agencies --- International Agreements and Observance --- International Economics --- International institutions --- International organization --- International Organizations --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Monetary Systems --- Mortgages --- Payment Systems --- Payment systems --- Political Economy --- Political economy --- Public Policy --- Regimes --- Standards --- Technological innovations --- Technology
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