Saudi Arabia grants licence to first Qatari bank
15 September, 2015
The Saudi Council of Ministers granted a licence for Qatar National Bank to open a branch inside the kingdom, the official SPA news agency said on Monday, in what would be its first licence awarded to a Qatari lender.
The announcement came less than a week after Qatar's central bank announced it would grant licences to fellow GCC banks to open branches, adding to the one Gulf lender - Dubai-based Mashreq - out of seven existing foreign institutions operating there.
Banking licences are usually granted on a reciprocal basis among GCC countries: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Out of the 12 foreign banks licensed to operate in Saudi Arabia, five are Gulf lenders - two from Bahrain and one each from Kuwait, the UAE and Oman. Other foreign lenders include JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley.
The move signals a further thaw in Saudi-Qatari relations, which have warmed in the past year following long-standing political disagreements over regional security.
The rift reached its nadir in March 2014, when three Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, withdrew their ambassadors from Qatar alleging it supports Islamist groups, particularly the Muslim Brotherhood.
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15 September, 2015
The Saudi Council of Ministers granted a licence for Qatar National Bank to open a branch inside the kingdom, the official SPA news agency said on Monday, in what would be its first licence awarded to a Qatari lender.
The announcement came less than a week after Qatar's central bank announced it would grant licences to fellow GCC banks to open branches, adding to the one Gulf lender - Dubai-based Mashreq - out of seven existing foreign institutions operating there.
Banking licences are usually granted on a reciprocal basis among GCC countries: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Out of the 12 foreign banks licensed to operate in Saudi Arabia, five are Gulf lenders - two from Bahrain and one each from Kuwait, the UAE and Oman. Other foreign lenders include JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley.
The move signals a further thaw in Saudi-Qatari relations, which have warmed in the past year following long-standing political disagreements over regional security.
The rift reached its nadir in March 2014, when three Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, withdrew their ambassadors from Qatar alleging it supports Islamist groups, particularly the Muslim Brotherhood.
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]