Oman replaces central bank chief after 26 years

Tahir Bin Salim Al Amri appointed as the executive president

The under-construction headquarters of the Special Economic Zone Authoriity of Duqm, Oman, August 23, 2017. Picture taken August 23, 2017. REUTERS/ Nawied Jabarkhyl
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Oman’s ruler replaced the head of the central bank after 26 years in the job amid pressure on the economy from low oil prices.

Sultan Qaboos, in a decree published by the state-run news agency late on Tuesday, appointed Tahir Bin Salim Al Amri as the central bank’s executive president. He replaced Hamud Sangur Al Zadjali, who served in the post since 1991, making him the world’s second-longest serving central banker after Romania’s Mugur Isarescu, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Mr Al Zadjali, a Boston University graduate, was replaced hours after Moody’s Investors Service cut Oman’s banking outlook to negative from stable to reflect a reduction in the government’s ability to support the country’s banks as well as weaker economic growth and tightening liquidity.

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With smaller oil reserves and less of a cushion in government savings than its wealthier neighbours, Oman is one of the more vulnerable countries in the GCC as lower oil prices pressure state finances. The budget deficit soared to more than 20 per cent of economic output last year, according to IMF data.

“The priority for Oman is on the fiscal side and they didn’t do very much on that despite the oil price deterioration,” said Dima Jardaneh, the head of Middle East and North Africa research at Standard Chartered in Dubai. “They needed to cut spending in a significant way but they weren’t able to over the past two years,” she said. “I think they were still counting on revenue measures to kick in but that will take much longer to make a difference.’’

Under Mr Al Zadjali, the central bank has repeatedly said it would maintain its currency peg to the dollar despite mounting investor pressure. Forward contracts on the Omani rial that expire in 12 months soared to a record 1,700 points in January 2016, when the price of Brent crude sank to the lowest level since 2003. And although the contracts have since eased to 575, they are still the highest among the GCCl.

Oman’s benchmark MSM30 Index of stocks has also been among the world’s top 10 worst-performing indexes this year, retreating 12.3 per cent.

The sultan also changed the central bank’s board of governors, appointing Sultan bin Salim bin Said Al Habsi as the deputy chairman of the board for a five-year term.