Israel Commercial Banking Report Q3 2010
Business Monitor International, July 2010, Pages: 53
Business Monitor International's Israel Commercial Banking Report provides industry professionals and strategists, corporate analysts, banking associations, government departments and regulatory bodies with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on Israel's commercial banking industry.
Since Q108, we have described numerically the banking business environment for each of the countries surveyed by BMI. We do this through our Commercial Banking Business Environment Rating (CBBER), a measure that ensures we capture the latest quantitative information available. It also ensures consistency across all countries and between the inputs to the CBBER and the Insurance Business Environment Rating, which is likewise now a feature of our insurance reports. Like the Business Environment Ratings calculated by BMI for all the other industries on which it reports, the CBBER takes into account the limits of potential returns and the risks to the realisation of those returns. It is weighted 70% to the former and 30% to the latter.
The evaluation of the Limits of Potential Returns includes market elements that are specific to the banking industry of the country in question and elements that relate to that country in general. Within the 70% of the CBBER that takes into account the Limits of Potential Returns, the market elements have a 60% weighting and the country elements have a 40% weighting. The evaluation of the Risks to the Realisation of Returns also includes banking elements and country elements (specifically, BMI’s assessment of long-term country risk). However, within the 30% of the CBBER that take into account the risks, these elements are weighted 40% and 60%, respectively.
Further details on how we calculate the CBBER are provided at the end of this report. In general, though, three aspects need to be borne in mind in interpreting the CBBERs. The first is that the market elements of the Limits of Potential Returns are by far the most heavily weighted of the four elements. They account for 60% of 70% (or 42%) of the overall CBBER. Second, if the market elements are significantly higher than the country elements of the Limits of Potential Returns, it usually implies that the banking sector is (very) large and/or developed relative to the general wealth, stability and financial infrastructure in the country. Conversely, if the market elements are significantly lower than the country elements, it usually means that the banking sector is small and/or underdeveloped relative to the general wealth, stability and financial infrastructure in the country. Third, within the Risks to the Realisation of Returns category, the market elements (ie: how regulations affect the development of the sector, how regulations affect competition within it, and Moody’s Investors Service’s ratings for local currency deposits) can be markedly different from BMI’s long-term risk rating.
Executive Summary
- Table: Levels (ILSbn)
- Table: Levels (US$bn)
- Table: Levels At February 2010
- Table: Annual Growth Rate Projections 2010-2014 (%)
- Table: Ranking Out Of 59 Countries Reviewed In 2010
- Table: Projected Levels (ILSbn)
- Table: Projected Levels (US$bn)
SWOT Analysis
- Israel Commercial Banking SWOT
- Israel Political SWOT
- Israel Economic SWOT
- Israel Business Environment SWOT
Business Environment Outlook
- Commercial Banking Business Environment Ratings
- Table: Israel Commercial Banking Business Environment Rating
- Commercial Banking Business Environment Rating Methodology
- Table: Middle East & Africa Commercial Banking Business Environment Ratings
Global Commercial Banking Outlook
- Middle East Banking Sector Outlook
- Table: GCC Commercial Banks Profits, Q109-Q110 (US$mn)
- Table: Comparison Of Loan/Deposit, Loan/Asset & Loan/GDP Ratios
- Table: Anticipated Developments In 2010
- Table: Comparison Of Total Assets, Client Loans & Client Deposits (US$bn)
- Table: Comparison Of US$ Per Capita Deposits (Late 2009)
- Table: Interbank Rates & Bond Yields
Israel Banking Sector Outlook
- Economic Outlook
- Table: Israel Economic Activity, 2007-2014
- Competitive Landscape
- Market Structure
- Protagonists
- Table: Protagonists In Israel’s Commercial Banking Sector
- Definition Of The Commercial Banking Universe
- List Of Banks
- Table: Banks In Israel (June 2010)
Company Profiles
- Mizrahi Tefahot Bank
- Table: Key Statistics For Mizrahi Tefahot Bank, 2004-2009 (ILSmn)
- Bank Hapoalim
- Table: Key Statistics For Bank Hapoalim, 2004-2009 (ILSmn)
- Bank Leumi Le-Israel
- Table: Key Statistics For Bank Leumi, 2004-2009 (ILSmn)
- Bank of Jerusalem
- Table: Key Statistics For Bank of Jerusalem, 2004-2009 (ILSmn)
- Bank Otsar Ha-Hayal
- Table: Key Statistics for Bank Otsar Ha-Hayal, 2004-2008 (ILSmn)
- Bank Yahav for Government Employees
- Table: Key Statistics For Bank Yahav, 2006-2008 (ILSmn)
- Israel Discount Bank
- Table: Key Statistics For Israel Discount Bank, 2004-2008 (ILSmn)
- Mercantile Discount Bank
- Table: Key Statistics For Mercantile Discount Bank, 2004-2009 (ILSmn)
- Union Bank of Israel
- Table: Key Statistics For Union Bank of Israel, 2004-2009 (ILSmn)
- First International Bank of Israel
- Table: Key Statistics For FIBI, 2005-2009 (ILSmn)
BMI Banking Sector Methodology
- Commercial Bank Business Environment Rating
- Table: Commercial Banking Business Environment Indicators And Rationale
- Table: Weighting Of Indicators
- Mizrahi Tefahot Bank
- Bank Hapoalim
- Bank Leumi Le-Israel
- Bank of Jerusalem
- Bank Otsar Ha-Hayal
- Bank Yahav for Government Employees
- Israel Discount Bank
- Mercantile Discount Bank
- Union Bank of Israel
- First International Bank of Israel
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