By Dr. Marcus Thornton, Managing Director, Gulf Capital Research
The Federal Reserve’s monetary policy decisions ripple through Gulf economies with unusual speed and force. As of 2026, with the Fed having navigated a complex rate cycle — raising aggressively to combat post-pandemic inflation, then beginning a gradual easing cycle — the implications for GCC currencies, fiscal positions, and capital flows are significant. Understanding this relationship is essential for any business treasury, investment team, or finance professional operating in the region.
The Dollar Peg: A Double-Edged Sword
Five of the six GCC currencies are pegged to the US dollar — the UAE dirham at 3.6725, the Saudi riyal at 3.75, the Qatari riyal at 3.64, the Bahraini dinar at 0.376, and the Omani rial at 0.385. Kuwait’s dinar is the exception, pegged to a basket of currencies in which the dollar holds the dominant weight. This structure means that GCC central banks effectively import US monetary policy — when the Fed raises or cuts rates, GCC base rates follow almost mechanically.
During the 2022–2023 Fed hiking cycle — the most aggressive in four decades — GCC central banks raised rates in tandem, from near-zero to over 5%. This was broadly manageable given the simultaneous surge in oil revenues, but it created meaningful challenges for mortgage markets, corporate borrowing costs, and project finance across the region. Construction and real estate sectors — particularly heavily leveraged residential developers — faced genuine financing pressure.
The 2024–2026 Easing Cycle: GCC Implications
As the Fed began its rate reduction cycle in late 2024, GCC central banks moved in parallel. Lower borrowing costs have provided relief to overleveraged real estate developers, stimulated mortgage demand (particularly in UAE residential markets), and reduced the cost of government debt service — important given that several GCC states ran fiscal deficits in periods of low oil prices. For businesses with floating-rate debt, the rate reduction cycle is directly beneficial to cash flows.
However, lower interest rate differentials between the dollar and other major currencies have some adverse effects for the GCC. When US rates are high, dollar-pegged GCC currencies attract speculative capital inflows seeking yield. As rates fall, that advantage diminishes. GCC equity markets and real estate have historically shown sensitivity to these capital flow dynamics.
FX Volatility and Gulf Business
The dollar peg provides Gulf businesses with one of the region’s great structural advantages: exchange rate certainty. A UAE company billing in AED or USD faces no currency risk in its core GCC transactions. This stability is a genuine competitive advantage relative to markets with volatile local currencies — and it is a significant factor in the UAE’s attraction as a regional headquarters location for companies managing revenues across multiple currency zones.
The trade-off is that when the dollar strengthens significantly against currencies of GCC trade and investment partners — the euro, rupee, or pound — Gulf purchasing power changes in ways that affect import costs, tourism competitiveness, and the relative attractiveness of Gulf markets for international investors. The dollar’s multi-year strength cycle has made Gulf tourism and real estate relatively expensive for European and South Asian visitors in local currency terms.
My View: What Treasurers and CFOs Should Watch
For Gulf business finance professionals, the key variables to monitor in the current environment are: the pace and depth of the Fed’s easing cycle, which will drive GCC lending rates; the dollar/euro and dollar/rupee exchange rates, which affect GCC import costs and tourism revenues; oil price trajectories, which remain the dominant driver of GCC fiscal positions regardless of diversification progress; and the spread between GCC sovereign bond yields and US Treasuries, which signals international investor risk appetite for the region.
The current environment — with rates declining from elevated levels, oil prices in a manageable range, and GCC fiscal positions broadly stable — is relatively favourable for Gulf business. The primary risk is a scenario in which global growth weakens significantly, reducing both oil demand and risk appetite for emerging market assets simultaneously. Gulf businesses with strong balance sheets and conservative leverage are well positioned; those that over-extended during the high-rate environment need to use the easing cycle to restructure before conditions potentially tighten again.
Related Reading
See also: GCC Dollar Peg 2026, Gulf Banking Transformation, and GCC Stock Markets 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are GCC currencies pegged to the US dollar?
GCC currencies are pegged to the US dollar primarily because Gulf oil revenues are denominated in dollars — the global currency of oil trade. The peg eliminates exchange rate risk for oil exporters, provides monetary stability, and supports the predictable business environment needed to attract investment. Kuwait’s dinar is the exception, pegged to a currency basket to provide slightly more flexibility.
What happens to GCC interest rates when the US Fed changes rates?
GCC central banks with dollar-pegged currencies typically follow Fed rate changes in the same direction and by approximately the same magnitude to maintain the peg and avoid capital flow distortions. When the Fed raised rates aggressively in 2022–2023, Gulf central banks raised rates in parallel. As the Fed began cutting in 2024, GCC rates followed, lowering borrowing costs for regional businesses and mortgage holders.
Does the GCC dollar peg limit economic policy flexibility?
Yes. The dollar peg means GCC central banks cannot use interest rates independently to manage domestic inflation or economic cycles — they must follow the Fed even if domestic conditions call for a different policy stance. This limitation is accepted because the stability benefits of the peg, particularly for oil revenue certainty and investor confidence, are judged to outweigh the lost flexibility. GCC governments use fiscal policy (government spending) as their primary domestic economic management tool instead.
Also Read: Abdulmajeed Alsukhan: How a Saudi Central Bank Alumnus Built the Kingdom’s First Fintech Unicorn | UAE Dirham Peg: How Currency Stability Powers the Emirates as an Investment Hub | Hosam Arab: The Man Who Built the Middle East’s Most Valuable Fintech from a Dubai Apartment



