HOME TRADE NEWS  BUSINESS DIRECTORY THE GULF JOBS   ADVERTISE CONTACT US  
Middle East & GCC Business Information and Trade News Portal
Market Trends
 
 
Business Directory
  Search Directory
  Company Name
  Business Activity
 
 
 
   
News Categories
 

 

Results By

   
  Agriculture & Farming
Banking & Finance
Building & Construction
Capital Market
Defence & Security
Economy
Education, HR & Training
Energy, Oil & Gas
Environment & Water
Food & Catering
Government & Laws
Health
Industry
Interiors
IT & Telecommunications
Media & Promotions
Motoring
Property & Real Estate
Retail & Wholesale
Shipping & Transport
Tourism, Travel & Leisure
International News
Int. Business News
   
Tools
Country Briefings
Currency Conversion
Events
Calendar Of Events
Leisure, Lifestyle & Entertainment
 

   
 
DHgate is a china wholesale marketplace for: wholesale cell phones, wholesale electronics, wholesale wedding dresses, wholesale apparel, wholesale cell phone cases, wholesale clothing, wholesale cell phone accessories,
and dropship
   
 
   
 
   
Business and Trade News - BANKING, FINANCE & INSURANCE
 
  NEWS > BANKING, FINANCE & INSURANCE 
 
Search for: Results per page:

Match: any search words all search words
 

Gulf Islamic banks 'must revamp business model'
Manama: 
 

Islamic banks in the Gulf Arab region need to adopt a new business model and take on more customers to weather the economic downturn, Ernst & Young's head of Islamic finance said.

Islamic banks, many of which are investment houses, have been heavily exposed to the real estate market, which saw prices start to plummet at the end of last year.

They channelled the wealth accumulated during the six-year oil boom that ended in mid-2008 into regional real estate through private equity and asset management.

'They relied heavily on selling investments and placements and that business model is being questioned,' Sameer Abdi, who is also a partner at Ernst & Young, said.

The global liquidity constraints will force Islamic banks to look for new customers and sources of funding, including moving into corporate banking, trade finance and retail banking, Abdi said.

Islamic banks cater to investors who do not want to earn or pay interest.

Some banks have already started to set up funds that enable retail customers to buy sukuk which in the past were mostly bought by regional banks and large Western financial institutions.

However, analysts have said that it will not be easy for Islamic banks to reduce their heavy exposure to real estate, as they are too small to move into such areas as regional infrastructure and energy projects, which require large investments.

Islamic and conventional banks in the region still have more of the financial crisis ahead of them, Abdi said.

'The financial industry is not out of the woods in the Middle East at all, in fact we are still in the middle of our crisis,' he said. 'It's going to take some support from regulators and governments to actually come out of the crisis, and that may be six to nine months away, at least.'

The restructuring of the debts held by troubled Saudi family groups Saad and Algosaibi could heavily impact many banks in the region.

The UAE alone face at least $3 billion in potential losses from their exposure to the two groups, Emirates Business reported on Thursday.

Abdi also said corporate defaults of private sector companies in the region were very likely over the next six months.


 
 
 

PAGES   1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 

SEARCH ARCHIVES

   
 
 
 

 

Today's Poll

Do you think the growing tension between the U.S. and China may lead to "economic cold war" between these two countries?
Yes
Somehow
No
No idea

View other Polls

 

 
 

Advertising | Contact | Feedback | Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | Web Feeds
Copyright (c) 2010, Al Hilal Publishing & Marketing Group