Talk About Network



Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Investments > Investing Science > Look Out! UAE ...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 2 Topic 15435 of 15569
Post > Topic >>

Look Out! UAE Wheelers & Dealers Are Stumbling In International

by HHimmler <kinkysr@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 29, 2008 at 10:23 AM

As personal wealth shoots the moon, Persian Gulf countries are
jostling to become powerhouse international banking and investment
giants.

But recent missteps by financial wannabees in Abu Dhabi are lighting
up "fraud monitors" in global capital markets, as the need for self-
policing seems very much in need of improvement.

----------------------------
"Fraud Cases May Complicate UAE Bid to Be Financial Center"

"There's 'Room for More Oversight,' Abu Dhabi Official Says"

By Will McSheehy and Arif Sharif
Bloomberg News
Tuesday, April 29, 2008; D05



Dubai public prosecutors are investigating Deyaar Development, and Abu
Dhabi is probing an alleged $109 million fraud. Both cases may hamper
the United Arab Emirates' effort to become a global financial center.

"The investment culture isn't deeply rooted in this region," Giyas
Gokkent, head of research at National Bank of Abu Dhabi, said in a
telephone interview yesterday. "There is plenty of room for more
oversight."

The UAE bought stakes in banks such as Citigroup and started tax-free
business parks to attract foreign companies to vie with Qatar and
Bahrain as the Persian Gulf region's biggest financial center. It has
had to overcome Abu Dhabi's involvement in the collapsed Bank of
Credit and Commerce International, a regulatory scandal at the Dubai
International Financial Centre and findings that two of the Sept. 11,
2001, hijackers came from the Gulf state.

Deyaar, Dubai's third-biggest publicly traded property company, is
being investigated for possible fraud, Attorney General Essam al-
Humaidan said yesterday. Authorities have arrested staff members and
detained former chief executive Zack Shahin.

Abu Dhabi police said they were investigating a suspect, identified by
the initials A.A.G., in the alleged swindling of investors through an
unlicensed investment company. A.A.G. and accomplices stole from 2,500
investors after promising them returns of 30 percent a month, the
police said yesterday.

"People here have made money so fast on the property market it's made
some think 40 percent a month is achievable," Nigel Sillitoe, Middle
East head of the $14 billion Thames River Capital hedge fund group,
said in a telephone interview from Dubai. "It just shows the investor
education that's needed."

UAE property values have quadrupled since foreigners were first
allowed to buy homes in 2002, Dubai-based Al Mal Capital said in a
report last month.

The mobile phone of Shahin was switched off when Bloomberg called
yesterday seeking comment. Shahin has been in jail for more than three
weeks, Dubai's public prosecutor said.

Abdulrahim al-Awadi, head of the UAE central bank's anti-money
laundering and suspicious cases unit, declined to comment on the Abu
Dhabi fraud case when contacted at his office yesterday. Saeed al-
Hamez, director of the central bank's counterfraud department, could
not be reached for comment on his cellphone.

Personal wealth in the Middle East may rise to $2.2 trillion by 2011,
from $1.4 trillion in 2006, as record oil prices fuel economic growth
in the region, according to Merrill Lynch and Capgemini. The economies
of Gulf oil exporters including the UAE and Saudi Arabia will probably
grow by 6 percent this year, the International Monetary Fund has said.

The forecasts have encouraged banks such as HSBC, Deutsche Bank and
Goldman Sachs to open regional offices in the Dubai International
Financial Centre, a 110-acre self-regulated park opened by the
emirate's government in 2004. In June of that year, the DIFC fired
regulators Phillip Thorpe and Ian Hay Davison after they questioned
the way the center awarded land-development contracts.

"Incidents like this will have an impact on foreign and local
investors' attitudes to the UAE," Faisal Hasan, head of research for
Global Investment House, Kuwait's biggest investment bank, said in a
telephone interview yesterday. "It calls for increased corporate
governance in the UAE capital markets."

[Zainab Fattah, Tarek al-Issawi and Glen Carey in Dubai contributed to
this report.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/28/AR2008042802375.html




 2 Posts in Topic:
Look Out! UAE Wheelers & Dealers Are Stumbling In International
HHimmler <kinkysr@[EMA  2008-04-29 10:23:23 
Re: Look Out! UAE Wheelers & Dealers Are Stumbling In Internatio
Video61@[EMAIL PROTECTED]  2008-04-29 10:30:42 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Sat May 17 4:55:42 CDT 2008.