Investment banks swoop on Gulf oil boom cash
DUBAI/LONDON: Foreign investment banks are rushing to cash in on the
oil boom in Gulf Arab states with the region’s capital market surging
and local investors scouring the globe for deals.
Some banks are gearing up for the launch on September 26 of the new
Dubai International Financial Exchange (DIFX), trumpeted by local
officials as a project that will transform the state into another New
York or London.
Even for those who are cautious about such ambitions, there is no
denying the surge in share issues, mergers, and other business for
investment banks.
Bankers estimate there will be more than $150 billion in project
finance alone over the next five years, if oil prices remain strong,
from Gulf Arab states.
In the UAE, trading volume soared 343 per cent on the Abu Dhabi stock
market in 2004 and 1,238 per cent on the Dubai market.
Middle Eastern oil exporters are estimated to have netted over $1
trillion in oil revenues in the past five years.
There are questions about how long the boom will last but many banks
find the potential rewards irresistible.
While foreign banks have always vied for a piece of the pie in the
world’s biggest oil-exporting region, a mix of factors, including
soaring crude prices, is changing where bankers sit.
“Traditionally, investment banking has been done by top tier
international banks offshore, based in London,” said Omar Al Salehi,
Middle East head at UBS Investment Bank.
“The region is changing and there are more deals, with the higher oil
price and more privatisation, so now people are reviewing whether to
put bankers on the ground.” Deutsche Bank is the latest arrival,
announcing it would set up an investment banking arm in Riyadh. In the
last three months, Citigroup has moved two senior bankers to Dubai from
London.
This month HSBC opened an investment banking unit to capitalise on the
billions of dollars of state investment projects expected in Qatar.
“There has been an increase of demand for financial analysts in the
region both from within the UAE and overseas for foreign banks,” said
Hassan Yousaf of bayt.com, a regional recruitment agency.
Foreign banks are already big players in the region, taking up most of
the top 10 positions in areas such as project finance, debt capital
markets and merger and acquisitions advisory, according to data
provided by Dealogic.
But recent growth in these businesses is unprecedented.
– Reuters Last update on: 17-9-2005 |