ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News Monday, 07 July 2008 | 04:17 UAE time

YOUR DIRECTORY /


	
Print this page Print this page | Email this to a friend Email this to a friend | Discuss this article (0 Comments) |

Dubai among world's top financial centres

by Dylan Bowman on Saturday, 01 March 2008
FINANCIAL HUB: Dubai was ranked the 24th most competitive financial centre in the world in the latest GFCI report.

Dubai is the leading financial centre in the Middle East and the fourth most competitive in Asia, according to the latest Global Financial Centres Index (GFCI), published on Saturday.

The emirate saw its competitive rating of 585 points increase by 10 points over the last report in September 2007, despite slipping two places in the ranking to 24th out of 50 global financial centres.

London topped the ranking with 795 points, followed by New York on 786 points and Hong Kong on 695 points.

Story continues below
advertisement

Dubai's position among the world's top centres is a sign of growing importance of the Gulf as a whole on the global financial stage, thanks in part to high oil prices and huge government investment.

Bahrain and Qatar, ranked 39th and 47th, saw seen their competitive rating soar.

"The Gulf state centres have risen strongly in the ratings... Dubai continues to be identified in assessments as a key and growing regional hub, and Bahrain and Qatar have experienced the biggest increase in the ratings, by 59 and 51 points, respectively," the report said.

"Dubai and Qatar... have continued to gain significance... highlighting their role as important regional financial hubs in the Middle East and beyond."

Commissioned by the City of London Corporation, the report labelled Dubai an "evolving" centre with a high rating that was susceptible to change, while Bahrain and Qatar were judged as "volatile" with not such high ratings but able to move upwards rapidly if improvements in certain areas were made.

"It is interesting to see that Dubai... [is] already matching some of the established centres and [has] the sensitivity to instrumental factors to move towards the group of ‘leaders’," the report said. It judges centres to be either leaders, minor, evolving or volatile.

However, the report cautioned that the future success of Gulf financial hubs would depend on broad improvements in their competitiveness, especially in the area of financial infrastructure, where both Dubai and Qatar received relatively low scores.

The report ranks centres by assessing their competitiveness in the areas of people, business environment, market access, infrastructure and general competitiveness.

Print Print | Email Email | Discuss this article |



USER COMMENTS (0 COMMENTS)

CLICK HERE TO POST A COMMENT

Add your Comment
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Notify me of further comments
Security Code * Code


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.

RELATED LINKS

  1. Government of Bahrain»
  2. UAE Government»

 EMAIL ALERTS

  1. City of London Corporation

  2. Government of Bahrain

  3. Qatar Government

  4. UAE Government

  5. Banking & Finance



ArabianBusiness.com/Jobs - Middle East Jobs Search
  1. Derivatives Senior Trader
    Industry: Finance
    Location: Kuwait, Kuwait
  2. Accountant
    Industry: Finance
    Location: Abu Dhabi, UAE
Browse all jobs »

BUSINESS FEATURES

The Oddo couple

A new joint venture at the DIFC aims to bring together European expertise and Arab relationships.

High finance

Amid continuing turmoil in global credit markets, Islamic finance is going from strength to strength. 

Sukuk and the city

The City of London has had a rough time recently, but for the city's Islamic financiers, outlook looks rosier.

BUSINESS INTERVIEWS

Market mover

Franklin Resources CEO on how one of the world's largest fund managers is looking to the Gulf to offset losses.

Noor goes moor

Noor Islamic Bank CEO Hussain Al Qemzi plans to take the fledgling bank across the Gulf and around the world.

Capital growth

Shuaa Capital CEO Iyad Duwaji believes the Gulf is on the cusp of unprecedented economic growth.

MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM