Photo
Business Update

Reuters business newsletter, your daily business coverage.

Subscribe

DIFC CEO sees more Gulf FX moves away from dollar

Sun Mar 25, 2007 4:55am EDT

Reporter's Notebook

[-] Text [+]

By Veronica Brown

DUBAI (Reuters) - More Gulf economies will move away from a dollar currency peg and shift foreign exchange reserves away from dollar to other currencies, including the Chinese yuan, the chief executive of Dubai International Financial Center (DIFC) said on Sunday.

DIFC CEO Nasser al Shaali noted that the UAE central bank had already started buying euros -- part of its strategy to move some 10 percent of its reserves into the single European currency before the end of the year.

"We've seen for example in the case of the UAE central bank a movement into the euro," Shaali told the Reuters Middle East Investment Summit.

"In the future most likely, we predict some of the economies in the region will adopt the Chinese yuan currency as well," he said, adding that he was not aware of that happening at the moment.

He said the appetite of the region as a whole was to increasingly to diversify exposure.

"The investment strategies of Dubai Holdings entities, Kuwait Investment Authority and so on...you will see a lot of these bodies start looking at Eastern Asia more aggressively along with a lot of institutional and private investors in the region," he said.

Saudi Arabia, the largest Gulf Arab economy, as well as Qatar, Oman and Bahrain have ruled out changes to their dollar pegs, adopted in preparation for a monetary union planned for 2010.

But the UAE and Kuwait, the third largest economy, have questioned the peg after the dollar fell about 10 percent against the euro last year.  Continued...

 
Global Environment Oct 06 - 8, 2008 Energy
Autos II Sep 30 - Oct 01, 2008 Hotels/Casinos
Restructuring Sep 22 - 26, 2008 Financial Services/Exchanges
Autos Sep 15 - 17, 2008 Autos
Russia Investment Sep 08 - 9, 2008 Country Summits

What are Summits?

Reuters Summits are your direct link to top business leaders, investors and regulators. Our journalists interview heavyweights in a particular industry, spin out hard-hitting breaking news and sharp analysis that can often move markets. If you want to understand what the insiders are thinking, look for Reuters Summits.  Launch Full Video 

 

Stay connected. Get e-mailed alerts with schedules, speaker lists, and headlines from upcoming and live Industry Summits.