Thursday, November 8, 2012

Major Qatar conference to examine role of finance after credit crisis ...

Hosted by The Qatar Central Bank, and held under the patronage of H.E. Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim Bin Jabr Al-Thani, Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, the event will examine how credit has been used as a primary driver for public spending, lending and private consumption in recent years, and look at the efforts to manage the spiralling phenomenon.

The event, "Global Finance: Re-Designed," is being supported by Qatar National Bank; Commercial Bank of Qatar; International Bank of Qatar; Qatar Islamic Bank; and Qatar First Investment Bank.

Reflecting the importance of the subject matter - as well as Qatar's rising position on the international stage - keynote speakers at the event will include H.E. Yousef Hussain Kamal, Minister of Economy & Finance, State of Qatar; H.E. Sheikh Abdullah Saoud Al-Thani, Governor, Central Bank of Qatar; H.E. Zeti Akhtar Aziz, Governor, Bank Negara Malaysia; H.E. Chedly Ayari, Governor, Central Bank of Tunisia; H.E. Marek Belka, President, National Bank of Poland; and Murat Cetinkaya, Deputy Governor, Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey

Richard Banks, Regional Director for Euromoney, organiser of the event, explains, "Governments have reacted to the credit crisis by increasing regulation on banks, upping capital requirements and restricting banks ability to take on risk. Banks and markets have reacted to the government debt crisis and the regulatory changes by reducing lending across the board and by viewing sovereign debt as a credit product."

"However, if governments and banks are bound by restrictive credit, what financial mechanism will provide the oil which lubricates the global economy and returns it to growth? This will be the subject of the first Euromoney conference in Doha on 11-12 December," he adds.

One of the key areas for discussion at the conference is that the world of finance is becoming more, not less, complex as a result of the crisis. The pace of financial innovation - in both products and technology - is increasing. The number and type of companies involved in the business of finance will also increase.

New credit players such as hedge funds, asset managers and specialist non-bank institutions will grow significantly. Regulatory complexity, Central Bank tools and government-led financial engineering will also grow.

For sovereign wealth funds, governments and banks within the MENA region, the opportunities for playing an enhanced role will be significant, given the ongoing economic development and increased global profile of the region.

At the heart of this lies a fascinating debate on behavioural financial models versus "the market", and the emerging discipline of "neuro-economics," which combines evolutionary biology, neurology and financial market behaviour.

Banks concludes, "Finance is meant to be an enabler, a means to an end and not an end in itself. If the result of the current changes is a financial system which has a better series of results for savings and investments as its output, then the changes will be worth it. These outputs are measured primarily in the private sector - better return on our investments and more capital available to business."

Major international and Qatari institutions are taking part in the event, and there will be a strong showing of international delegates.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/major-qatar-conference-examine-role-finance-317897

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