Gulf News

Stricter rules are actually a blessing

- BYWILLIAM TOHME Special to Gulf News William Tohme is Senior Regional Head at CFA Institute.

‘ Stay safe’ has become more than just a mantra these past six months. Government­s have used the phrase to explain why restrictio­ns to everyday life are needed. We read it on posters in the street and on shop doors. We even sign off our emails to friends and colleagues with it. Yet there is more to these two words than just jargon.

Staying safe has become an imperative that has percolated through society and changing the way we perceive the world at large. It is also changing the way we think about risk in financial markets.

The last time this happenedwa­s adecade agowhenthe­Global Financial Crisis ushered in a slew of reforms that sought to atone for an era of laissez- faire capitalism. Before the collapse of Lehman Bros, regulation was often seen as an obstacle to overcome rather than a code to work to.

TheGulfhad its ownfinanci­al idiosyncra­sies thatwere also to be swept away by the rising regulatory tide, such as the practice of “name lending”, where reputation alonewas often enough to secure vast credit lines for projects that were sometimes little more than ideas. But rather than being a hindrance to the developmen­t of regional financial markets, the regulatory changes put into place in the years that followed the crisis had the opposite effect.

Improved profile

Europe is already working on a number of financial sector reforms to make it easier for capitalmar­kets to support the recovery of businesses.

Instead, bourses from the UAE to Saudi Arabia were elevated by index providers, attracting billions of dollars in fresh capital and helping to move the Gulf from the fringes of the investment world to nearer the mainstream. Such progress in such a short period would not have been possible without the enabling scaffold that financialm­arket regulation provided.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has once again triggered a new wave of regulatory introspect­ion across global markets and in the Gulf, where it can be argued the stakes are much higher today than at the time of the Global Financial Crisis. This time the investment community itself is driving the trend as much as regulators.

Our recent Covid- 19 survey reveals that the majority of UAE investment profession­als ( 78 per cent) believe that regulators should take a proactive role and consult with firms on possible solutions. More than half also believe regulators should design new frameworks to help restart normal market activity as quickly as possible.

With so much of the investment community already onside, the industry at large is in a better mindset than a decade ago, when confrontat­ion rather than collaborat­ion often defined the dynamic. The challenge for regulators will be to keep in lockstep with the increasing­ly technology- driven sectors that they oversee.

Go as wide as possible

In the past, individual jurisdicti­ons such as Abu Dhabi Global Market have been remarkably effective in establishi­ng robust regulatory frameworks supported by legal enforcemen­t, which was instrument­al in changing the wider perception of Gulf financial markets. The future may demand such innovation across the region to prevent regulatory arbitrage and ensure that the momentum is maintained amid so much volatility in sectors from energy to real estate.

Gulf economies will now need to show, as they did a decade ago, that they are capable of reacting quickly to the new and still unfolding consequenc­es of the pandemic on financialm­arkets. If there is one big lesson for government­s from this crisis, it is that swift and decisive action has given people a better chance to stay safe.

The same holds true for investors.

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