Data from Lipper, the fund data collator, show the scale of the hit taken by funds domiciled in the Arab world since the collapse of Lehman Brothers – but also a tentative recovery.
At the end of July last year, total assets under management in funds domiciled in the eight Arab markets monitored by Lipper, were $64bn; by the end of the year, in the middle of the worldwide financial meltdown, that figure had fallen 21 per cent to $50.4bn. But by the end of July this year assets under management had rebounded to $56.9bn. Unsurprisingly, equity funds have been particularly badly affected.
“There has been a shift in appetite towards more conservative products. I think equity products are a hard sell. But that is not necessarily the case for fixed income or products which have better liquidity,” says Giyas Gokkent, economist at National Bank of Abu Dhabi.
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