After more than a year in makeshift lodgings, the Iraq Stock Exchange (ISX) yesterday celebrated its official opening - behind cream-painted blast walls.
The ISX has taken over from the former Baghdad Stock Exchange, which closed 2½ years ago on the eve of the US-led invasion. But the promised Nasdaq of the Middle East has fallen short of expectations.
With an old-fashioned trading system based on white boards and markers, the original exchange was derided by US advisers as an example of economic backwardness under Saddam Hussein's dictatorship.
But the high hopes many held for a new high-technology exchange have had to be scaled down.
Instead of electronic touch-screens, brokers at the ISX must still shout out their bids to officials manning the white boards at the front of the room.
Iraqi finance officials say they urged the Americans to let go of their high-tech dreams and simply allow the exchange to carry on with business. "It works exactly like the old stock exchange," says Muntheral-Fettal, ISX board member. "It's clear and practical. For getting deals done, it works just fine." |