DUBAI, July 22 (Reuters) - Dubai Islamic Bank
Chilwan, who was previously deputy CEO at the bank, replaces Abdullah Al Hamli who was named managing director, the bank said in a bourse filing.
The management reshuffle at DIB comes when the bank is preparing for renewed growth, after it set aside about 5 billion dirhams ($1.36 billion) against bad loans following the 2009-2010 crash of Dubai's real estate market.
In an interview, both Chilwan and Al Hamli told Reuters in May that the bank had dealt with much of its balance sheet weakness and should see profits for 2013 grow in the double digits, allowing it to eye acquisitions in new markets in Asia.
The 38-year-old bank, 30 percent-owned by Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum's Investment Corp of Dubai, reported a 17 percent increase in its first-quarter net profit.
DIB, which is in the process of acquiring Islamic mortgage lender Tamweel
(Reporting by Mirna Sleiman; Editing by Andrew Torchia)
((Mirna.Sleiman@thomsonreuters.com)(+971559374644)(Reuters Messaging: mirna.sleiman.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
Keywords: EMIRATES DIB/