“Boring banking,” said Freddie Baz, “is why Lebanese banks have been insulated from the crisis.” Baz, the group chief executive and strategy director at Lebanon’s biggest bank, Bank Audi, said the “lack of sophistication” in commercial banking was the key factor protecting the Lebanese banking sector from the financial turmoil plaguing the rest of the world. Other factors have been the conservative policies set by Banque du Liban (BDL) — Lebanon’s central bank — and traditional, prudent strategies used by domestic banks. Last year the average profit for the top five banks topped 20 percent. Those record breaking profits are in the past, but early 2009 numbers seem to indicate Lebanon’s banks are doing just fine: Bank Audi, BLOM Bank and Byblos Bank — the three largest in Lebanon — posted total profits of $149 million in the first quarter of 2009, a 13 percent gain on the same quarter