Showing posts with label Iran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iran. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 April 2016

IRAN ISSUES SUKUK AL IJARAH

Tehran—The Iranian Ministry of Finance issued IRR 5 trillion of four-year lease-based Sukuk on 16 March. Reuters reports that the bonds were sold through Iran Fara Bourse, Tehran’s over-the-counter market. The issue marks the first use by the Government of Iran of such bonds. Previously, in September 2015, another first had been notched up with the issuance of some $295 million in Islamic Treasury Bills on Iran Fara Bourse.


In a statement at the time, Amir Hamooni, CEO of Iran Fara Bourse commented, “Once sanctions are lifted by the early 2016, dollar or euro-denominated sukuk will be issued for an array of investors piled up to tap into Iran’s lucrative market.”



Deputy Economy Minister Shapour Mohammadi noted at the time that the Iranian Government is planning to continue issuing Islamic bonds, including T-bills. Reuters cites expectations that the Government will issue up to IRR 60 trillion in T-bills in 2016. “Banks could benefit from the debt market as a form of collateral, if the central bank gives its approval,” Mohammadi said last year. “We intend to introduce a law in 2016-17 to enable executive enterprises to accept these securities as credit or trade them at the bourse.



(Pakistan Observer / 31 March 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Thursday, 17 September 2015

Lifting of Iran sanctions to fuel Islamic finance growth

The lifting of international sanctions on Iran will boost the country's economy and fuel the growth of Islamic finance, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said on Tuesday.
For Iran - one of the largest players in the Islamic finance industry contributing to around 40 per cent of global Islamic banking assets - the lifting of sanctions could bring about its eventual economic rebound and help boost Islamic finance.
The ratings agency said in a report that if Iran meets all deliverables, sanctions may start to lift in the first half of 2016.
The World Bank estimates this would help Iran's oil exports rebound to pre-2012 sanction levels within eight to 12 months. Sanctions lifting could also restore Iran's access to the global financial markets. Under this scenario, Iran's GDP growth would hover around six per cent annually in fiscals 2017 and 2018 according to market estimates, compared with less than one per cent in 2015.
"We expect that accessing the sukuk market might help Iran raise funding for its projects and be seen by global Islamic investors as a diversification opportunity. The Islamic financial market could also benefit from volume effects as post-sanction investment projects are reportedly high. This could support market growth in the medium term," S&P said.
The flipside of sanction removals is the possible drop in oil prices. This could intensify pressure on some oil exporting countries that rely heavily on oil revenues, in turn curbing their spending and banking system growth, the report said.
Tehran is aiming to ramp up oil production despite a supply glut that has sent prices down drastically.
Iran, which has the fourth-biggest oil reserves in the world and is pumping about 2.8 million barrels a day, is expected to add between 600,000 and one million barrels to output once sanctions are lifted.
But Iranian authorities are much more bullish and aim for an increase of close to 1.5 million barrels by the end of 2016, taking daily production to 4.2 million.
For banks in the UAE and Lebanon, the opening up of the Iranian economy bodes well with Tehran lining up $100 billion worth of energy deals to kick-start its economy.
Potentially, Western, Chinese and Indian banks also will likely be attracted to Iran's diversified economy and significant trade flows, according to Moody's.
(Khaleej Times / 16 September 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 14 September 2015

Islamic banks to see a significant uptick from post-sanctions Iran

As the Iranian economy opens up for business, regional Islamic banks are likely to benefit most as the country’s banking system is governed by Sharia, according to Moody’s.
Entry into Iran could be easiest for Islamic banks given that Sharia governs the conduct of business and banking regulation in the country. Iran was the first country in the world to fully convert all banking activities to follow Sharia principles with the enactment of the Usury Free Banking Law in 1983. Currently Iranian banking system operates 100 percent according to Islamic banking principles, a unique feature compared to peers globally.
According to the Central Bank of Iran, the country’s banks and other financial institutions held 15,901 trillion Iranian Real ($558 billion) in total assets as of May 2015.
As a result of financial sanctions, the sector has limited links with the global financial system, relying only on domestic funding with limited interbank borrowing. Of the 29 banks operating in the country, three are commercial government-owned banks, five specialized government-owned banks, 19 are private-sector banks and two are special mandate banks.
“Given the sheer size of the banking system and the country’s financing needs, we expect a major boost to sukuk volumes,” said Khalid Howladar — senior credit officer at Moody’s. “However, Sharia harmonization across jurisdictions would likely remain difficult,” he said.
The country’s largest private-sector banks include Bank Saderat Iran, Tejarat Bank and Pasargad Bank, all of which are listed on the Tehran Stock Exchange. In addition, there are more than 6,000 so-called ‘Gharz-al-Hassan’ institutions catering specifically to microfinance, consumer and SME financing.
Its banking sector is the largest contributor to the global total of Islamic banking assets estimated to account for 45 percent of $1.2 trillion market. Some of the largest Islamic banks globally are based in Iran, with two of them — Bank Melli Iran and Mellat Bank — both estimated to have in excess of $65 billion in assets, just behind the world’s largest Islamic Bank Al Rajhi in Saudi Arabia at $87 billion.
(Albawaba Business / 13 September 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday, 2 September 2015

Iran boasts $518b banking asset, highest in Islamic world

TEHRAN – Iran’s banking asset amounts to $518 billion, making the country the biggest asset holder in Islamic banks, said Mehdi Razavi, the chairman of Iran Banking Institute. 

Addressing the 26th Annual Islamic Banking Conference in Tehran on Tuesday, Razavi said that the country accounts for 37 percent of the Islamic world’s total banking assets. 



“From 1995 to 2014, Islamic banks and financial institutes have seen an approximately annual growth of 20 percent and their total asset value has increased from $300 million in 2005 to about $2000 billion in 2014”. 



“According to some estimates, the total asset value of Islamic banks will touch $3,400 billion in 2018”, Razavi highlighted. 



According to published statistics, the number of Islamic banks and financial institutes has surpassed 600 across the world. 



Business Monitor has predicted a 21 percent asset growth in 2016 for Iranian banks, amounting to $586.06 billion.  



Although Iranian banks were under western economic sanctions, a 40 percent asset growth was fulfilled. Iranian banks' total assets were estimated to be approximately $301 billion and $403 billion in 2013 and 2014, respectively.  



Furthermore, granted loans by Iranian banks amounted to approximately $153.93 billion in 2014 and the loans were up 19% in 2014, hitting $183.33 billion.  



In regards to deposit attraction by Iranian banks, 22 percent growth has been predicted, amounting to approximately $219.09 billion, the report reveals. The amount had been allegedly about $179.39 billion in 2014.  


(Tehran Times / 02 September 2015)

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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 29 June 2015

Iran to raise stake in Islamic finance body as it prepares for possible sanctions relief

Iran plans to raise its stake in the International Islamic Trade Finance Corp (ITFC), becoming its third largest shareholder, as it prepares for a possible easing of sanctions on its foreign trade in exchange for curbing its nuclear programme.
The Jeddah-based ITFC promotes Islamic trade financing, which follows religious principles such as a ban on interest payments. With 56 shareholders including about 31 member countries, it extends direct financing and cooperates with other providers to support sharia-compliant trade.
A bigger role in the ITFC could help Iran rebuild its international trading links if the sanctions are eased. This depends on whether negotiations between Tehran and world powers can reach agreement on its disputed nuclear programme. An agreement looks possible as soon as this week, although both sides say major obstacles remain.
The ITFC's annual general assembly this month approved an increase of Iran's subscription by 8,500 shares, a resolution by the body said. Its annual report says each share is worth $10,000, implying Iran would pay $85 million to lift its stake.
At the end of 2013, Iran's subscription was just $1.92 million, which made it the 22nd largest shareholder in the ITFC, behind Bangladesh and just ahead of Bahrain, according to the latest data on the body's website.
At present, the Islamic Development Bank is the largest shareholder in the ITFC with a stake worth $266 million; Saudi Arabia holds second spot at $120 million. The ITFC has total paid-up capital of $701.9 million.
The ITFC resolution said Iran would increase its stake via three equal and consecutive installments. The first installment is due in six months time, but Iran could opt to pay any or all of the installments before the due date.
Islamic trade finance still serves only a tiny fraction of global trade, partly because Islamic banks are relatively small and lack the expertise and large international networks of mainstream Western banks.
The ITFC approved transactions worth $5.2 billion in 2014, up from $3.4 billion in 2013, with over three-quarters of the money going to finance trade in the energy sector.

Since its inception in 2008, the ITFC has extended $594 million worth of financing approvals for Iran, all of that before 2012, when the sanctions were tightened and effectively froze Tehran out of the global banking system.
(Reuters / 28 June 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Iran and the Islamic Finance Crown

Iran is one of the pioneers of Islamic finance. In 1983, four years after the revolution led by Ayatollah Khomeini overthrew the Shah, the Islamic government passed the Riba-Free Banking Act, forcing local banks to rebuild their business around sharia-compliant products.
More than 30 years on, the Iranian banking industry remains completely regulated by sharia law and is by far the world’s largest center of Islamic banking. Yet its experience is unique within the global Islamic community, as it is inspired by Shia jurisprudence, which often diverges from mainstream Sunni jurisprudence. Sunni scholars have repeatedly questioned the “rightfulness” of Iranian banks, with some even claiming that they “are merely carrying Islamic labels and are rather dummy version [sic] of Islamic banks,” to put it in the words of apaper published by the International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM).
However, with Iran now seemingly closer than ever to an agreement with the West over its controversial nuclear development program, local financial institutions are poised to regain access to international markets and place their sharia-compliant products among emerging market enthusiasts. Yet instead of adding new momentum to the growing Islamic finance industry, Iran’s financial comeback risks opening a new chapter in the century-old clash of principles between Sunni and Shia Islam.
“[Should an agreement with the West really happen] Iran will still remain segregated, because its concept of Islamic finance is not exactly similar to the concept of Islamic finance in other Muslim countries,” Monzer Kahf, a sharia scholar and professor of Islamic finance and economics at the Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies, told The Diplomat. “This is the result of an intellectual position adopted in Iran which may not be accepted in other countries.”
Islamic finance forbids the use of a pre-determined fixed interest rate, also known as riba, in banking and financial transactions, as well as investing in businesses that provide goods or services considered contrary to its principles. Financial interests are not banned altogether; they are accepted as long as they represent a ratio of the profit generated by the use of capital. Riba-free banking thus translates in contracts like mudaraba,which literally identifies a profit-sharing agreement between the bank and its clients, either in the form of deposits or loans.
Although Islamic finance practices were first developed in the Caliphate between the 8th and 12th centuries, they gained new momentum in the late 20th century, when countries like Saudi Arabia accumulated huge amounts of petrodollars and began focusing on how to make their booming financial sectors comply with the teachings of the Quran. Over the last 20 years, the development of the Islamic finance industry has accelerated. Global Islamic banking assets stood at roughly $1,560 billion by the end of 2014, according to figures from the Islamic Financial Service Board (IFSB). At the same time, outstanding sukuks, or Islamic bonds, grew by an annual 20.7 percent between 2008 and 2013, amounting to $294.7 billion at the end of September 2014, IFSB figures show. Both Islamic banking and bond assets are expected to continue growing at double-digit rates in the coming years, as estimated by international observers such as consultancy firm Deloitte and credit rating agency Moody’s.
End of Isolation?
Iran, the only Muslim country besides Sudan where the entire financial industry is obliged to be consistent with the principles of sharia law, accounts for more than 40 percent of the world’s total Islamic banking assets. Trailing far behind is Saudi Arabia with 18.5 percent, Malaysia with 9.56 percent, and the UAE with 7.36 percent. However, years of isolation have prevented its bonds from reaching the international markets, leaving the leadership of the global sukuk market to Saudi Arabia, and above all, Malaysia. Things may be approaching a turning point as the Islamic Republic and the P5+1 group (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States plus Germany) appear closer than ever to a deal over Iran’s nuclear development program. A deal would trigger a gradual removal of Western sanctions and reinstate Iran as a legitimate member of the global financial community.
“This Iranian government led by Hassan Rohuani is very keen to integrate the country into the global economy,” Ishrat Hussain, former governor of the Central Bank of Pakistan, told The Diplomat. “They have to catch up with the rest of the world. Now that the sanctions may be over, the government and the private sector have to do lot to rebuild the economy.”
Cash-strapped Iranian state and private companies are keen to tap the international debt market and address the shortage of hard currency they are facing as a result of years of crippling international sanctions. About 180 companies are considering Islamic bond sales in 2016, a Bloomberg report noted in April, quoting estimates from a local financial analyst. Foreign investors will be equally keen to chip in given Iran’s economic potential based on its massive hydrocarbons resources and a domestic market of 77 million people. Iran featured among Goldman Sachs’ “Next 11” most promising countries in 2007, before a new round of Western sanctions dragged down the entire economy.
Iranian bonds and other financial instruments will not be an easy bet for Sunni asset managers though.
“In Iran, whatever the vali-e faghih-e iran [the supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, who succeeded to Khomeini in 1989], or whatever the Islamic government approves in his name, is to be considered Islamic,” Kahf says. Iran is home of the world’s largest Shia community, with Shiites representing 95 percent of the country’s population. Shiites are estimated to make up 10 percent to 20 percent of the world’s Muslim population, the remainder being Sunnis.
“On the other hand, in Sunni countries, we rely more on the sharia law as understood by the four classical school of thought of the Sunni tradition, which represent the basement for any opinion on Islamic finance. […] This means that whatever is called Islamic finance in Iran most likely is not acceptable as Islamic finance outside Iran. As a consequence, a sukuk issued in Iran will not be able to get customers in Sunni countries such as Qatar, Malaysia or Pakistan and the other way round.
Apart from the different jurisprudential approach, Iranian banks have also been questioned over their real commitment to comply with local Sharia rules.
“It seems that many of activities which are common practice in the Iranian banks are just alike commercial banks,” the IIUM paper reads.
“After enacting the riba-free banking services in 1983, neither customers nor banks could implement the Ughods [Islamic principles].”
Years of isolation and a different approach to Islamic finance have left Iran at the margins of the growing global Islamic finance industry. Even the fact that the country may be close to staging a financial comeback went largely unnoticed at the last Islamic Financial Service Board (IFSB) summit, one of the most important events on the annual calendar of the Islamic finance industry, held in Almaty, Kazakhstan, in May. Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, and the UAE shared the spotlight as the industry’s trendsetters while Indonesia and Turkey were repeatedly pointed out as its next big thing, although Sharia-compliant assets remain just a (growing) fraction of total assets in both countries. Only a handful of delegates represented Iran.
“Unfortunately, the Iranian banking system has so far failed to maintain a constructive cooperation with pioneer countries in the field of Islamic banking,” Farhad Nili, head of the Monetary and Banking research institute within the Central Bank of Iran, wrote in a 2014 research report. “Hence the international community knows little about the theoretical foundations and practice of riba-free banking in Iran.”
Other Iranian officials tend to downplay the existing differences between Iran and other major Islamic finance centers and focus on the financial appeal of Iranian products instead.
“It’s like buying a smartphone, there is no Shia or Sunni smartphone, it’s just the same,” Mohammad Fetanat, chairman of Iranian market regulator Security and Exchange Organization (SEO), told The Diplomat on the sidelines of the IFSB summit.
“In terms of profits, Iran is one of the [most] profitable countries in the world. Mid-term yields on bonds and deposits range between 20 percent to 30 percent in local currency, and many of these returns are adjusted to inflation and foreign exchange variations.”
Iran and the P5+1 have time until June 30 to follow up on the framework agreement they announced on April 2. Iranian financial authorities and institutions are already gearing up to stage their comeback in the international financial community. The SEO itself is working at a conference — to be held in Tehran in September  – specifically aimed at attracting foreign investors into the Iranian capital market. It can lure Western investors with attractive returns, but they will need much more to convince their fellow members of the Islamic community that, at the end of the day, a Shia sukuk is just like a Sunni sukuk.
(The Diplomat / 16 June 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

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