Showing posts with label Islamic banking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamic banking. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 May 2016

Pakistan's Summit Bank eyes Burj Bank for Islamic banking entry

May 3 Summit Bank has received approval from Pakistan's central bank to conduct due diligence on Burj Bank, it said in a stock exchange filing, in the latest bid for the unlisted lender, which is seeking to boost capital through a stake sale.
The acquisition of a majority shareholding in Burj Bank would fit the long term strategy of Summit Bank, which is planning to convert its operations to conform to Islamic principles that include bans on interest and gambling.
Burj Bank, one of the country's five full-fledged Islamic banks, held 4.4 billion rupees ($42 million) in paid up capital as of December, compared with the regulatory minimum of 10 billion rupees.
Last month, Burj Bank said it had shortlisted three financial institutions to conduct due diligence on a non-exclusive basis. It also received an extension from the central bank to meet the mimimum capital requirement until June 30.
The Islamic lender has previously attracted interest from state-owned National Bank of Pakistan and MCB Bank Ltd , both conducting their own due diligence in 2014, but a sale has not materialised.

The largest shareholders of Burj Bank are Bahrain's Bank Alkhair with a 37.9 percent stake and the Jeddah-based Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector, which holds a 33.9 percent stake. 
(Reuters / 03 May 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
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Sunday, 27 March 2016

First Islamic banking center opened in Russia's Kazan

AhlulBayt News Agency - Russia's first center of partnership (Islamic) banking was opened today in Kazan. It will operate in full compliance with the principles of partnership funding, which are widely used in many countries of Southeast Asia and the Middle East.

The opening of the center was attended by the President of the Republic of Tatarstan, Rustam Minnikhanov, the first Deputy Chairman of the Bank of Russia, Alexei Simanovsky and the Mufti of the Spiritual Directorate of the Muslims of Tatarstan, Kamil Samigullin.

"We live in difficult times, difficult economic circumstances force us to look for new ways," the head of the republic said.

The center was opened in the framework of a cooperation agreement between the Spiritual Directorate of the Muslims of Tatarstan and Tatagroprombank, TASS reports.

The working group, which is headed by the first deputy chairman of the Central Bank, Alexei Simanovsky, drafted a "road map" for the development of partnership banking and related financial services in the Russian Federation in 2016-2017.

The center will conduct investment, leasing and trading activities. It will share financial risks with its clients.

The head of the department of stock markets and financial engineering of the Faculty of Finance and the Banking Business of RANEPA, Konstantin Korischenko, said in an interview with a correspondent of Vestnik Kavkaza that Islamic banking is very actively developing form of financing.

"The only difficulty in the Russian context is that the banking does not quite fit in with the Russian Civil Code. Since the principle of payment for repayment of resources does not correspond to the basic principle of Islamic finance, which proposes a joint profit from economic activities. So active discussions are under way if changes in Russian legislation are possible. There are even proposals for a regulatory change, but unfortunately the problem has not been solved yet," the expert said.

The head of the department of stock markets and financial engineering of the Faculty of Finance and the Banking Business of RANEPA recalled that there is only one kind of legislation in Russia, which is the legislation of the Russian Federation, which, unfortunately, does not support such a type of financing now. "So the problem is how legal contracts between the parties will be signed." So currently research and consulting functions of the center will be more in demand," Konstantin Korischenko concluded.

The president of the Association of Russian Banks, Garegin Tosunyan, expressed opinion that "every banking service is in demand here," so "we should welcome this practice." "This type of banking, in terms of the specifics of provided services, may be attractive for a particular group of customers," he said.

The expert also noted that such banks will not be radically different from the usual, but they will be characterized by "forms of specialization, in which preference is given to only investment programs and approaches, while putting a particular emphasis on the cultural and ethical aspects of business.



(ABNA / 27 March 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 21 March 2016

Promoting Islamic banking: Centres of Excellence in educational institutions

LONDON: 
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) is pursuing an aggressive policy for the development of adequate human resources for the growing Islamic banking and financial sector in Pakistan.

As part of the plan, in phase 1, three ‘Centres of Excellence’ in ‘Islamic Banking and Finance’ have been set up at the Institute of Business Administration (IBA) Karachi, Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) Lahore and the Institute of Management Sciences Peshawar.
Setting up these centres is indeed an impressive development as it is bringing the most prestigious and professional institutions of higher learning into the fold of Islamic banking and finance. At the same time, the role of more traditional Islamic academic institutions like the International Islamic University Islamabad (IIUI), in developing human resources for Islamic banking and finance industry is getting eclipsed.
The first international conference in Islamic economics, banking and finance was organised by the IIUI in the mid-1980s, and during the following decade the ‘International Institute of Islamic Economics’ at the IIUI provided useful input into delineating a comprehensive blueprint for the Islamisation of Pakistan economy. Now, the IIUI is in a great mess due to the continuous brain drain the university has experienced, with the departure of some of the most distinguished experts in the field of Islamic economies, banking and finance. Last year, the university organised an international conference on Islamic economics and finance but the introvert policy of the university did not help in creating any significant awareness.
Taking the limelight
With an increased focus on Islamic banking and finance and phenomenal growth in the sector, some other institutions have become more visible in the marketplace, most notably COMSATS Institute of Information Technology Lahore. The Centre of Islamic Finance at COMSATS organised its third ‘Global Forum on Islamic Finance’ in Lahore last week, in which delegates and scholars from around the world participated. Prior to that, University of Management & Technology (UMT) Lahore organised a two-day conference on Islamic banking and finance.
LUMS is scheduled to have its first ‘Islamic, Finance, Banking and Business Ethics Global Conference’ on March 27-28, 2016 in collaboration with INCEIF, a Malaysian university specialising in Islamic banking and finance. This would be the third such conference in a span of two months in the city of Lahore. While a welcome development in its own right, it also shows how unsystematic and opportunistic Pakistani institutions are with respect to Islamic banking and finance.
There is a need to devise a collaborative strategy to put Lahore on the global map of Islamic financial services industry. All the three universities in Lahore (namely COMSTAS, UMT and LUMS) should come together to organise something called Lahore Islamic Economic Forum (LIEF). Given the scarcity of human resources and funding for research and development, the three universities should also develop a joint research agenda to conduct applied research in the field of Islamic banking and finance.
Malaysia has developed the World Islamic Economic Forum (WIEF) as a truly global brand and the proposed LIEF should collaborate with it to bring Lahore to the attention of the global Islamic financial services industry.
Punjab, with an estimated population of nearly 100 million, is a viable market for any kind of financial services, including Islamic banking and finance. With the likes of MCB, Allied Bank, the Bank of Punjab, and FINCA Microfinance Bank, headquartered in Lahore, there is enough critical mass to develop Lahore as a centre for Islamic banking.

There are other important institutions headquartered in Lahore, most notably Akhuwat that is a premier microfinance interest-free lender in the country. All these institutions may consider setting up an ‘Islamic Financial Inclusion Centre’ in the city to conduct research in poverty alleviation and reduction of income inequalities in the country.

(The Express Tribune / 21 March 2016)

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

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Malaysia: RHB to grow Islamic banking organically

KUALA LUMPUR: Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are not part of RHB Capital Bhd’s plan in growing its Islamic banking business at the moment.
The fourth largest banking group in Malaysia would instead remain focused on growing its Islamic banking operations organically, the group’s chief executive officer and managing director Datuk Khairusalleh Ramli said.
“We will focus on organic growth ... no M&A,” Khairusalleh said.
“Our target is to grow our Islamic assets to account for about 40% of our group’s total financing assets by 2017,” he told StarBiz on the sidelines after the signing ceremony to mark the collaboration between RHB Banking Group and Credit Guarantee Corp Malaysia Bhd (CGC) to offer a new product proposition targeting the small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) here yesterday.
The tie-up between RHB and CGC would see the launch of he RHB Financial Supply Chain Portfolio Guarantee (RHB FSCPG) which provides working capital financing, specifically for SMEs who lack collateral in supporting their need for funding.
“The FSCPG is aimed at providing Malaysian SMEs that are involved in the distribution chain with working capital to grow their businesses at reasonable cost, without the need for any collateral.

“Through this strategic partnership with CGC, financing of up to RM1mil is available, partially backed by CGC. This product is targeted at Malaysian SMEs who lack collateral to support their working capital needs,” Khairussaleh said. He added that the FSCPG would provide SMEs, their vendors and suppliers a platform to manage their cash flow and inventory more efficiently, through its web-based capabilities.

(The Star Online / 10 March 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Tuesday, 8 March 2016

Turkish deputy PM ÅžimÅŸek projects rapid growth in Islamic banking


Highlighting that the share of Islamic banks within the banking and financial system is nearly 5 percent, deputy prime minister in charge of economy, Mehmet ÅžimÅŸek, said: "Our president [Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan] set a goal for a 25 percent share of Islamic banking in the long-term, but we will take the necessary steps for the share to reach at least 15 percent in the medium-term." Responding to a question about why the Halk Participation Bank's establishment was delayed, ÅžimÅŸek said: "Halkbank actually had taken a fast start, but as I understand, there was a dispute regarding the establisher of the bank, Halkbank or the Treasury; that's why it was delayed. Now, we are speeding up the process."

Elsewhere, the Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency (BDDK) approved the foundation of Vakıf Katılım Bankası A.Ş., Vakıf Bank's new participation bank, which began operations on Feb. 26. Vakıf Katılım Bank CEO Öztürk Oran announced that the bank will operate from its current headquarters for the first quarter and hire 120 employees; however, the target is to open 30 branches and hire 500 employees by the end of the year. Onan said the first branches will be opened in the provinces of Istanbul, Ankara, Konya, Gaziantep, Bursa, İzmir, Adana, Antalya and Kayseri.

Stressing that Vakıf Katılım Bank will open 100 branches and hire 1,200 employees within three years, Oran added that Vakıf Katılım aims to attain 10 percent of the participation banking system's market share by 2018. "Our main goal is to become the leading bank in the Turkish participation banking sector by 2023. Going public is not in our short-term or long-term plans," Oran said. 

Oran added that participation banking can only develop through public banks, emphasizing that Vakıf Katılım aims to increase competition in the market. "As a state bank, the market's trust is high, and therefore with this trust and belief, we believe we will assume a crucial role in drawing foreign funds to our country," Oran said.

In addition, according to an official report released a couple of months ago by international credit rating agency Fitch, the number of loans granted by participating banks in Turkey will continue to increase in 2016, and be likely higher than average due to the entrance of new banks in the sector and the evident rise of the sector's penetration rate. 

The number of Turkish participation banks has increased to five with the foundation of the Ziraat Participation Bank, and as of September 2015, the total assets of participation banks and loans in the banking sector was around 5.1 percent. The total number of participation banks increased to six at the end of February when Vakıf Participation Bank began operating. 

The report also reflects the government's decision to increase the rate of the assets and loans in the participation banking sector to 15 percent by the end of 2023. Along with the Ziraat Participation Bank founded in May 2015 and Vakıf Bank on Feb. 26, Halkbank is also planning to establish participation banks soon, which are all state-owned.



(Daily Sabah Business / 07 March 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday, 24 February 2016

JIC chief promotes Kingdom's Islamic banking, halal food

AMMAN — Jordan Investment Commission (JIC) President Thabet Al Wir highlighted the Jordanian experiments in Islamic banking and halal food as a gate for cooperation with Germany to support the Kingdom's investment and economic environment. 

At a meeting with a German delegation representing the Federation of German Industries (BDI) and the German Federal Ministry of Finance, Wir described the Jordanian expertise in Islamic banking as  top at the regional and international levels.

The Kingdom is also among the first countries to accredit the Islamic banking system, he said.
The presence of many Muslim communities in Germany provides a chance for the country to benefit from the Islamic system in its banking sector, the JIC president added.

There are many Jordanian industries that follow modern, developed methods in preparing and manufacturing halal foods, he continued, noting that several relevant businesses are present in European and East Asian countries as well as the US. 

Wir and the delegates also discussed ways to enhance economic relations between Jordan and Germany according to the outcomes of the London conference, stressing the significance of applying these results to support the Jordanian economy through providing jobs for Jordanians in the first place and then for Syrians. 
The German delegates, who are currently visiting the Kingdom to discuss ways to apply the outcomes of the London conference, had a firsthand look at investment opportunities in the King Hussein Development Zone in Mafraq.

The delegates stressed the importance of enhancing economic cooperation with the Kingdom, and providing investment opportunities to both countries' businesspeople, especially in the banking and food sectors, highlighting the need to support small- and medium-sized sectors to generate new jobs.


(The Jordan Times / 22 February 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Sunday, 7 February 2016

Islamic Banking in Kashmir

Islamic finance for all: There are three different perspectives to look at the idea of Sharia’h-compliant banking & finance. One is religious, which is where it has come from i.e. Quran & Sunnah;  the second is purely from the Economics point of view, wherein people express their interest in it only because they see it as a viable alternative to the current financial system. However, being Muslims as well as responsible global citizens, we should actually be concerned with both the reasons; hence go with the third perspective of having both the reasons. At the time, when Islamophobes are at their best to reduce Islam to an obsolete 6th century Arab doctrine, what better response could be to it other than offering to them a recession-proof & just economic system, which shall ensure their financial stability and that of their children. It must be noted that Islam does not restrict this system only to the Muslims but it’s open to Non-Muslims as well. It is with the same spirit that we have come up with ‘Islamic Banking Kashmir’ (IBK), which is a Research, Advocacy & Awareness group, based in J&K. However, before anyone talks about its advocacy or its benefits, the general public has a right to know the legal hurdles in the way of its implementation.
Regulatory impediments for us: The banking industry in India is currently governed by The Banking Regulation (BR) Act 1949, The RBI Act 1934, The Cooperative Societies Act & The Negotiable Instruments Act 1961. Certain sections of the said acts are in contradiction with the foundational theory of Islamic banking. Examples: The section 21 of the BR Act necessitates the interest on Deposits. The idea of ‘Profit & Loss Sharing investments’ is clearly prohibited by its sections 5(b) and 5(c). And the section 8 of the BR Act disallows any bank to directly or indirectly buy, sell or barter goods, which closes the door for Islamic bank’s concept of Murabaha in which banks enter Sale & purchase agreements (Edgeverve).  There are three ways to introduce Islamic banking/finance: One is a Stand-alone Islamic bank, second is to open a Special window for Interest Free banking within a Conventional bank & the 3rd is to go for a Non-Banking Finance Corporation (NBFC). Since an NBFC does not fall under the jurisdiction of BR Act, it remains a possibility in Kashmir even this time, on the lines of Cheramaan group in Kerala. The 2nd option of ‘Special window’ has recently been recommended by a high level RBI committee headed by Mr. Deepak Mohanty. The committee had sought suggestions from the concerned entities and we at IBK wrote to the Principal Chief General Manager, Reserve Bank of India, Financial Inclusion and Development Department, Mumbai& gave our suggestions. Within few days we shall also write to the Finance Ministry of India and the RBI governor. The 1st option of a stand-alone Islamic bank seems to be a little far, at the moment.
  Why Islamic banking? Coming back to the various perspectives and motivations to seek this alternative form of finance, let’s delve into them a bit. As far as the argument of freedom of religion goes,  Riba’(Usury/Interest) is the only sin in Islam, wherein such an individual has been declared to be at war with God, categorizing it as an uncompromisable tenet of Islam. The Economics argument can be proven by the fact that Not a single Islamic financial institution has had to be bailed out with tax payer’s money, even during the 2008 sub-prime mortgage crisis (This is not to say that all the financial institutions who claim to be Islamic are really so, but even such opportunists who only want to tap Muslim market use some Islamic contracts, which saved them too). The reason being that no transaction takes place in an Islamic bank, unless it is backed by an asset. Such a principle does not let the industry create the currency out of thin air to lend that & charge interest from the poor individuals at the micro level or countries at the macro level, who crumble under the debt-bubble, which eventually bursts. The money gets concentrated within few people, which makes them richer and the interest payments make majority of the people poorer, hence the disparity. This is no less than a slaughter. This is the channel through which the financial institutions like the IMF, The World Bank or WTO get to control the resources of poor nations, when they fail to pay back debt. Islamic economics believes in risk-sharing & not the financial engineering of risk-transfer, in which only one party takes the risk and the other fats his belly & earns interest doing nothing for it. It’s very simple to understand that anybody who bequeaths wealth will always get wealthier without having to work for it, while the one who is born poor will always get poorer by paying that interest for the loan, which his earlier generation had got, by his sweat & blood. Moreover, our unemployed youngsters who want to start business ventures can benefit from Mudaraba, in which both the bank as well as the applicant will use their resources and expertise to make the applicant’s initiative profitable, as both shall have a stake in its success unlike the current system which is only concerned with the interest they earn on their disbursed loan amount and sealing the mortgage of the applicant, if the start-up fails. However, It resembles Venture Capital financing but here the investment is restricted only to the permissible sectors and it does not invest in the companies which having a zero conventional debt capital structure.  So, it actually fuses economic viability with Islamic permissibility, rendering it a reliable option.  


Conclusion: This is a vast field which can not be summed up in a column. We may still have numerous questions unanswered. However, the time has come for it and we need to help each other to seek knowledge and then seek permission from the concerned authorities, so that those amongst us who prefer it, shall have an option and they don’t find the current financial system at loggerheads with their faith or their freedom of choice. I look forward to your support.

(Greater Kashmir / 05 Febuary 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

Islamic Banking Is Dominant in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia Islamic Banks Dashboard here DUBAI/LONDON, February 02 (Fitch) In a new report, Fitch Ratings says Islamic finance is a mature and developed industry in Saudi Arabia, representing about two-thirds of total bank financing. About 38% comes from Islamic banks and 28% from the Islamic windows of conventional banks. There are 12 licensed commercial banks in Saudi Arabia. Four are fully sharia compliant with the remainder providing a mix of sharia-compliant and conventional banking products and services. Due to the largely Islamic finance nature of the lending market in Saudi Arabia, the performance and credit matrices of both Islamic and conventional banks are to a large extent similar (for more information on Saudi banks see Saudi Banks: Peer Review at www.fitchratings.com). Al Rajhi Bank is the largest Islamic bank in Saudi Arabia, and also the largest Islamic bank internationally with assets of SAR325.2bn (USD87bn) at end-3Q15. National Commercial Bank (NCB) is aiming to convert to a fully sharia-compliant bank following its IPO in 2014. NCB's loan book is already majority sharia compliant and once the bank is fully compliant it could replace Al Rajhi Bank as the world's largest Islamic bank. NCB has a large investment portfolio that will be more challenging to convert into sharia-compliant securities, in terms of availability and variety of appropriate alternatives and maintaining the current yield on the portfolio. Saudi Arabia has the largest Islamic bank asset base of any country that allows commercial banks to operate alongside Islamic banks. All banks are subject to a single supervisory authority and the same disclosure requirements. The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) regulates sharia-compliant banks in the same way as it regulates conventional banks. No special treatment is applied to Islamic products and no additional support is given to Islamic banks. However, as a predominantly Muslim market, and now that similar retail products exist in both conventional and sharia-compliant form, Islamic banking is seeing the fastest growth. In Saudi Arabia, banks benefit from large volumes of local currency liquid assets, including government securities and deposits with SAMA. However, one of the key differences between conventional and Islamic banks is the structure of their liquidity/investment portfolios. This is because Islamic banks have far fewer sharia-compliant investment options. These are mainly cash and central bank deposits, such as "mutajara" or "murabaha", which are therefore relatively low risk and low return. Investments also include sukuk issued by other Islamic banks. High spending, particularly in the form of large government projects, has started to reduce due to stricter screening, delays and cancellations, as the government reduces spending to match lower oil revenues. We expect the tougher economic environment to continue for at least two years. The challenging operating conditions are likely to affect earnings, with profitability metrics growing less quickly and possibly declining. Fitch also expects asset quality metrics to deteriorate over the next two years. The full report, Saudi Arabia Islamic Banks Dashboard is available at www.fitchratings.com or by clicking the link above. Contact: Bashar Al Natoor Global Head of Islamic Finance +971 4 424 1242 Fitch Ratings Limited Al Thuraya Tower 1 Office 1805 Dubai Media City Redmond Ramsdale Director +971 4 424 1202 Media Relations.

(Reuters / 02 Febuary 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 25 January 2016

Muslim traders endorse Islamic banking system

COTABATO CITY, Maguindanao—Business leaders and stakeholders of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao and Central Mindanao have endorsed the establishment of an Islamic banking system, specifically one that prohibits the charging of high interest rates, a Basilan lawmaker said.
The proposal was indicated in House Bill No.5989 filed by Basilan Pary-list Rep. Sitti Djalia Turabin Hataman which was supported by Salem Glandour of Maybank Islamic Berhad in Malaysia and Amanah Islamic Bank executive Isdrro Sobrecarey.
Both businessmen cited the advantages of an Islamic banking system to operate in the Southern Philippines.
Hataman, wife of ARMM Gov. Mujiv Hataman, stressed that under her proposed Islamic banking law, “banks do not rely on high interest rates to sustain operation but push for moderate to socialized interest charge.”
The Basilan legislator said that based on Islam, the banking system prohibits usury or taking high interest on cash loans and cater mostly on the poor and moneyed traders.
Glandour explained that “while Islamic banking system offers low interest rates, it has no conflict with conventional and commercial banks.”

Hataman hailed the business leaders’ warm reception of her proposal and pledged to continue dialogues through roundtable discussions with other stakeholders.

(The Standard / 23 January 2016)
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Friday, 15 January 2016

Islamic banking system gets nod of ARMM, Muslim business leaders

Cotabato City – Business leaders in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) and in Region 12 on Tuesday expressed optimism that an Islamic Banking System would be established soon in the country.
This positive outlook came after Anak Mindanao (Amin) Partylist Rep. Sitti Djalia Turabin-Hataman filed House Bill (HB) 5989 that is now being deliberated upon in the lower House.
Muslim and Christian business leaders in the region attended yesterday’s first roundtable discussion on HB 5989 here.
Anchored on Islam, the banking system would prohibit usury, or the imposition of exorbitant interests on cash loans, and cater mostly to the poor as well as traders.
(Manila Bulletin / 14 January 2016)
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Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday, 13 January 2016

Dr. Adnan Chilwan, Group CEO of Dubai Islamic Bank: Dubai is leading the revolution in Islamic banking

Since its inception, modern Islamic commercial banking has been intrinsically linked with the UAE. The formation of Dubai Islamic Bank over 40 years ago is widely regarded as the birth of the sector as it was the first financial institution to incorporate the principles of Islam into all of its practices. In the short span of time since then, the industry has rapidly established a firm foothold in the world of banking and finance and has steadily progressed from being a select ‘niche’ to a fast-growing ‘norm’.
The last financial crisis revealed the true value of this relatively nascent industry highlighting it as a transparent and fair system of banking for people, corporations, and governments alike. Islamic finance is now increasingly being recognised for its innovative and modern practices as well. Reflective of the industry’s success, global Islamic banking assets are expected to reach $1 trillion by the end of 2015, growing at a CAGR of 16 percent a year, according to EY. Indicative of the potential yet to be realised, the global industry profit pool is expected to exceed $30bn by 2020, as Sharia-compliant financing increases its share in emerging markets.
Looking to 2016 and beyond, innovation will continue to be critical for the ongoing development of the industry. For instance, efficiency can still be improved as Sharia-compliant institutions still lag behind their conventional counterparts, and are increasingly looking to embrace technological innovation in order to minimise operational costs as well as project a modern face of banking that would appeal to a younger generation of customers, which will be critical for ongoing growth.
Another area of development is the Islamic asset management sector, as the range of services available remains quite limited and there is a general lack of quality products in this space. To this end, Islamic investment instruments and securities related to savings and pension plans are also an area where significant progress can be made in order to appeal to a broader range of customers. Indicative of the untapped potential here, the total value of pension funds’ assets globally exceed $27 trillion, while those that are Sharia-compliant make up just 0.001 percent in spite of Muslims making up almost 25 percent of the world’s population.
(Arabian Business.Com  / 12 January 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Saturday, 9 January 2016

Islamic banking advances in Southeast Asia

In Malaysia, central bank data show the amount of outstanding Islamic loans grew 35 per cent from the beginning of 2014 to October 2015, while total loans expanded by 17 per cent.
Indonesians are less enthusiastic about Islamic banking but the sector still enjoys double-digit growth: Islamic loans increased by 13 per cent and total loans by 19 per cent respectively in the same period.

Islamic teachings forbid the charging of interest and investment in activities Muslims consider as sinful such as alcohol, tobacco and gambling. In response, Islamic financial institutions offer interest-free products and steer clear of un-Islamic industries.

A recent survey by FT Confidential Research, a Financial Times research service, found that 61 per cent of Indonesians and 73 per cent of Malaysians say that they either use Islamic banking services primarily or as often as conventional ones.

While religious obligation is the main driver behind the growth in Islamic banking, it is not the only one. The survey found that 60 per cent of those using Islamic banking services in Indonesia and Malaysia cited religious requirements as a factor.

Others were more interested by less divine incentives such as risk and cost. Islamic lending, for instance, puts a cap on effective interest rates — the so-called profit rate — while there is no legal or other imposed limit on interest rates under conventional lending.

Indeed, the appeal of Islamic banking can reach beyond the Muslim population. In the same survey, 13 per cent of Indonesian and 25 per cent of Malaysian Islamic banking customers were not Muslims.

But despite its broad appeal, Islamic banking still has only small market shares in the two countries.

At the end of the third quarter of last year, just 7 per cent of total loans worth $284bn in Indonesia and 27 per cent of loans worth $334bn in Malaysia were Islamic, according to Bank Indonesia and Bank Negara Malaysia, the central banks.

The market for Islamic banking is bigger in Malaysia than in Indonesia, even though Malaysia’s population is just 31m, compared with about 257m in Indonesia. One reason is the “soft infrastructure” installed by the Malaysian government to support the industry, including tax breaks and coherent regulation, since the 1980s. Indeed, Malaysia is a global centre of Islamic banking and finance, with 51 per cent of all outstanding sukuk (Islamic bonds) originated from the country in 2015.

Indonesia is playing catch-up, with various support systems still a work in progress. FT Confidential Research believes the long-term potential of Islamic finance in the country is immense and largely untapped.

About 88 per cent of Indonesians are Muslims, compared with about 61 per cent of Malaysians. The median age of Indonesians is just 29-years-old. Meanwhile, strong economic growth of 5 to 6 per cent for the past several years is enlarging the middle class.
Yet, Indonesians are severely underbanked compared to their regional neighbours. Only 36 per cent of adult Indonesians have a bank account, compared with 81 per cent in Malaysia, according to the World Bank.

Foreign banks are moving in. Large Malaysian banks with deep experience in Islamic finance such as Maybank and CIMB have set up in Jakarta and other big Indonesian cities as their home market saturates.

Emirates NBD, the largest banking group in the Middle East by assets, plans to acquire a stake in an Indonesian sharia-compliant bank to gain a foothold in the world’s most populous Muslim country. Other Gulf banks have expressed interest in doing the same, bypassing the competitive Malaysian market — usually the first Southeast Asian market for Middle Eastern banks.

(Emerging Markets / 08 January 2016)

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

Wednesday, 6 January 2016

Prospects of Islamic banking in Pakistan

LONDON: 
A hallmark of Islamic banking and finance in 2015 has been the resilience of Islamic retail banks in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries in the wake of historically low oil prices.

The year has proven to be a testing period for the global Islamic financial services industry, with the gradual exit of the likes of Islamic Bank of Asia in Singapore and the visible diminishing enthusiasm in Islamic banking and finance of global banks.
Pakistan ranks third in Islamic finance awards
Furthermore, Islamic asset management industry has also been slow in attracting new players from the western world. While the likes of Amana Growth Fund managed by Saturna Capital and Shariah-compliant funds by Azzad Asset Management have continued to excel, new players like Arabesque Asset Management, despite having some of the most impressive investment philosophies and methodologies, have yet to make a mark.
SEDCO Capital is another success story. It has shown great commitment to offer Shariah compliant funds with social responsibility in the heart of its investment philosophy.
However, other socially responsible Shariah compliant funds have not been as successful as the ones mentioned. For example, F&C Responsible Shariah Global Equity Fund’s assets under management (AUM) have shrunk from over $50 million in 2014 to $4.5 million at the end of October 2015.
There is some anecdotal evidence that sensitive investors prefer dealing with fund managers who manage only Shariah compliant funds and portfolios. Conventional fund managers managing compliant funds are fast going out of favour of Islamic investors. With this backdrop, Islamic asset management industry is poised for growth in Pakistan, where Islamic financial institutions adhere to Shariah standards more religiously than in many other countries.
This is consistent with what has for long happened in Islamic retail banking, which is dominated by full-fledged Islamic banks. Conventional banks offering Islamic financial services through dedicated Islamic branches or Islamic windows only feature marginally in Islamic retail banking.
There are certain exceptions to this general observation.
The likes of ADCB in the UAE and Bank Alfalah in Pakistan operate vibrant Islamic windows and close sources suggest that these banks are preparing for full-fledged subsidiary Islamic banks.
MCB Bank in Pakistan has already received a licence for full-fledged subsidiary Islamic banks and is in fact preparing for its full launch in 2016. On December 16, 2015, the board of directors of MCB Bank Limited approved the sale of the bank’s entire Islamic banking operation to its wholly-owned subsidiary MCB Islamic Bank Limited (MCBIBL) for Rs7.946 billion. The bank’s extraordinary general meeting to approve the transaction is scheduled for 8 January 2016.
While the global Islamic financial services industry continued to grow, it is the second consecutive year of single digit growth – 7.3% in 2015 – as opposed to 9.3% in the previous year. In fact, Islamic banking and finance has grown with a declining rate since 2013 when it grew by only 12.3%, compared with the 2012’s growth of 20.2%.
In this context, predictions by some industry observers and consultancy firms of the estimated size of the industry to reach $3.5 trillion seem to be exaggerated.
The Global Islamic Finance Report (GIFR) 2015 predicted that Islamic financial assets would reach $5.3 trillion by the end of 2020. However, in expectation of further slowdown in the growth of Islamic financial assets in the wake of low oil prices, continued social disorder and political conflict in some of the key IBF markets, Edbiz Consulting, the publisher of the report, has decided to revise future size estimates.
Situation in Pakistan
In Pakistan, however, Islamic banking has continued to grow, with share of Islamic banking assets in the national banking sector having grown to 11%. The industry is poised for further growth, as the fundamentals are right.
The State Bank of Pakistan, which commissioned Edbiz Consulting to conduct a survey ‘Knowledge, attitude and practices of Islamic banking in Pakistan’ in 2014, has confirmed time and again that there is an overwhelming and evenly distributed demand in the urban and rural areas of the country for Islamic banking.
Pakistan slips in WEF competitiveness rankings
According to Edbiz Consulting, the demand for Islamic banking is as high as 95% among the households at the retail level. “Demand stands at 73% among the businessmen,” according to the SBP survey, which is based on 9,000 households nationwide and includes banked and non-banked customers, and 1,000 corporates.
(The Express Tribune / 28 December 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Sunday, 20 December 2015

Gulf banks set to dominate global Islamic banking sector by 2020

Islamic banking assets of commercial banks based in Qatar, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, the UAE and Turkey (known as QISMUT) are set to exceed $801 billion in 2015, according to EY's World Islamic Banking Competitiveness Report 2016.
The report said this will represent 80 percent of international Islamic banking assets which are set to exceed $920 billion this year.
It added that In terms of banking market share, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar are expected to be the major players by 2020.

Saudi Arabia continues to dominate the share of the global Islamic banking market with 33 percent, followed by Malaysia (15.5 percent) and the UAE (15.4 percent), the report said, adding that Islamic banks in Bahrain have also been steadily gaining market share over traditional banks.
(Arabian Business.Com  19 December 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Tuesday, 15 December 2015

HSBC Amanah chief to head CIMB Islamic banking arm

Dec 14 CIMB Group Holdings Bhd , Malaysia's second-biggest bank by assets, said on Monday it had hired the former head of HSBC's Islamic arm to lead its Islamic banking operations.
Mohamed Rafe bin Mohamed Haneef, who was heading HSBC Amanah Malaysia Bhd, was appointed chief executive of CIMB Islamic Bank Bhd and the Group Islamic Banking Division effective Jan. 4 2016, CIMB Group Holdings said in a statement to the bourse.
The move sees Haneef, a 15 year Islamic finance vereran, taking the helm of one of the largest arrangers of sukuk or Islamic bonds at a time when the market seeks to expand into new markets and attract a wider range of issuers.
Haneef will replace Badlisyah Abdul Ghani who resigned from CIMB Islamic in July, and CIMB Group has been looking for a suitable replacement since the resignation.

The lender, the region's fifth-largest by assets, reported net interest income of 2.42 billion ringgit ($574.55 million) for the third quarter through September - its highest since December 2013 - driven by growth in operating income.
(Reuters / 14 December 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 7 December 2015

Turkish gov’t commences prep work to launch Islamic banking coordination mechanism


Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet ÅžimÅŸek has said preparatory work to launch a coordination mechanism for Islamic banking in Turkey have started, and the related circular note has recently been sent to the Prime Ministry. 

ÅžimÅŸek particularly stressed the rising popularity of interest-free Islamic banking, dubbed “participation banking” in Turkey, around the world since the 2008 financial crisis. 

“Britain performed its first sukuk export worth 200 million pounds in June 2014. TheCityUK group launched its ‘Secretary on Islamic Finance’ in 2011 to coordinate and support the development of Islamic finance. The Islamic Finance Task Force [IFTF] in the U.K. was established in 2013 with the aim of making the county an Islamic finance hub and to lure further investments in this field, so Britain aims to be a hub in Islamic finance,” he said. 

“Luxembourg has the largest Islamic finance investment funds among non-Muslim countries with its 5 billion euros of funds, following Saudi Arabia and Malaysia,” he added, as quoted by Anadolu Agency. 

ÅžimÅŸek also stated that Russia’s Sberbank had earlier announced that it would launch Islamic finance services in its own country. 

“Turkey has had one of the highest potentials in developing alternative banking activities in addition to traditional banking. In order to be able to realize this potential, new additional initiatives need to be created in addition to existing ones,” he said. 

The development of Islamic financial instruments and the launch of the mechanism for coordination are one of the priorities of the 64th Government Program and the 10th Development Plan, he added. 

ÅžimÅŸek noted that preparation has started in order to establish this coordination mechanism. 


(Daily News / 07 December 2015)

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

Sunday, 22 November 2015

Turkish watchdog to revise Islamic banking regulations


The head of Turkey’s banking watchdog has pledged to revise the regulations governing the Islamic banking sector to increase the popularity of the sector in the country.

Mehmet Ali Akben, president of the Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency (BDDK), said there was a strong need for changes to the rules governing what are known as “participation banks” in Turkey.

“We are trying to readjust those rules,” he told an Islamic finance conference in Istanbul on Nov. 19. “We believe this system will shine on both a local and global scale in the coming years.”

He said there was a demand for a financial model working under non-interest-based rules and that the BDDK had launched a separate body to analyze how Islamic finance could be developed and popularized in Turkey.

Launch of sharia boards for Islamic banking 

Akben said the BDDK would launch the required regulations enabling the system to grow further in Turkey and to become exemplary around the world. 

“In this vein, should the sharia boards be under the direction of the BDDK? ... There have plans to launch these boards under the Association of the Participation Banks, but this issue could be reassessed to determine which option is best,” he said.  

 Talat Ulussever, chairman of the Borsa Istanbul exchange, called for a system in which members of the public could invest in major projects.

“We need to exert effort to establish financial structures in which Turkey’s big projects in areas such as energy, communication, defense and infrastructure will be financed by people as profit is shared by them,” he said.

Ulussever said the 2008 financial crisis showed that conventional finance could not absorb volatility in global markets.

“There is a recent survey by the OECD that indicates financing through credit has a negative affect while economies that prefer stock exchanges for their financing needs grow faster and sustainably,” he said.


(Daily News  22 November 2015)

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

Tuesday, 17 November 2015

Bahrain's growing stature in Islamic banking underlined

Manama, Nov 16 (BNA): CEO Khalid Hamad of Banking Supervision at Central Bank of Bahrain highlighted Bahrain's leading standing attained in the world of Islamic banking through the adoption and development of the Islamic banking.


In a press conference held today at the Bahrain Stock Exchange to review the details of the World Islamic Banking Conference 2015, Hamad asserted that many of the developed and developing countries have resorted to Bahraini expertise and its qualitative initiatives in the field of Islamic banking. 

He attributed Bahrain's success to the sound Islamic banking policies followed, commitment to legitimate controls and implementation of best accounting and auditing standards in the Islamic banking sector. He called for investing in education, training, agriculture and health areas. 



(Bahrain News Agency / 16 November 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Saturday, 7 November 2015

Islamic financing is growing across the globe, trumping Western banking

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — It works like this: No interest on investments, but the borrower and the lender share the risk and split the returns. This growing form of banking, known as Islamic finance, is now making significant headway into Africa, one of the fastest-growing regions in the world.

In fact, proponents of Islamic banking are touting this alternative to classic Western financial practices as a better way to help Africa improve roads, develop state-of-the-art health care systems and create a massive middle class to address some of the issues hindering growth.
“Islamic finance offers excellent prospects for the African continent, which we should seize,” Ivory Coast Prime Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan said last month before an audience of around 500 people at the region’s first Islamic Finance Forum.
Nigeria’s securities commission last month staged a roundtable discussion to educate local lenders and businesses about the benefits of an “Islamic capital market.” The Central Bank of Djibouti this week is putting together a two-day event billed as the International Banking Summit Africa, which is designed to boost trade and investment between the oil-rich Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa using Islamic financing practices.
This form of financing — Standard & Poor’s estimates that Islamic finance grew by as much as 15 percent in the past decade to reach $2 trillion globally — could also be a way for rich Muslims from the Middle East and beyond to enhance their portfolios while adhering to their religion, which prohibits “riba,” or the charging of interest on monetary loans.
Those same investors might not otherwise recognize the potential in markets such as western Africa, said Fabrice Toka, a South Africa-based senior director covering sub-Saharan Africa at Fitch Ratings.
“Islamic finance doesn’t take away from that which you can already do with traditional financing,” Mr. Toka said. “It adds another pool of investors.”
Rather than charging the borrower a set interest rate for a set period, Islamic lending is based on Shariah principles and works on the basis of risk- and profit-sharing. The customer and the bank share the returns and risk of investments on negotiated terms.
“There is a level of return that is expected,” said Nida Raza, advisory director of the Saudi Arabia-based Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector, or ICD. “The difference is, it’s not interest; it’s profit.”
Home to roughly a quarter of the world’s Muslim population, Africa represents a growing market for faithful Muslims to put their money to work, according to an ICD report.
“Although the potential contribution of Islamic finance in favor of African economic development has long since been recognized by experts, the rhythm is now accelerating,” said the report, titled “Islamic Finance in Africa: A Promising Future.”
Ready for takeoff
Economic growth in Africa averages roughly 5 percent a year, rivaling Asia and other regions, according to the International Monetary Fund.
But since 2001, at least half of the 10 fastest-growing economies in the world have been in Africa. The continent also sports 15 percent of the world’s population, two-thirds of the Earth’s uncultivated arable land, rich energy resources and a rising youth population, according to the IMF.
Developed nations such as the United States, Japan and China have actively wooed African countries in recent years, typically with high-profile summits in which billions of dollars in deals and financing projects have been struck. Last week, India hosted its first such gathering for 54 African countries, including 41 heads of state, announcing a doubling of subsidized loans to the continent to $10 billion over the next five years, along with some $600 million in grants.
But around 340 million people in sub-Saharan Africa still lack reliable access to traditional banks, the ICD report noted.
Those trends have led the ICD to boost its funding in Africa by more than double to around $12 billion in the next five years.
“Africa has the highest growth in the world. It needs more finances to back up the growth,” said Islamic Corporation CEO Khaled Al-Aboodi. “Access to finances presently here are scarce and difficult to attain.”
Islamic financing can take different forms. An “ijara” investment involves a bank buying an asset — such as a tractor — that is leased to the debtor, who uses it for business. In “murabaha” lending, banks purchase goods and resell them to customers, who make installment payments on the goods at markups. In a “musharaka” deal, the bank and its customer launch a joint venture and share the resulting profits or losses.
Ms. Raza said Islamic banking protects debtors from interest charges that cut into debtors’ revenue whether or not they are operating in the black. Islamic financing also gives lenders more flexibility when debtors encounter hardships and threaten default, she said.
“The majority of Islamic finance transactions do carry a level of risk-sharing,” she said.
Ms. Raza noted, however, that debtors couldn’t necessarily exploit banks in Islamic financing. Banks can quickly repossess assets loaned under the terms of most transactions, for example. “There are deterrents put into place during the structuring process to avoid any sort of misuse of the flexibility that Islamic financing is supposed to ensure,” she said.
In West Africa, where at least 80 percent of the population is Muslim, Islamic financing has grown in popularity. Since 2014, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Niger and Senegal have issued “sukuks,” or Islamic bonds, totaling almost $800 million, according to the countries’ financial filings.
A sukuk pays a dividend based on a return from a tangible asset. It is similar to a traditional Western-financed bond, without the interest. Proceeds from sukuks often finance large state development projects for purposes such as education, agriculture and infrastructure.
“With these tools, we could build a freight terminal at the Felix Houphouet-Boigny Airport,” Ivory Coast’s Mr. Duncan said at the forum. “Cote d’Ivoire can use these finances for infrastructure development.”
Despite its promise, Mr. Toka said, it will take more than a new financing mechanism to bring prosperity to a region that has struggled with issues such as political instability and corruption, epidemics such as Ebola and terrorist threats from Islamic extremist forces such as Boko Haram.
“For Islamic finance to thrive, we need to provide the legal and regulatory framework that goes with it,” he said. “Countries need to have those frameworks put into place so it can actually help with the expansion of Islamic finance in Africa.”

(The Washington Times / 06 November 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

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