Islamic Banking

March 24, 2008

Islamic finance is gaining importance in non-Muslim nations

By Jasim Ali, Member of Parliament, Bahrain

I wrote this article in Tokyo during a week-long visit to Japan. The trip was partly designed to provide me the opportunity to appreciate the Japanese model of economic development. As it happened, the Japanese side wanted to benefit from my knowledge about the economies of Gulf Cooperation Council.

Among other things, I was asked to deliver a speech on Islamic banking at the Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA). I had to research the subject and meet with several specialists in the field during the course of preparing for the lecture. These are some of my key findings.

To begin with, in Islamic finance, money can only earn returns if used in productive or real investments. This explains why deposits in banks cannot earn interest. Still, prohibitions are made against guaranteed and predetermined rates of return. Conversely, Islamic finance encourages risk-sharing and entrepreneurship.

The Islamic banking sector is big. As of January, some 300 Islamic Financial Institutions (IFIs) operated in 75 countries, managing some $500 billion. The GCC has the largest concentration of IFIs due to the simple fact that the region is the primary source of funding for Islamic banking activity.

In addition, I explained to the audience some of the primary Islamic banking products. These include Murabaha or cost plus financing, which accounts for 75 per cent of Islamic financial activities such as purchase of cars and houses. Another well-known product is that of Mudaraba, or profit sharing, in turn used for general investments. Yet another product is Musharaka, or equity participation, used in joint ventures.

Other emerging products include Ijara (leasing), Salam (deferred payment or delivery of goods) and  Sukuk (Islamic bonds).

IFIs have been credited with undertaking mega projects, as they usually are not under pressure to bring in quick returns.

For example, Arcapita is developing the $2 billion Bahrain Bay, a project that should transform Manama once completed in 2010. The amount is substantial for a small economy like Bahrain, which has a GDP of $16 billion and state budgeted expenditures of $5.5 billion in 2008.

Growing demand

Furthermore, there is a growing demand for Islamic banking in non-Muslim countries. Established in 2004, the Islamic Bank of Britain (IBB) offers financial products compliant with Sharia. And it is suggested that the UK government is contemplating issuing sukuk. France is seeking to get a share of Islamic finance on the back of its considerable Muslim community. Against this background, I urged the audience at JIIA to ensure that Japan is not left out of a growing industry. By one account, Islamic banking is growing at the range of 15 to 20 per cent per annum.

Nevertheless, Islamic banking must overcome certain challenges. These include developing short-term products to absorb demand and to help develop a secondary market.

The second concern deals with ensuring the availability of Sharia scholars with knowledge of conventional and Islamic finance. The third matter deals with ensuring availability of qualified human resources meeting the requirements of an ever growing industry. It is believed that demand exceeds supply in all three cases.

Another test deals with ensuring uniformity of application of accounting principles for Islamic banks. The Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions sets accounting and auditing standards for IFIs. Yet no single body has jurisdiction over Islamic finance houses to implement standards.

I ended my talk at JIIA urging Japan to join the bandwagon of Islamic banking.

Source: Gulfnews.com

January 21, 2008

Japan’s megabanks tap into Islamic finance business

Tokyo - Japanese megabanks are trying to increase their presence in the Islamic finance industry, Japanese media reports said Tuesday.

Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ has invested in Malaysian investment bank CIMB with a 30-per-cent share in the global business of issuing Islamic bonds, or Sukuk.

Another Japanese financial giant Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp helped finance construction of oil refineries in Saudi Arabia in 2006 and Kuwait last year as part of its strategies to tap Islamic finance for investments in petrochemical plants and large-scale projects in the Middle East, Jiji Press said.

The banking institutions must break into the Islamic finance industry in order to expand their businesses in the Middle East, where large-scale projects are in progress thanks to rising oil prices, an analyst was quoted as saying.

With the continuing surge in oil prices, the Islamic finance industry is expected to double by 2010 to 1 trillion dollars.

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September 9, 2006

Japan set to enter Islamic banking

The government-backed JBIC said it was studying the possibilities of issuing Islamic bonds to help Japanese businesses diversify their fund raising.

Japan is looking to become the first major industrialized nation to issue Islamic bonds in hopes of attracting money from oil-rich Muslim countries, a bank official said yesterday.

Islamic financial practices ban the payment or receipt of interest or any transactions that include alcoholic beverages or gambling, which are banned by the Koran.

"The bank is studying the possible issuance of the bond with Malaysia," said Hiromi Inukai, a spokeswoman of the government-backed Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC).

"The bank has had talks with the central bank of Malaysia with the intention to attract ample petro-dollars not only to Japan but also to the whole of Asia," she said.

She declined to give further details such as how much of the bond JBIC officials, with the support of the finance ministry, would place with Bank Negara Malaysia, the Malaysian central bank, and when.

Japanese news reports have said that the JBIC has formed an advisory board of Islamic legal scholars to study Islamic financial practices. Britain’s Financial Times said the bond would be valued at US$300 million to US$500 million and launched around January.

First G7 nation

Japan would be the first G7 nation to issue the Islamic bond, called sukuk, bond on a national basis, although companies in the developed world have already done likewise.

Japan would be the first G7 nation to issue the Islamic bond, called , bond on a national basis, although companies in the developed world have already done likewise.

Hideki Nukaya, a researcher at the Institute for International Monetary Affairs, said JBIC’s envisaged Islamic bond placement would help diversify funding sources for many large Japanese businesses.

"Japan and its companies could get a foot in the door and become more active players in Islamic financing by gradually making progress and learning the methods," Nukaya said.

"Once JBIC places the sukuk bond and learns the methods, Japanese companies would be able to have more options for financial resources when they need a bulk of money, not only through conventional but also through Islamic bond issuance," he said.

"But compared with conventional projects, Islamic banking requires more preparation, which the Japanese financial institutions are doing right now," Nukaya added.

Japanese companies will likely need to study up on religious regulations, such as rules on interest, as the country has a miniscule Muslim community.

Demand for Islamic financing is growing in countries with significant Muslim populations, particularly in the Middle East.

Largely Muslim Malaysia is the current Asian leader in Islamic banking after introducing services in 1983.

Leading position

To cement its leading position, the country is liberalizing its Islamic financial system and promoting itself as a center for education about Islamic finance.

To cement its leading position, the country is liberalizing its Islamic financial system and promoting itself as a center for education about Islamic finance.

Total worldwide assets of Islamic financial institutions exceed US$250 billion and are growing 15 percent annually, according to the IMF.

In 2003, the Islamic Bank of Britain opened in London and last year Britain’s fifth-largest bank, Lloyds TSB, said it would introduce personal bank accounts compatible with Islamic law.

In 2004, the impoverished eastern German state of Saxony-Anhalt became the first in Europe to issue an Islamic bond in hopes of finding new sources of financing.

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