Islamic Banking

March 31, 2008

Devon Bank In Chicago Ventures Into Islamic Banking

Chicago, IL (AHN) - Like a growing number of British banks which have discovered it pays to lend to Muslims, a bank in Chicago has recently ventured into Sharia banking. No interest loans now comprise 75 percent of the bank’s mortgage portfolio.

Devon Bank’s Islamic finance products are built on the following principles:
1. Products must be Shariah compliant.
2. Products must fit within both Islamic law and U.S. law, and without the uncertainty caused by separate agreements.
3. Products must make good business sense, both for the Bank and for our customers.
4. We must keep the transaction costs as low as possible.
Quoted from the bank’s website: "Our products are created to meet your needs by a staff versed in both U.S. and Islamic legal requirements, and then submitted to appropriate government regulators and Shariah scholars. We do not use conventional documentation with cover letters and we avoid the uncertainty of documents that do not properly reflect the Shariah requirements.
Wherever possible, our products are designed to resemble conventional banking products with which customers may already have some familiarity. Devon Bank strives to ensure that any extra costs incurred as a result of religious compliance are kept as low as possible. Where there are costs that exceed those of conventional transactions, we try to minimize them and clearly explain why they are being assessed."
With a neighborhood made up of Middle Eastern and Pakistani immigrants, the bank has its hands full of Muslim clients amid a slowdown in the U.S. banking sector. David Loundy, vice president and legal counsel of Devon Bank, told USA Today, "People started coming out of the woodwork" after word spread around the community that the bank was Sharia-compliant.
While Americans are grappling with home mortgage payments, Muslims are awash with cash from the spiraling oil prices, providing them financial means to acquire new homes. According to Moody’s Investors Service, the Islamic finance market has expanded by 15 percent annually since 2005 and is now valued at $700 billion.
Major global banks such as the Deutsche Bank, Citigroup and the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation had forayed into Sharia banking through affiliates. Major industrialized countries like the U.K. and Hong Kong are bidding to be Islamic banking hubs in their regions. Other financial institutions have also discovered the good bottom line behind Sharia-compliant business practices. Mortgage investor Freddie Mac started to purchase Sharia-complaint mortgages in 2001. Like Devon Bank, Freddie Mac purchases mortgages from the American Finance House Lariba, University Bank and Guidance Residential.
Islamic mortgages works on a lease-to-own scheme. The bank purchases the house, leases it to the buyer over a period of time until he has paid the full amount. It has double paperwork as the transaction involves two houses.
Local colleges too, like the DePaul University, are catching up by including Islamic banking in some courses. Amir Davoodi, a student at the university, began a course on Islamic banking recently. Davoodi told the Chicago Tribune, "They’re saying there’s a market out there for it. I know I can learn a lot and it will help with my career."
Sources: http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7010455460
http://www.devonbank.com/islamic/index.html

March 24, 2008

Misconceptions about Islamic Finance

Hany Abou-El-Fotouh, First Vice President and Group Head of Corporate Governance and Compliance at ABC Bank Egypt has participated as the panelist at the ‘Money Laundering Alert 13th Annual International Conference’ held in Hollywood, Florida, organized by Miami-based Alert Global Media, Inc., the publisher of Money Laundering Alert and moneylaundering.com Premium.  More than 1,500 attendees from the United States and 40 countries have signed up to this conference.

In the conference Abou-el-Fotouh has tackled major misconceptions about Islamic finance and banking among other issues.

About the size of Islamic finance Abou-El-Fotouh said “Islamic finance is rapidly growing. It is estimated at USD 700 bn globally and expected to be USD 1.4 trillion. There are more than 300 Islamic financial institutions and Islamic windows operating globally. The major principles of Islamic finance are prohibition of all kind of interest, no financing of sinful and socially irresponsible activities as well and dealings are on contractual basis"
 
He clarified several common misconceptions about Islamic banking and finance. “The major myth about Islamic banking is that it is about a cluster of hard line religious believers and about religion only. The reality is nearly 60% of Islamic banks’ customers are non-Muslims who mostly believe that Islamic finance is an alternative way of doing business and making money through wealth creation and distribution” Said Abou-El-Fotouh.

He further added "another misconception describes Islamic banks as being regulated only by Sharia (Islamic law). The reality is Islamic banks draw their founding blocks from Sharia and they operate fully under the `law of land’ where they exist"

Source: PR-USA.net

February 5, 2008

Islamic banks shielded from subprime

Islamic banks have been largely shielded from the U.S. mortgage crisis, which may even open doors for expansion beyond traditional strongholds in Arab and Asian markets, Bahrain’s central bank governor said.

Islamic banks should have shunned collateralised debt obligations linked to subprime, or high risk, mortgages because such complex instruments do not comply with Muslim law, Rasheed al-Maraj told the Reuters Islamic Finance summit on Monday.

Islam bans lending on interest and trading of debt. Scholars vet every stage of a transaction to ensure compliance with sharia, or Islamic law, making it unlikely that risks were lurking in the balance sheets of unsuspecting lenders, he said.

"In Islamic banking, there is no black box that needs a genius to unwind it," Maraj said. "Many of these conventional products that have been under stress lately are very complex and need special risk management tools

"In Islamic banking you will not have this kind of thing. Some of these products would not be sharia accepted."

Global conventional banks from Citigroup to UBS have written down more than $80 billion (40 billion pounds) in credit market losses since October as defaults on subprime mortgages triggered a credit crisis that threatens to tip the U.S. economy into recession.

By contrast lenders in the Gulf and Malaysia, the global hubs of Islamic finance, have barely reported any subprime related losses. Bahrain-based Arab Banking Corporation ABCB.BH, a conventional lender which has an Islamic arm, on Sunday reported a 38 percent fall in 2007 net income on subprime writedowns.

"From the financial results, we have not had any kind of indication that there have been any damages to the balance sheets as a result of this." 

"This does not mean that Islamic finance is risk free. We still have some concern about the concentration of risk … There is a lot of focus on real estate," Maraj said, adding that tools to allow Islamic lenders to hedge risk should be developed.

The subprime crisis could provide the Islamic banking industry with greater opportunity for growth, both from conventional retail customers looking for an alternative, and also from the collapse of Western asset prices.

"Maybe Islamic banking will be a safe bet for them," he said.

"I think opportunities exist in the United States and Europe as a result of this financial distress. The high valuation of the assets will come down."

By Mohammed Abbas - in Reuters






















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