Islamic Finance
Islamic Finance
Islamic Finance
ISLAMIC FINANCE
FINANCIAL TIMES SPECIAL REPORT | Tuesday December 14 2010
www.ft.com/islamicfinancedec2010 | twitter.com/ftreports
Wider spread: strong expansion is expected as more and more countries, from Turkey to Nigeria to China, offer Islamic bonds and financial services
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slamic finance has weathered the storm. One of the worlds fastest growing asset classes before the financial crisis hit in August 2007 continues to expand, albeit at a slower pace. The Dubai debt standstill that rocked the industry a year ago looks more like a tremor than the cataclysm that was feared at the time, and the internal wrangles over the definition of what is religiously compliant appear to be resolved. Islamic finance banking assets have risen by 8.9 per cent this
interest, known as riba, which is seen as sinful under Islamic law as the creation of money from money itself is considered immoral. Nick Edmondes, joint head of Islamic finance at law firm Trowers & Hamlins, says: Islamic finance has withstood the financial shocks relatively well, as it is not exposed to the toxic mortgagerelated assets and derivatives that have hit the conventional financial sector. Razi Fakih, deputy chief executive of HSBC Amanah, the Islamic
finance arm of HSBC, adds: The financial crisis didnt have a direct impact on the Islamic industry, partly because the Islamic financial institutions were based in emerging markets, which werent significantly impacted. However, there have been casualties this year, as the fall-out from the financial crisis and the Dubai debt standstill took its toll. Some Islamic banks faced large losses because of their exposure to ailing property markets. The
Continued on Page 2
aimed at reversing an unexpected slowdown in the country that dominates the Islamic finance sector Page 4
shock of Dubai Worlds debt standstill request, borrowers are starting to return Page 4
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Nascent sector looks for new model
INVESTMENT BANKS Islamic investment
companies and banks, a group savaged by the global financial crisis, now need to diversify Page 6
On FT.com
Shariacompliance remains top goal
HEDGE FUNDS The Dubai debt crisis last year
may well have made the mediumterm prospects for a vibrant sharia hedge fund industry somewhat better
he headquarters building of Faisal Islamic Bank is one of the more imposing towers in Cairo, capital of Egypt. Severe, angular and decorated with Koranic verses, it looms over its neighbourhood. Yet in spite of the impressiveness of the headquarters of the countrys largest Islamic bank, the shariacompliant financial sector remains a backwater in the poor, populous and fastgrowing country. Egypts Islamic financial institutions hold about 3-4
per cent of the countrys total banking assets, says a report by McKinsey, the consultancy. Many observers say Faisal Islamic Bank represents the unrealised potential of the sector in Egypt. The sharia-compliant bank was incorporated in 1977 but has only 24 branches. Kuwait Finance House was founded the same year, but has more than 50 branches just in its domestic market an admittedly richer but far smaller country than Egypt. Islamic banking hasnt really developed in Egypt, at least considering [the banks] potential, says Radwa El-Swaify, an analyst at Beltone Financial, an Egyptian investment bank. They havent worked very hard, they have relatively few products and carry lots of nonperforming loans.
On paper, Islamic banking should be a perfect fit for Egypt. Modern Islamic banking was arguably founded in Mit Ghamr, a village on the outskirts of Cairo, in the early 1960s. Egypts 86m inhabitants remain severely underbanked: only about 10 per cent have bank accounts. Apart from a Coptic Christian minority, the country is overwhelmingly Muslim. The failure of Islamic finance to establish itself in
Egypt is partially due to the whiff of scandal that still hangs over the sector. In the 1980s, a number of small Islamic financial institutions collapsed, wiping out the savings of many Egyptians. While experts say most were little more than speculative financial ventures with dubious religious credentials, their failures tarnished the industrys reputation in Egypt, according to analysts.
Moreover, the religious imperative to avoid interest, or riba, is not as strong in Egypt as it is in the more conservative Arab Gulf. Following the Islamic banking scandals of the 1980s, Egypts leading cleric, Sheikh Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, the Grand Imam of Al Azhar Mosque and University which has been a leading centre of Islamic studies for centuries issued a fatwa indicating that simple bank
Tall but not wide: Faisal Islamic Bank has just 24 branches across Egypt
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interest would be permitted as long as it was not excessive. Even the more devout, poorer segments of society took note. Omar Elhitamy, the managing director of Orascom Housing Communities, a social housing development company, says that not one of the com-
investment remains a favourite, but Islamic bonds have started to regain the momentum they saw before the financial crisis
Cambridgebased adviser Maris Strategies explains why banks and financial services providers are increasingly optimistic
Contributors
David Oakley Capital Markets Correspondent Aline van Duyn US Markets Editor Robin Wigglesworth Gulf Correspondent Kevin Brown Asia Regional Correspondent Anousha Sakoui Capital Markets Reporter Sam Jones Hedge Fund Correspondent Rohit Jaggi Commissioning Editor Steven Bird Designer Andy Mears Picture Editor For advertising details, contact: Ceri Williams +44 020 7873 6321 Fax +44 020 7873 4296 ceri.williams@ft.com or your usual representative
banks facing the biggest problems tended to be based in the Middle East rather than Asia, which had learnt its lessons from the crises of the 1990s and has more robust local capital markets. In the Middle East, Gulf Finance House, formerly one of the strongest institutions in the region, faced problems on some of its debt. Investment Dar, which was seen as a success story before the financial crisis, also had issues on some of its loans. Malaysia, one of the big markets for Islamic finance, has run into some troubles, as global headwinds stalled growth of the sukuk, or Islamic bond, market, one
of the most high-profile and successful asset classes in recent years. Generally, problems over the standardisation of products and liquidity management, where difficulties in raising money mean investment projects can suffer, continue to hold back the sector. Regulators and bankers are attempting to address these issues. In Kuala Lumpur, an International Islamic Liquidity Management Corporation has been established. This will issue short-dated debt that can be used by banks and other companies to manage liquidity in a sharia-compliant way. In the Middle East, the Bahrain-based Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) and the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) are promoting increased standardisation and harmonisation of sharia products to improve the industrys credibility and make it more appealing for investors. In spite of the problems, many analysts insist the potential for further growth is great, as only a small per-
centage of Muslims, estimated at about 12 per cent of the 1.6bn globally, use Islamic finance. And it is not just in the Islamic world where bankers see possibilities for expanding the product. In Europe, particularly London, the industry is growing strongly, with nonMuslim investors seeing this type of finance as a sensible way to diversify as it offers a distinct product that appears more resilient amid the uncertainty in the western markets, especially in the eurozone. Some fund managers consider the weaker peripheral economies too risky to invest in. Islamic banks and institutions have grown without taking on to their books toxic assets, such as mortgage-related debt or complicated derivative products. They are not highly indebted, like many western banks, making Islamiccompliant products relatively safe investments. There are particular opportunities for Islamic finance to grow in retail banking and the provision of financial services to small businesses. On this front, banks such as CIMB
Islamic have expanded business in Asia, while ABSA Islamic Banking has extended its business in Africa. Citi Islamic Investment Bank is expanding in South America, Asia and Africa. In Europe, London is seeking to consolidate its position as the gateway to Islamic finance in the western world. The UK first corporate sukuk was launched
Nigeria and Senegal are set to issue their first Islamic bonds next year
in the middle of the year and Islamic banking continues to grow in the country. Investors remain hopeful the UK will issue the first sovereign western sukuk. The French government announced new initiatives in July to facilitate the introduction of Islamic products, while Turkey produced the first sukuk offering from one of its leading banks.
In other parts of the world, China has approved Bank of Ningxia to offer Islamic financial services, India is considering introducing Islamic banking practices, while Australia is reviewing taxation treatment of Islamic finance, banking and insurance products. In the Gulf, the population over the next decade is expected to soar by 30 per cent to more than 50m, increasing demand for products, says HSBC Amanah. The use of Islamic windows by conventional banks in north Africa highlights another potential area of growth because of the continents large Muslim population, many of whom do not use banks of any kind. Nigeria and Senegal are set to issue their first Islamic bonds next year and in Kenya, the central bank has licensed two Islamic banks. Oliver Wyman, the consultancy, expects Africa to double its income from this kind of finance by 2012. Islamic finance has grown rapidly in a short time it only properly took off after Malaysia issued the first
sovereign sukuk in 2002. For this reason, the optimists are confident it will continue to grow strongly. The sceptics, on the other hand, stress the limitations that strict religious rules place on product development. They say the market is unlikely to see a meaningful expansion in some of the more sophisticated derivative products, which are commonplace in conventional finance. For example, many Islamic scholars and investors see the much touted possibilities of developing a hedge fund sector appear at best debatable. Many see the term Islamic hedge fund as a contradiction that even the cleverest lawyers and financial engineers will struggle to overcome. The limitations that religious boundaries place on a financial product explain why the industry represents only 1.5 per cent of the worlds global financial assets. This small percentage means there is vast scope for growth but even the industrys biggest fans admit it will always remain a niche product.
Taking note: just M$18.9bn worth of Islamic bonds were issued in the first three quarters of this year
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alaysias Islamic finance market is back in recovery mode this year. A slide in sukuk issuance has injected an air of urgency to reforms aimed at restoring confidence in the wake of the global financial crisis. The value of Islamic bonds issued in Malaysia was just M$18.9bn ($6bn) for the first three quarters of this year, compared with M$32.3bn for the whole of last year and M$20.8bn in 2008, according to the Malaysian Securities Commission. The unexpected slowdown comes as Malaysia, which dominates the sukuk market with more than 60 per cent of global outstanding stock, takes steps to protect its position as a leading centre for the US$1,000bn Islamic finance sector. Najib Razak, the prime minister, announced in October that extra tax breaks would be available next year to promote innovation in Islamic financial products, and the government issued a US$1.25bn sukuk in May its first in eight years to help bolster the local market. Separately, Bursa Malaysia, the Kuala Lumpur exchange, will soon allow issuers to sell sukuk that can be marketed direct to retail investors, and Bank Negara Malaysia, the central bank, is pre-
paring to issue licences to two new banks to increase the capital base of the sector. Zeti Akhtar Aziz, governor of Bank Negara, told the Financial Times in October that Malaysias experience demonstrated the potential for Islamic finance to grow globally among non-Muslims who now account for more than half of customers at some Malaysian institutions. So long as we maintain products that are competitive, I believe [Islamic finance] will continue to grow at a very fast rate, she said. Other officials have taken a similar line. Zarinah Anwar, chairman of the securities council, told an Islamic capital markets forum in Kuala Lumpur that Malaysias unparalleled range of sukuk instruments gave the
helped make them generally robust. But he said problems with standardisation and limited liquidity management options for banks must be tackled to increase long-term stability. The liquidity issue is being dealt with through the establishment in Kuala Lumpur of an International Islamic Liquidity Management Corporation, set up by the multinational Islamic Financial Services Board in October with strong support from the Malaysian authorities. The IILMC will issue shortdated debt that can be used to manage liquidity. Some banks are also using a sharia-compliant commodities exchange on Bursa Malaysia, set up last year. Experts disagree on the dangers of the lack of standardisation in products, which flows from differences in interpretations of sharia law by the four main Islamic schools, and the limited availability of scholars who can rule on product acceptability. Daud Vicary, global leader of the Islamic finance team at Deloitte, said at a Global Islamic Finance Forum in Kuala Lumpur in October that the sector needed a clearer process for decision-making but having different schools of sharia thought is absolutely fine it stimulates discussion. Nik Norzul Thani, chairman of Zaid Ibrahim & Co, Malaysias largest law firm, says Islamic financial schools have achieved a harmonised view on 90 per cent of issues. But he says the increasing sophistication of Islamic financial products in Malaysia make it essential for scholars and bankers to communicate effectively: The days when sharia advisers never went to a bank and bankers never read the Koran have gone.
It is not defaults that pose a potential problem for the market but how they are seen to be dealt with
Farmida Bi Norton Rose
over the past nine months, allowing high-quality Dubai borrowers to access the debt capital markets once again. However he warns: We have to be careful in extrapolating from the Dubai World case, as much of the debt concerned wasnt Islamic debt, and the main Islamic instrument that was involved the Nakheel December 2009 sukuk was repaid on time and in full without any restructuring or delay. Islamic bond issuance has yet to recover to pre-crisis levels, though. So far this year there has been just $13bn issued down from the $17.5bn issued last year. Debt capital markets issuance from the UAE more generally is also down. According to Dealogic, just $10.7bn has been sold this year half the $21bn last year. Ms Bi says there has been some nervousness in the wake of the Irish debt crisis, but in the absence of any other major crises, there is a positive feeling about next year. The markets probably wont grow as quickly as in the boom years of 2006 to 2008. But that is not a bad thing.
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Looking into the future: the fullscale Islamic banking example of CIMB may be an example for others
Bloomberg
slamic investment banks and companies mushroomed across the Middle East in the years preceding the financial crisis, buoyed by increasing religious sensibilities and the flow of billions of petrodollars into the region. Companies such as The Investment Dar in Kuwait and Bahrains Arcapita and Gulf Finance House were among the most profitable institutions in the region and broadened the Islamic finance industrys geographical footprint and sophistication. But while most Islamic
commercial banks have fared relatively well, the financial crisis caused billions of dollars of losses and exposed severe problems in the business models of many Islamic investment banks. Moodys said in a recent
report on the sector: The speed at which the [shariacompliant investment banking] model failed was alarming: the most innovative and in-demand concept since the birth of modern Islamic finance around 40 years ago was wiped out in just a few months. Despite being a very profitable and robust concept, the . . . model did not survive its first wave of negative economic cyclicality, the rating agency said. The ingredients of the crises were the same at most institutions: mismatches between short-term debt and long-term investments, sector concentration, poor risk management, and a reliance on bulky but volatile mark-to-market investment revenue, rather than diversified, fee-based income streams. Gulf Finance House, once one of the most prominent Islamic investment companies, went through a selective default on some of its debts after tough negotiations with creditors. The Investment Dar, which owns part of UK carmaker Aston Martin, has also defaulted and is still locked in protracted talks with its lenders over a repayment plan. Other Islamic investment companies, including Arcapita and Unicorn Investment Bank, have fared somewhat better, but their liquidity, financial performance and capital base have come under tremendous pressure, according to Moodys. This has led many bankers and analysts to call for a rethink of how Islamic investment companies operate. Islamic investment companies have to take a step back and look at what works and what does not in the new normal, says a senior Bahrain-based
banker. Catering to regional demand for shariacompliant investments is clearly a sustainable business model, but how to do that will have to fundamentally change. Atif Abdulmalik, chief executive of Arcapita, one of the oldest Islamic investment banks, concedes that the industry has lessons to learn. But he says the engine needs fine-tuning, not a complete overhaul. The industry deserves much credit. Its been through an extremely testing situation and, despite its youth, it has done relatively well. Other bankers say more extensive surgery is needed. Many Islamic investment banks in the Middle East are in reality little more
The industry deserves much credit. Despite its youth, it has done relatively well
than speculative real estate investors or private equity funds, financed by Islamic debt obtained from international and regional commercial banks, they say. After the sectors problems over the past two years, these banks will be much less willing to extend financing to Islamic investment companies, says the head of Islamic finance at a large international bank. The future may lie instead with the more fullscale Islamic investment banking model followed by CIMB Islamic in Malaysia, and the investment banking arms of the large Saudi Islamic banks. These entities largely eschew the proprietary investments and bulky
asset management of most Islamic investment companies and resemble more closely the western concept of a full-service investment bank but backed by a stronger retail bank. Thanks to the liquidity made available alongside the parents safer funding mix, these investment banking subsidiaries/business lines can more easily weather unexpected ruptures in the economic cycle, Moodys noted. This trend appears to be gathering momentum. Qatar Islamic Bank and Boubyan Bank in Kuwait have recently followed Saudi banks in setting up separate investment banking subsidiaries. Al Rajhi Capital, for example, is the investment banking subsidiary of Al Rajhi Bank, one of the worlds largest Islamic retail banks, and offers brokerage, asset management, advisory, research, capital markets and underwriting services. Having Al Rajhi Bank as our parent company matters, of course, says Gaurav Shah, chief executive officer of Al Rajhi Capital. It makes us a strong, quality counterparty. The future for some of the investment banks and companies that dominated headlines in the pre-crisis years is more uncertain, says Mohammed Abdulmalik, chief executive of Capivest, a Bahrain-based Islamic investment bank. A number are slowly crawling their way out of the mess, and have learnt some lessons, but I think the jury is still out on what the future looks like for some of them, he says. What is clear is that, whatever model emerges from the crisis, it will have to have more than the one line of business.
he French like nothing better than to outshine the English. Although the ideal platform for this is usually the rugby field, the French see an opportunity to challenge their counterparts on the other side of the English Channel by developing Paris as a centre for Islamic finance in Europe. France, which has a Muslim population of 3.5m twice that of the UK is looking into legislation to allow the issuance of sukuk, or Islamic bonds, and would like to see more Islamic financial products developed in Paris. Paris has made progress in the past two years but in recent months the challenges of overtaking London have become clearer, as Muslim investors have increasingly shown a reluctance to switch their investments to the other side of the Channel. Farmida Bi, a partner at Norton Rose, one of the leading law firms in the Islamic finance sector, says: The headscarf issue [in France, headscarves are banned from public places such as schools and workplaces] is emotive. That has discouraged some Muslim investors from Paris. The scale of the challenges in developing the infrastructure in terms of financial and legal expertise has also become more apparent, as London is a much bigger and more sophisticated financial centre, offering an ideal gateway to the rest of Europe. London has five Islamic banks, while most of the conventional
London calling: the UK capital has a wide range of Islamic banking expertise
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global banks in the City have Islamic sections that offer expertise on structuring financial derivatives, underwriting sukuk, and developing trade finance. They also can offer the knowhow for drawing up property deals and buying equity, which is extremely popular with Islamic investors. London had a significant advantage, too, as it started introducing legislation much earlier than Paris. Since 2003, a number of finance acts have passed through parliament to help Islamic finance develop. This addressed a variety of tax and regulatory barriers, such as making changes on stamp duty
for the buying of property and the ironing out of tax problems in connection with the issuance of sukuk. Jervis Rhodes, head of corporate banking at the Bank of Middle East and London, says: You cannot compare any other European centre to London. It is where all the expertise is. It is ahead in terms of legislation and many Muslim investors want to buy property in London. Certainly, the UK market continues to see strong demand for property. Deals in Britain include the purchase of the UK headquarters of Procter & Gamble from Prupim, the property investment arm of
Prudential, for a syndicate of Gulf investors, the purchase of BTs regional headquarters in Leeds from LaSalle Investment Management and the purchase of InterContinental Hotel Groups global headquarters in Uxbridge for a group of Gulf investors. In other areas of finance, such as sukuk, there have also been encouraging developments, with International Innovative Technologies, a technology company based in the north-east of England, issuing the first UK corporate sukuk in the summer. Bankers and lawyers hope this might be the first of many other corporate sukuk deals in the UK. There are also hopes that the
more on institutional investments than on creating financial and investment products for individuals. Before the financial crisis, for example, there were emerging-market funds or
other investors in the US that would buy sukuk issues by banks or companies in Malaysia or Gulf countries as a way to gain exposure to those credits. In spite of a year of little activity, it is expected that 2011 will see some US companies following GE Capital which has itself said it plans to follow up the original transaction with another. No specific date has been set, however. The record low interest rates available in corporate bond markets in the US and strong investor appetite for debt sold by blue-chip companies also means there is little urgency for companies to diversify their funding sources.
According to bankers, discussions have started about trying to raise sukuk capital in 2011. However, the deals would probably take some time to come to the market, even once discussions pick up. Gulf investors are looking to diversify again, says Mr Cohen. There are still some US companies interested in diversifying their funding sources, but in general sukuk funding is more expensive than regular bond markets and the deals have higher transaction costs. Over time, for some companies, it is worth developing a relationship with investors wanting to buy sukuk.