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Friday 28 February 2014

Gradual Approach in Prohibiting Riba (P. I)

Among the proofs of the realistic approach of shari`ah is gradation in legislation. In the previous two articles of this series, I studied the gradual approach of shari`ah in prohibiting intoxicants and the abolishment of slavery that prevailed the whole world even before the advent of Islam. It was evidenced that it was not Islam who brought slavery into this world as unfairly alleged by some biased Orientalists as well as Westerners.

Here, I would study the case of the prohibition of riba(usury or interest) as a third example of gradation in legislation. 

Meaning of Riba

Lexically, the word riba means excess, increase, augmentation, expansion or growth.
Mawdudi defines riba as “a predetermined excess or surplus over and above the loan received by the creditor conditionally in relation to a specified period.”[1]

On the exact meaning as well as relation between riba and interest, Kahf states,

Riba is defined with regard to financial transactions as any contractual increment in a loan or debt due to the time element. This is exactly what we know today as interest. Both legally and financially, interest is defined as an increment paid by the debtor to the creditor for granting a loan or for extending the maturity of an existing debt.[2] 
Types of Riba
There are two distinguishable types of riba: [3]
1. Riba al-nasi’ah: It occurs when the specified increase is in return for the delay of, or waiting for, the payment.
2. Riba al-fadl: It occurs when the increase is mentioned irrespective of the postponement and is not offset by something in return.

Islamic Ruling on Riba
As far as Islamic shari`ah is concerned, riba is condemned and prohibited in the strongest possible terms. This prohibition cannot be questioned or undermined in any way.

Allah Almighty says in the Ever-Glorious Qur’an,
{… whereas Allah permits trading and forbids usury (riba)}. (Al-Baqarah 2:275) ,
{Allah has blighted usury …}. (Al-Baqarah 2: 276) and,
{O you who believe! Observe your duty to Allah, and give up what remains (due to you) from usury, if you are (in truth) believers. And if you do not, then be warned of war (against you) from Allah and His messenger.}. (Al-Baqarah 2: 278-9)
Kahf comments on the last verse as saying, “No other sin is prohibited in the Qur’an with a notice of war from Allah and His Messenger!”[4] Surely, this shows how grave the sin of getting involved in usurious transactions is in the sight of Allah and His Messenger.
Ibn `Abbas said that, “{Then be warned of war (against you)} means, ‘Be sure of a war from Allah and His Messenger.’ He also said, “On the Day of Resurrection, those who eat riba will be told, ‘take up arms for war.’ He then recited, {And if you do not, then be warned of war (against you) from Allah and His messenger.}. (Al-Baqarah 2: 279)”[5]
In the same vein, the Prophet’s Sunnah is abundant in hadiths that declare riba as unlawful as well as abhorred. To cite a few:
The Prophet (peace be upon him) said, “The wrath of Allah is on the taker of riba, its giver, its writer, and its two witnesses.”[6]
On the day of Fat-h Makkah (i.e., the opening of Makkah) the Prophet said, “All forms of riba during the time of jahiliyyah (pre-Islamic period of ignorance) is annulled and under my feet, and the first riba I annul is the riba of al-`Abbas (the Prophet’s uncle).”[7]
Ibn Majah reported that abu Hurayrah said that the Messenger lah (peace be upon him) said, “Riba is seventy types, the least of which is equal to one having sexual intercourse with his mother.”[8] 
Ibn Mas`ud narrated that the Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him) said, “May Allah curse whoever consumes riba, whoever pays riba, the two who are witnesses to it, and the scribe who records it.”[9]
It is also worthy of note that the wisdom behind the prohibition of riba is the elimination of injustice and the call for human brotherhood and cooperation. This will be clearly shown throughout the following lines. 
Catastrophic Effects of Riba
No one can deny the atrocities and catastrophes riba has brought to humanity both in the past and at present. The latest global financial crisis is a good example on this as attested to by financial specialists and economists from different backgrounds. Some Western as well as other countries still feel the pressure of that crisis from which their economies have not yet fully recovered.
To use Daryabadi’s eloquent words, “The devastating propensities of usury are visible to every eye. The evils attendant on it are neither few nor far between – the callousness it engenders, the profligacy it lets loose, the greed it encourages, the jealousy it breeds, the misery it entails, the abjectness it inculcates, and so on.”[10]Part of the wisdom behind the prohibition of riba – as hinted to earlier – is to fight all these injustices and more.
Moreover, “In the language of modern socialism, interest is an unjustifiable tax on the laboring classes, the unpaid wage of the laborer.” Accordingly, those who have abundance lend money and that money returns to them to increase that abundance, the increase being the unpaid dues of labor, which are the only source of legitimate wealth – “the rich are thus made richer and the poor poorer, by every fresh act of taking interest, and the stability of the social organism is thus disturbed.”[11]
Therefore, Islam clearly and decisively declares riba as unlawful, absolutely and unconditionally.
Let us take a look at the ancient civilizations to see their stand on riba. Greece and Rome both groaned heavily under riba’s yoke, but none of their legislators, like the economists of modern Europe, thought of banning it altogether. In Greece, ‘the bulk of the population became gradually indebted to the rich to such an extent that they were practically slaves’, and ‘usury had given all the power of the state to a small plutocracy.’ The Romans were nothing but worse than the Greek. ‘The attempt to regulate the rate of interest utterly failed. In the course of two or three centuries the small free farmers were utterly destroyed. By the pressure of war and taxes they were all driven into debt, and debt ended practically, if not technically, in slavery.’[12] 
Daryabadi further continues,
With all these horrors experienced and patiently borne, nobody ventured to eradicate the evil root and branch. The utmost that a Solon[13] among the ancients or a Bacon[14] among the moderns could advise to ‘grind the tooth of usury, that it bite not too much, that is to say, to regulate its rate, without attaching the slightest moral taint to the usurer’.
The Bible went no doubt many steps further inasmuch as it forbade the advance of usurious loans to the Israelites (Ex. 22: 25: DT. 23: 19). But even the Biblical prohibition did not include usurious loans to non-Israelites. It is the Ever-Glorious Qur’an which, to its everlasting glory, has categorically forbidden usury in all its forms.[15]
Even the people of jahiliyyah understood the fact that Allah is Good and does not accept but what is good and thus upon rebuilding the Ka`bah before Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) was sent as Prophet, one of them, namely Abu Wahb ibn `Amr said,
“O Quraysh! Do not let into this building anything but lawful gains; so no harlotry,riba, nor unjust practices [should be included].”[16]
(On Islam / 28 Feb 2014)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Phases of Prohibiting Riba

In Part One of this study, I explored the meaning of riba (interest or usury) and its ruling in Islamic Shari`ah. I also elaborated the catastrophes and atrocities of riba. Here, I would study the gradual stages of prohibiting riba in Islamic legislation.
First Stage:
This stage started with the revelation of the Makkan Qur’anic verse in surat ar-Rum whose meaning is rendered into English as,
{That which you give in usury in order that it may increase on (other) people’s property has no increase with Allah; but that which you give in charity, seeking Allah’s countenance, has increase manifold}. (Ar-Rum 30: 39)
Apparently, this is a direct advice that riba has no profits or gains with Allah. The verse came in the context of speaking about sustenance and recommendation of spending on relatives, the poor, and wayfarers. This shows the ethical, moral, and social dimension of the issue. According to Qur’an commentators, this verse applies to those who give to others gifts or services to receive from them greater benefits in return. Such seemingly good acts are meritless and deserve no reward from Allah, since He knows the real intention behind such allegedly good deeds.
Basically, riba is prohibited for the principle that “any profit which we should seek should be through our own exertion and at our own expense, not through exploiting other people or at their expense.”[1] However, as Muslims, we are asked to go beyond the mere act of avoiding what is wrong. We are enjoined to love our community in a practical manner; that is to spend of our own resources in the service of those who are in need. We should also have the belief that our reward is with Allah the Almighty Who will surely multiply it for us even more than what we do deserve because He is the Most-Generous.
Finally, the aim behind the verse is the “awakening of the live souls,” addressing the people who have not been aware so far that such gain from usury is to be interdicted.[2]
Second Stage:
Then, two Madinian verses in surat an-Nisa’ were revealed; these verses tackled one aspect of the story of the Jews and how they were condemned for taking riba when they were forbidden from taking it. The verses may mean in English,
{Because of the wrongdoing of the Jews We forbade them good things which were (before) made lawful unto them, and because of their much hindering from Allah’s way. And of their taking usury when they were forbidden it, and of their devouring people’s wealth by false pretences. We have prepared for those of them who disbelieve a painful doom}. (An-Nisa’ 4: 160-161)
Ibn Kathir said, “Allah states that because of the injustice and transgression of the Jews, demonstrated by committing major sins, He prohibited some of the lawful, pure things which were previously allowed for them.” In addition, “Allah prohibited them from taking riba, yet they did so using various kinds of tricks, ploys and cons, thus devouring people’s property unjustly.”[3]
The second verse is seen by many scholars as prohibiting riba, though some understood it as referring to the Jews and their taking of riba; a matter which – to them – leaves it unclear if such a prohibition applies to Muslims as well. However, in this verse a stronger expression is used, i.e., ‘take’ instead of ‘give’ which is used in the preceding verse in surat ar-Rum. As a linguist, I understand this as to connote the graduation in prohibition.

Third Stage:
Then the following Madinian Qura’nic verses were revealed and they may mean in English,
{O you who believe! Devour not usury, doubling and quadrupling (the sum lent). Observe your duty to Allah, that you may be successful. And ward off (from yourselves) the Fire prepared for disbelievers. And obey Allah and the Messenger, that you may find mercy}. (Aal `Imran 3: 130-132)
Commenting on the topic of riba, Daryabadi says,
The Arabic word is but partially covered by the English word usury which, in modern parlance, signifies only an exorbitant or extortionate interest. The Arabic expression al-Riba, on the other hand, means any addition, however slight, over and above the principal sum lent, and this includes both usury and interest.[4]
This means that any excess on the capital is riba (interest). There is no distinction in Islam in so far as prohibition is concerned, between low and high rates of interest.
In the above verses, Allah prohibits the believers from dealing with riba and from devouring the property of others through illegal means as they used to do during the pre-Islamic period. For instance, if the debtor asks for deferring a loan, the creditor would require interest and this would occur year after year until the little capital becomes multiplied many times. Also, Allah commands the believers to have piety in their hearts so that they may be successful in this life and the Hereafter. The believers are also threatened with Hell-fire and are warned against it in clear words.
In short, these verses enjoin the believers to keep away from riba if they desire their own welfare.
It is also worthy of note that there is a graduation in the strength of the word used in these verses, i.e., ‘devour’. In the verse in surat ar-Rum, the word “give” was used, then in the surat an-Nisa’ the word “take” was used, and here in surat Aal `Imran the word “devour” is used. Surely, the connotations as well as denotations of each of these words cannot be ignored by anyone who knows Arabic and appreciates the rhetorical inimitability of the Ever-Glorious Qur’an to the extent that makes one realize the fact that each and every word in the Qur’an is intended and no other word can replace it in its own context!

Fourth Stage:
Finally, four verses of surat al-Baqarah were revealed declaring the absolute and strict prohibition of riba in Islam. These verses may mean in English,
{Those who swallow usury cannot rise up save as he arises whom the devil has prostrated by (his) touch. That is because they say: Trade is just like usury; whereas Allah permits trading and forbids usury. He unto whom an admonition from his Lord comes, and (he) refrains (in obedience thereto), he shall keep (the profits of) that which is past, and his affair (henceforth) is with Allah. As for him who returns (to usury) such are rightful owners of the Fire. They will abide therein. Allah has blighted usury and made alms giving fruitful. Allah loves not the impious and guilty}. (Al-Baqarah 2: 275-276)
{O you who believe! Observe your duty to Allah, and give up what remains (due to you) from usury, if you are (in truth) believers}. (Al-Baqarah 2: 278)
{And if you do not, then be warned of war (against you) from Allah and His Messenger. And if you repent, then you have your principal (without interest). Wrong not, and you shall not be wronged}. (Al-Baqarah 2: 279)

The above verses are seen as categorically forbiddingriba of all forms and rates as ordained by Islam. They came in the context of speaking about spending in the Cause of Allah, giving in charity, abolishing differences between the rich and the poor through forbidding extravagance, and declaring riba as one of the means of blocking the institution of spending in the Cause of Allah. All these confirm the ethical dimension behind the prohibition of riba as well as the social and integral dimension among members of the Muslim community.
Verse 275 means, on the Day of Resurrection, these people will get up from their graves just as the person afflicted by insanity or possessed by a demon would. This is understood from the hadith by ibn `Abbas which reads, “On the Day of Resurrection, those who consume riba will be resurrected while insane and suffering from seizures.”
In the same vein, al-Bukhari recorded that Samurah ibn Jundub said in the hadithabout the dream that the Prophet (peace be on him) had, “We reached a river -the narrator said, ‘I thought he said that the river was as red as blood’- and found that a man was swimming in the river, and on its bank there was another man standing with a large collection of stones next to him. The man in the river would swim, then come to the man who had collected the stones and open his mouth, and the other man would throw a stone in his mouth.”
The interpretation of this dream was that the person in the river was one who consumed riba.
Also, these Qur’anic verses show the difference between trading and riba and states that Allah has permitted trade and forbidden riba. The reason behind this can be learned from the following words, “Whereas legitimate trade or industry increases the prosperity and stability of men and nations, a dependence on usury would merely encourage a race of idlers, cruel blood-suckers, and worthless fellows who do not know their own good and therefore akin to madmen.”[5]
Verse 276 shows that Allah does not bless riba and that He increases charity. This can be also understood from the hadith of ibn Mas`ud which reads, “Riba will end up with loss, even if it was substantial.”[6]
And the hadith narrated by al-Bukhari that reads, abu Hurayrah said that the Messenger of Allah (peace be on him) said, “Whoever gives in charity what equals a date from lawful resources, and Allah only accepts that which is good and pure, then Allah accepts it with His right (Hand) and raises it for its giver, just as one of you raises his animal, until it becomes as big as a mountain.”[7]

 Finally, the above verses reproached those taking riba; they established a clear distinction between trading and riba; they required Muslims to terminate all forms ofriba, instructing them to take only the principal sum of the debt, and abstain from taking even the principal money in case the debtor is in difficulty.

A Final Word
One of the Laws of Allah in natural disposition of man is the difficulty of change especially with things one is accustomed to and feels familiar with. Before Islam, the Companions of the Prophet (peace be on him) acquired habits that became part and parcel of their own lives. Islam came with morals and rulings that are contrary to some of these habits. It was out of Allah’s Mercy and Wisdom – which were also taught to His Messenger (peace be on him) – that the application of change came gradually and that gradation was one of the objectives and key characteristics during the Prophet’s life.
Examples of gradual approach Islamic legislation include the gradation in prohibiting intoxicants and riba as well as the abolishment of slavery step by step and through a deliberate systematic mechanism that led eventually to the complete avoidance and total submission to the Ordinance of Allah and His Messenger without the slightest inclination to return to the same state of affairs as was before Islam.

(On Islam / 03 Feb 2014)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Asian retail sukuk looks to broaden appeal of Islamic finance


KUALA LUMPUR/SYDNEY: Issues of Islamic bonds targeting retail investors in Indonesia, Malaysia and Pakistan could broaden the appeal of sharia-compliant financial products, create a more active investor base and convince more companies to raise funds with sukuk.

Last year saw the first-ever issue in Malaysia of retail sukuk, which are offered to the public rather than being sold to banks or placed with large institutional investors.

The Malaysian issue was followed this month by Karachi’s electric utility; Indonesia’s finance ministry has been offering sovereign paper to the mass market since 2008.

Authorities hope that by involving large numbers of individual investors, retail sukuk can become popular among 400 million Muslims across the three countries - roughly one in every four Muslims in the world.

“We are very optimistic, as in the market there is demand for sharia-compliant financial instruments,” said Amir Khan Afridi, director at Pakistan’s Securities and Exchange Commission.

Proponents hope that retail sukuk will serve more than investment and fund-raising purposes; they could raise awareness of the principles of Islamic finance, such as its bans on interest payments and pure monetary speculation.

“This will provide an opportunity to investors to debate Islamic finance concepts. These debates and discussions will help bring more clarity among the public,” Afridi said.

Pakistani utility K-Electric, which serves over 20 million consumers, is in the process of raising 6 billion rupees ($57 million) through the country’s first retail sukuk issue. Afridi said another Pakistani firm, which he declined to name, had applied for permission to conduct such an issue.

K-Electric decided on its issue after it sold a 2 billion rupee conventional retail bond last year which was fully subscribed within six weeks, a company spokesman said.

There are major obstacles to successful issuance of retail sukuk, which explains why the instrument did not appear earlier in Malaysia and Pakistan, and why non-government issuers have not yet emerged in Indonesia.

In the Gulf, the world’s other main centre of Islamic finance, many sukuk are listed on stock exchanges - in theory allowing them to be traded by individuals - but issues are targeted at institutions, not at retail investors.

The United Arab Emirates’ National Bonds Corp offers sharia-compliant savings schemes in which investors can buy savings certificates based on the mudaraba format in very small denominations, but this stops short of a direct issue of sukuk to the retail market.

In Malaysia, Jamaluddin Nor Mohamad, head of Islamic and alternative markets at Bursa Malaysia, the national exchange, said engaging with potential issuers was a “daunting task”, while it was hard to raise awareness of the product among retail investors more accustomed to other instruments such as equities.

“The product features of a fixed income instrument did not fit perfectly into the mind space of our existing investors.”

Lack of familiarity has raised the costs of issuing. When Malaysia’s DanaInfra Nasional, set up by the finance ministry to raise funds for the country’s largest infrastructure project, issued its debut 300 million ringgit ($91 million) sukuk in January 2013, it structured the instrument to mimic an equity IPO but still had to offer a price premium to attract buyers. This created a “negative perception” among potential issuers, Jamaluddin said. DanaInfra’s subsequent retail sukuk, a 100 million ringgit issue last October, tried to correct this by pricing in line with the over-the-counter market used by big institutional investors.

DanaInfra may make two more retail issues of 100 million ringgit each in 2014, Jamaluddin said. “We continue to highlight that it is difficult for us as an exchange to promote this product when there is only one issuance. On that basis, we are saying two is not enough.”

In a statement, DanaInfra said the retail sukuk market needed more time to mature. “It may only be achieved with continuous support from all parties including the regulators, the brokers and the market makers.



(Daily Times / 28 Feb 2014)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday 26 February 2014

Islamic Development Bank Aims To Price Benchmark Sukuk On Thursday

Islamic Development Bank is aiming to price a benchmark-sized Islamic bond issue on Thursday after releasing initial price guidance for a five-year deal, a document from lead managers showed.

The supranational lender set initial guidance at mid-to-high 20s over midswaps, the document said on Tuesday.

While no definitive size has been set for the issue, the first from the AAA-rated bank since May, the document said that it was expected to be benchmark-sized – which is traditionally understood to mean in excess of $500 million.

The banks arranging the transaction are CIMB, Commerzbank, First Gulf Bank, HSBC, Natixis, National Bank of Abu Dhabi and Standard Chartered.

(Gulf Business / 26 Feb 2014)
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Pakistan: SBP unveils 5-year plan to boost Islamic finance

KARACHI: Pakistan's central bank has published a detailed five-year plan to promote Islamic finance through an array of proposed legislative changes, product incentives and instructions to market participants.
The plan aims to double the branch network of Islamic banks, which now have about 1,200 branches, and increase the industry's market share to 15 per cent of the banking system by 2018 from roughly 10 per cent now.
The document says it would create a level playing field for Islamic banks in the world’s second most populous Muslim nation; their financing-to-deposit ratio would reach a level that was at least on a par with their conventional peers.
The central bank said the plan would focus on improving the public's perception of the industry, and it included a detailed timetable for the gradual roll-out of initiatives.
“Despite strong growth momentum, the industry perception is still not very positive, largely due to limited awareness and similarities between conventional and Islamic banking products,” said Saleem Ullah, director of the central bank’s Islamic banking department.
The regulator aims to encourage Islamic banks to not only obey industry rules but also follow the spirit of Islamic principles, such as an emphasis on transactions based on real economic activity rather than monetary speculation.
“Product offerings are overwhelmingly debt-based, which though they meet the minimum sharia requirements don’t meet the sharia objectives of risk- and reward-sharing, and equitable and broad-based distribution of economic gains,” Ullah said.
As of September, Pakistan had five full-fledged Islamic banks and 14 others offering Islamic banking products; they held a combined 926 billion rupees ($8.8 billion) of assets or 9.5 per cent of the total, central bank data showed. That compares with around 25 per cent in the Gulf Arab region.
Legal framework
The central bank intends to develop a distinct legal framework for Pakistan’s Islamic banks by 2018, and to propose changes to its own charter and review other legislation to eliminate any confusion and inconsistencies.
It will work with federal and state governments to provide tax neutrality for Islamic banks to limit extra product costs.
The regulator will also step up adoption of guidelines from the Malaysia-based Islamic Financial Services Board and the Bahrain-based Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions, the global industry's two main standard-setting bodies.
A sharia governance framework is scheduled to be released in Pakistan this year which will specify roles and responsibilities of management, scholars approving Islamic finance activities, and sharia compliance and audit officers.
Guidelines for development finance institutions to start offering Islamic banking are to be issued by 2015. An alternate resolution mechanism for resolving Islamic banking disputes is planned for 2016.
An Islamic pricing benchmark for money market transactions and short-term lending would be devised by 2015, as well as guidelines for treasury products. By 2016, the central bank is to have rationalised minimum capital requirements for full-fledged banks, Islamic windows and Islamic banking subsidiaries of conventional banks.
This would be complemented by a media campaign to promote the industry which was launched last year and is to be strengthened.
Complex
The central bank's complex plan would be challenging to implement for any regulator, even in more developed economies than Pakistan. Success in all of the initiatives is not entirely under the central bank's control; it will need the cooperation of other institutions such as parliament and the finance ministry, which may be distracted by other issues.
Nevertheless, the central bank appears willing to invest considerable effort in the scheme. Last month it named a new deputy governor to focus on Islamic banking and enlisted renowned scholar Muhammad Taqi Usmani to its sharia board.
Its plan addresses some challenges, such as the need to develop a short-term Islamic money market, which have dogged Islamic finance globally for years and have not been resolved by regulators in many other countries.
To harmonise industry practices, Pakistan's central bank plans to review major products and issue instructions by 2016 on products' essential requirements. It will restrict certain mechanisms in Islamic banking transactions such as agency agreements, hiba (gifts) and waad (unilateral promises) which it believes can be criticised by scholars.
Incentives would be introduced by 2015 to stimulate profit-sharing transactions such as musharaka and mudaraba, which are widely known but relatively rarely used Islamic contracts.
By 2017, housing finance products would be designed based on market prices and rentals, rather than the current practice which uses interest-based pricing benchmarks. Guidelines would also be developed by next year for project and infrastructure sukuk (Islamic bonds).
The regulator will encourage Islamic banks to increase financing to the agriculture sector and to small enterprises. By 2015, the banks are expected to allocate at least 5 per cent of deposits or 10 per cent of financing to each sector.
Similar efforts will encourage financing of low-income housing, where there is unfilled demand of 7.5 million housing units that is accumulating by 350,000 units every year, the central bank said.
It plans to revamp an existing sharia-compliant export refinance scheme and develop a long-term financing facility by 2015.
(Dawn.Com / 25 Feb 2014)
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Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Tuesday 25 February 2014

Bahraini Islamic Bank Al Baraka Q4 net income climbs 23%

Reuters – Bahrain’s Al Baraka Banking Group reported a 23% increase in fourth-quarter net profit on Sunday, and said it would continue expanding its network and issuing further sukuk through its foreign subsidiaries in 2014.

The Islamic lender recorded a net attributable profit of $32m in the three months to 31 December, compared with $26m in the corresponding period of 2012, the bank said in a statement.

The hike came despite a slight decline in total operating income vis-à-vis the same quarter of 2012 to $227m.

For the full-year 2013, net attributable profit gained 9% to $145m, which the bank said was a result of its expanded operations, improvements in asset quality and better cost efficiency.

Al Baraka has operations in fifteen countries predominantly across the Middle East and Africa, including nations which have seen significant economic turmoil in the last year such as Syria, Turkey, Egypt and Sudan.

Adnan Ahmed Yousif, chief executive of Al Baraka, said in the statement that the results posted by the lender could be considered “satisfactory by all standards if we take into account the difficult economic and financial conditions that prevailed in the region and the world as a whole.”

Total assets at the end of 2013 stood at $21bn, up 10% over the end of the previous year. Loans and advances and deposits increased 7 and 8% respectively over the same timeframe.

Al Baraka said it planned to add 81 branches to its network in 2014, in countries including Turkey, Pakistan, Jordan and Egypt. It currently has 479 branches, the statement added.

The bank would also continue its policy of “diversifying financing resources for our subsidiary units through the issuance of Islamic sukuk.”

A senior executive at Albaraka Turk, the bank’s Turkish subsidiary, told Reuters last month it planned to issue sukuk worth between $300m and $400m in 2014, following on from its debut $200m issue in April 2013.

(Daily News Agypt / 24 Feb 2014)
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Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Gulf Ties Could Aid Islamic Finance In Italy

Islamic finance has so far made only marginal progress in continental Europe.

Bankers and academics in Italy are stepping up efforts to develop Islamic finance in the country, a campaign which could benefit from growing economic links between Gulf countries and the euro zone’s third largest economy.

Islamic finance has so far made only marginal progress in continental Europe, mainly in France and Germany. But Italy is seeking trade and investment with wealthy Gulf Arab states as a way to grow out of its debt problems.

Kuwait’s sovereign wealth fund announced this month that it would invest 500 million euros ($685 million) in Italian companies in coordination with the Italian government’s own strategic investment fund. Italy made a similar deal with Qatar last year.

Italy’s trade ties with the Gulf are booming; its exports to the United Arab Emirates hit 5.5 billion euros in 2012, a 16.7 per cent rise from 2011, government data shows.

Only about two per cent of Italy’s population of 61 million are Muslim. But the hope is that as Gulf companies and investors increase their activities in Italy, Islamic finance – which follows religious principles such as bans on interest payments and pure monetary speculation – will follow.

Italian firms raising loans could use Islamic structures to attract sharia-compliant banks from the Gulf, for example. Italian bonds and equities could become attractive to Islamic funds if they were certified as sharia-compliant.

“I think the development of sharia-compliant products is an important opportunity for Italy – it might become one of the drivers to get finally out of the economic crisis,” said Enrico Giustiniani, analyst at Banca Finnat Euramerica in Rome.

“There is quite a big interest from Islamic funds and Islamic institutional investors to invest in Italy, especially in this period with many companies on sale.”

INDEX

Banca Finnat has gone as far as designing a hypothetical index of sharia-compliant stocks, which features some of the country’s best-known luxury brands, Giustiniani said.

“A specific index still does not exist, but the interest is very high. The luxury sector is a brand required by foreign institutional investors and it is a very important growth driver for our country.”

Gulf investors have already shown considerable interest in Italy’s luxury good firms; in 2012, for example, Italian fashion brand Valentino was bought by Qatar’s royal family.

Fondazione Istud, a Milan-based business school, plans to establish an Islamic finance position this year, intended as a venue for industry research and to develop proposals aimed at Italian decision makers.

This would be the first structured attempt to provide industry information and influence legislation, Marella Caramazza, director-general of Fondazione Istud, told Reuters.

“Certainly regulators and practitioners seem to demonstrate a general interest on this subject in our nation, but at the same time tend to have a very conservative approach.

“At this stage, we are trying to involve stakeholders and gather funds at different levels, in order to begin with the activities,” Caramazza added.
REGULATIONS
These activities should include a review of existing regulations, mainly those covering real estate registration taxes, said Hatem Abou Said, representative in Italy of Bahrain’s Al Baraka Banking Group (ABG).

Tax rules are particularly important for Islamic finance because many of its asset-based transactions are vulnerable to double taxation under conventional accounting methods; addressing such barriers could lure Islamic banks to the market.

Currently, however, only broad discussions are taking place with Italian policy makers and no specific agenda is in place, said Francesca Brigandi, president of COMEDIT, the Italian-Mediterranean and Gulf Countries Chamber of Commerce.
While political and legislative hurdles remain, Italy’s central bank is no stranger to Islamic finance as it monitors the sector on a regular basis, though it does not have a specific group studying Islamic finance, said a central bank spokesman.

Its research department has conducted formal studies, held seminars on Islamic finance as far back as 2009, and last year co-hosted a forum with the Malaysian-based Islamic Financial Services Board, one of the industry’s standard setting bodies.

Rony Hamaui, chief executive of Milan-based Mediofactoring, a fully owned subsidiary of Intesa Sanpaolo, Italy’s biggest retail bank, said his and other Italian companies had explored Islamic financing options in the past but did not do deals, partly because of a lack of regulatory support in Italy.

However, deals could start to materialise – perhaps involving Italian firms overseas – even without government support, as companies increasingly seek to broaden their funding sources, Hamaui said. “Liquidity is becoming a more and more important problem in Europe.

(Gulf Business / 25 Feb 2014)
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