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Showing posts with label Islamic capital market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamic capital market. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Malaysian Islamic capital market now worth RM1.5 trillion

ICM now accounts for 56% of the overall Malaysian capital market, said the Securities Commission deputy chief executive Datuk Dr Nik Ramlah Mahmood.
“Seventy-one per cent of our public listed companies are designated as syariah-compliant. We also maintained our position as the largest sukuk issuer in the world, accounting for 69% of the global sukuk issuance,” she said at the BNP Paribas -INCEIF Centre for Islamic Wealth Management Symposium here yesterday.
“She said better wealth creation and investment opportunities for investors had also been made available by increasing the number of full-fledged Islamic fund management companies in Malaysia.
“Our Islamic fund management industry with RM97.5bil in assets under management, is managed by 19 asset management companies licensed to exclusively manage syariah-compliant funds.
“Of the total assets under management, RM42bil is in the form of syariah-compliant unit trust funds which grew by 21% in 2013,” said Nik Ramlah.
“Of particular relevance to the Islamic wealth management industry is the fact that Malaysia now has 52 Islamic wholesale funds with almost 15 billion units in circulation with a total net asset value (NAV) of RM16.43bil.
“This represents almost 28% of the NAV of all wholesale funds in Malaysia. While it is clear that the local ICM has supported domestic growth by offering a multitude of financing and investment opportunities to domestic businesses and investors, it also continues to leverage on Malaysia’s core strengths to make very significant strides in the international arena and is now increasingly more integrated with the international market,” she added.
According to Nik Ramlah, a milestone was achieved in this regard with the introduction of the revised screening methodology of listed stocks.
“The two-tier quantitative approach introduced in 2013 further aligns our screening process with international practices, thus paving the way for a greater inflow of foreign Islamic funds into the domestic markets,” she said. — Bernama
“By also incorporating a two-tier quantitative benchmark approach comprising business activity and financial ratio benchmarks, the adoption of the revised methodology is envisaged to further enhance the attractiveness of the Malaysian Islamic equity market and fund management segments to international investors.
“With this in place, the wealth management industry should gain more traction with a wider market, especially from investors looking for syariah-compliant wealth management solutions,” she said.
The symposium, jointly organised with the Labuan International Business and Financial Centre, attracted more than 150 delegates.
A total of six speakers and panelists, ranging from regulators, Islamic scholars, academicians and industry practitioners, convened to share their insights and knowledge of the Islamic wealth management industry.
During the one-day symposium, speakers and delegates deliberated on practical issues and challenges in further developing the Islamic wealth management industry and its relevant management structures such as the Labuan Islamic Trusts and Foundations, to gain a competitive advantage in establishing Malaysia as a preferred Islamic wealth management destination.
At the end of the symposium, Chairman of BNP Paribas - INCEIF Centre for Islamic Wealth Management (CIWM) Advisory Board Professor Datuk Dr Syed Othman Alhabshi, said more awareness programmes need to be created, especially for high net worth individuals and financial wealth managers to promote Islamic wealth management in Malaysia.
Labuan IBFC chief executive officer Saiful Bahari Baharom said Malaysia had the infrastructure and expertise in the Islamic finance space to develop a strong competitive value proposition in syariah-compliant wealth management.
“The Islamic wealth management value chain is long, starting with the acquisition of assets, advisory and management services, in addition to legal, taxation and syariah advice, alongside trust and custodial services. Right at the end is the distribution of the assets.
“Each of these parts contributes to a specific value-added competency that we must strive to enhance to help grow our domestic high-value wealth management industry,” he added.
(The Star Online / 01 May 2014)
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Friday, 6 September 2013

Strong Malaysian capital market seen, SC says Malaysia has good fund-raising track record

KUALA LUMPUR: The local capital market is expected to be “reasonably strong” based on the pipeline of capital raising, Securities Commission (SC) chairman Datuk Ranjit Ajit Singh said.
“We are not targeting any specific number but we have said (based on projections) that the capital raising figures for the local (market) are reasonable. However, it would depend on how the market condition would pan out for the rest of the year,” he told reporters after delivering a public lecture on Islamic Wealth Management co-organised by BNP Paribas Malaysia Bhd and the International Centre for Education in Islamic Finance.
He said Malaysia had a fairly successful fund-raising track record for the last few years. Notably, RM146bil was raised from the Malaysian market last year, of which RM124bil was through the bonds market and RM22bil through the equities market.
Ranjit also said the regulator was targetting to position the country as an Islamic wealth management centre, following Malaysia’s success in other areas of Islamic financial services such as Islamic banking, sukuk and takaful.
“Malaysia has a large pool of savings worth some RM1 trillion. The challenge we have is to ensure that some of these pools of savings are intermediated through the capital markets, so that you create scales in terms of those intermediaries to address Malaysians’ needs, and then to position yourself outside,” he said.
One of the strategies was for foreign asset management units to enter the country, he said, adding that the regulator had issued 19 licences to Islamic fund management firms to-date.
He pointed out that such companies got to enjoy tax incentives.
According to Ranjit, of the US$25 trillion (RM82 trillion) worth of mutual funds in the world, the demand for Islamic funds was only US$60bil to US$70bil (RM197bil to RM230bil), which showed that there was still lack of demand for the product, prompting him to urge fund managers to participate in Islamic fund management to create more awareness.
Notably, Malaysia was home to the world’s largest unit trust industry, with 169 Syariah-compliant funds, he said.
Assets under management (AUM) for Islamic funds stood at approximately RM80bil last year, up RM32bil or 66.7% from RM48bil in 2010, he added.
He also said the RM80bil represented about 16% of the total funds industry.
“By 2020, the SC has projected the Islamic fund management industry’s AUM to expand to RM322bil,” he said.

(The Star Online / 05 Sept 2013)

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Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Islamic Capital Markets: A Selective Introduction

In the third quarter of 2012, for the first time, sukuk issuances (US-dollar volume) exceeded bond issuances in the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). In 2012, total issuances globally were $143.4 billion, up 54 per cent from 2011; miniscule in comparison to total global bond issuances ($6 trillion to $8 trillion of issuances, plus massive rollovers and refinancings). However, the comparative issuance trend is notable as a harbinger of the future in the GCC and in the 53 countries of the Organisation for Islamic Cooperation (OIC). The sukukissuance figure is also a notable trend indicator, historically considered. Some examples: the first sukukissuance occurred in 2002–2003, some six or seven years after the inception of modern Islamic finance. The total cumulative issuance volume from industry inception to November 2008 was approximately $89 billion.Sukuk issuance is the fastest-growing component of the activities constituting “Islamic finance”. And Islamic finance may be the most rapidly growing component of finance, considered globally.
While interesting, that summary provides little information and raises more questions than answers. What aresukuk? How are they structured? How do they operate? Who is involved? What are the Islamic capital markets? Where do sukuk fall within Islamic finance (and what is that anyway)? This note attempts to provide a selective and rudimentary introduction to the Islamic capital markets.
Contextually, and from the practitioner’s vantage, it is important to note the following: Islamic finance is ethical finance. Its principles mirror those of other ethical funds and programmes (eg, Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Talmudic, secular, etc). Involvement with certain categories of activities are impermissible (eg, pornography, prostitution, weapons of mass destruction, alcohol and pork for human consumption, interest-based banking and finance, non-mutual insurance and certain others). Islamic finance is structured finance, in terms of risk and cash flow structuring (rather than derivatives). Islamic finance contractual structures (eg, leases, partnerships, sales agreements) are very similar – indeed, almost identical – to their conventional equivalents. Islamic finance, although somewhat different and based in religion, is not a realm of mystery. What’s more, it is encountered in every jurisdiction – and this will only increase.
ISLAMIC FINANCE IN CONTEMPORARY PRACTICE
Conceptually, modern Islamic finance is comprised of four areas of commercial and financial activity, each conducted in compliance with current interpretations of Islamic shariah. These are: banking; investments; finance, including capital markets; and takaful (insurance). Islamic finance is an outgrowth of the post-World War II devolution of the Islamic states from colonial powers after a long interregnum in which interest-based commerce and finance were dominant. Islamic banking began in the 1970s and developed erratically until the mid-to-late 1990s, when its focus expanded from deposit-side activities to include investment and finance activities. Investment and finance activities commenced in the mid-1990s and have grown continuously at an accelerated rate ever since. Takaful started in the early 1980s and has been slower to develop.
In each case, growth has been somewhat disorganised and sporadic – with the notable exception of Malaysia, which introduced organisational formalities (including laws) in the early 1980s.
The shariah is commonly considered to be Islamic law, but this is a woefully inaccurate characterisation. Theshariah is the path or guide by which a Muslim leads his or her life, in every facet, activity and detail of life. It is religion, ethics, morality and much more, including aspects that constitute “law”. The principles are embodied in the revealed sources: the Qur’an (Islam’s holy book); and the Sunna (practices, examples and decisions of the Prophet Mohammed). Principles are also discerned by other methods, most importantly (particularly in Sunni Islam) the consensus of the community of shariah scholars (ijma) and analogical deduction and reasoning (qiyas). The shariah is not a monolithic construct. There are multiple schools of Islamic jurisprudence: for example, the four main orthodox schools of Sunni Islam dominantly effect modern Islamic finance.
Interpretation of the shariah as applied in contemporary Islamic finance is performed by shariah scholars, most frequently sitting on shariah supervisory boards comprised of at least one scholar (commonly three). These scholars are retained by individual investors, banks, financial institutions, family offices, standard-setting organisations and other industry participants to provide advice and fatwas, or opinions, on commercial and financial transactions, activities and entities, including structures and documentation. Fatwas are rendered specifically to the retaining entity in respect of discrete and definable transactions and activities. Standard-setting organisations also have shariah boards that issue and approve advisory standards for the industry. Many such standards pertain to contracts and structural arrangements used in Islamic finance transactions and activities. An example of a prominent standard setting organisation is the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI).
ISLAMIC CAPITAL MARKETS
The Islamic capital markets are comprised of an equity side and a “debt” or finance side. The equity side commenced in 1998, after issuance of a fatwa by the shariah board of Dow Jones Islamic Market Indexes (DJIMI fatwa), which set forth parameters and principles for the screening of equities for shariah compliance and inclusion in Dow Jones indices. In so doing, it also institutionalised certain principles allowing for “permissible variances” from (or “permissible impurities” regarding) strict interpretations of relevant shariahprinciples; and methods of “cleansing” or “purifying” impurities. For example, until issuance of the DJIMI fatwa, a strictly observant Muslim could not purchase non-controlling positions in equity securities because virtually every business entity either paid or received interest, both of which are forbidden under current shariahinterpretations. The balance-sheet ratio tests set forth in the DJIMI fatwa allow investments in permissible equity securities if certain ratios are satisfied. The ratios relate to debt to market capitalisation; cash and marketable securities to market capitalisation; and accounts receivable to market capitalisation. No ratio can exceed 33 per cent. Cleansing is obtained by donating any interest income to charity. The “conglomerate” issue (an entity that directly or indirectly conducts impermissible or haram business activities) was also addressed: investments are impermissible if such activities constitute “core” activities of the entity.
The DJIMI fatwa may be the most influential fatwa issued in the history of modern Islamic finance and is one of seven critical factors enabling the growth of modern Islamic finance (a grouping that also includes sukuk and the bifurcated lease structures discussed below). The permissible variance, cleansing and core business activities principles set forth in the DJIMI fatwa have been applied in a broad range of contexts and have been instrumental in allowing Islamic finance to exist, and thrive, in Western markets and in transactions involving Western interest-based participants. Thus, for example, application of the “core business activities” principles may allow, as permissible tenants in buildings owned by shariah-compliant investors, automatic teller machines owned and operated by interest-based banks; supermarkets that sell pork and alcohol; and back office operations of interest-based banks, among others. Permissible leases to these tenants may include nonconforming provisions relating to default interest, non-takaful insurance, and non-compliant structural maintenance. “Single Islamic tranche” project financings may be incorporated in structures that also include conventional interest-based debt. And “bifurcated lease structures” that utilise structurally isolated interest-based debt are almost standard throughout the world.
Sukuk are the most important and most rapidly expanding component of the finance side of the Islamic capital markets. Sukuk are not “bonds”, despite their persistent characterisation as such by the press. They are either asset securitisations or whole business securitisations, in each case akin to their conventional counterparts in that they are structured with asset isolation and servicing of the securitisation instrument (thesukuk) from cash flows from those assets. They resemble pass-through certificates of the early 1980s: fractional undivided ownership interests, albeit with cash flow restructuring. They must be structured around tangible assets, usufructs or services. Under the relevant AAOIFI shariah standard, which is widely followed in the industry, there are 14 categories of permissible sukuk. Five involve lease arrangements. These pertain to existing or to be acquired tangible assets or leasehold estates and presales of services. One relates to construction funding; another to the production or provision of commodities or goods at a future date (a forward-sale contact). One relates to acquisition funding of goods for future sale (a murabaha contract), although this structure has been stretched to almost any type of financing and debt generation. Two relate to capital participation in a project or business (mudaraba, or service-capital partnership, and musharaka). One relates to asset management (wakala or agency) and three relate to land and agricultural activities.
Malaysia has consistently been the global sukuk issuance leader, with 69–77 per cent of global issuances. In recent years, it has been followed by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, which is reflective of their infrastructure development programmes. Bahrain’s central bank is a consistent issuer of sukuk that function as short-term commercial paper equivalents. Domestic offerings constitute a huge portion (91 per cent) of all issuances, which is indicative of extensive risk concentrations due to, and loan-substitute nature of, purchases by domestic banks and financial institutions. Viewed historically, lease-based sukuk are the most common structures. However, since the onset of the 2007 financial crisis, the use of murabaha-based sukukhas increased dramatically. A murabaha is a cost-plus sale, and murabaha-based sukuk frequently make use of metals or palm oil murabaha transactions in which the commodities serve solely as a vector for debt generation. Musharaka (partnership or joint venture) structures experienced a high point just before the financial crisis, and were the subject of stringent criticism by shariah scholars because they were structured to be, essentially, bonds rather than profit-and-loss-sharing instruments. Government issuances dominate, at approximately 65 per cent of all issuances. Government-owned corporate issuances comprise the great bulk of the remaining issuances. True asset securitisations are rare. Malaysia is the exception: private corporate issuances constitute notably larger percentages. Apart from infrastructure-related issuances, the primary categories of issuances are in the financial services and real estate sectors. However, that pattern varies over time, economic cycle and region.
As the trend data illustrates, sukuk issuances will continue to dominate the Islamic capital markets, and the issuance rate will accelerate, even if governments, quasi-governmental entities and government-owned corporates remain the primary issuers. The explosion in sukuk issuance will occur if private entities can access the domestic and international capital markets. The undertaking to achieve that result is daunting. It will entail significant legal, regulatory, tax, administrative and financial reform in OIC jurisdictions. Examples of concepts, regimes and constructs that will need to be developed and implemented are, among many others:
• true sale concepts;
• insolvency and bankruptcy regimes;
• legal, regulatory, financial, administrative and substantive law constructs and regimes that recognise the distinctive elements of securitisation;
• corporate governance principles;
• lien laws and recordation systems, particularly regarding perfection and prioritisation;
• regimes for issuance and publication of judicial opinions;
• regimes that infuse stare decisis concepts into legal systems;
• trust concepts, even in jurisdictions based upon civil law;
• concepts that clarify the definition and role of the shariah in each jurisdiction; and
• regimes that implement and strengthen the elements and clarify the role of the rule of law.
There is evidence that, directly and indirectly, Islamic finance – and particularly the growing reach and power of the Islamic capital markets – may provide the necessary impetus to effectuation of some of the necessary reforms in OIC jurisdictions, even where similar reforms based upon secular efforts have stalled or been rejected or deferred. Consider the adoption of trust concepts in Bahrain and a mortgage and lien recordation regime in Saudi Arabia.
Hopefully, the eminent practitioners listed in this volume will undertake to contribute to this reform programme, whether in self-interest or a broader commitment to global legal reform. In any such case, the benefits to the entirety of commerce and finance, the global community, global understanding and tolerance, self-knowledge and awareness, and individual legal practices will be profound.
(Whos Who Legal / 23 July 2013)
by Michael J.T. McMillen, Partner at Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle LLP
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Sunday, 23 September 2012

Need to enhance and harmonise disclosure requirements in the Islamic capital market


The Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) and the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), two global standard-setters in their respective fields, collaborated with the Securities Commission Malaysia (SC) to organise a high-level roundtable in Kuala Lumpur, themed “Disclosure Requirements for Islamic Capital Market Products”.
The roundtable represents a significant step towards the development of international regulatory standards and best practices relating to disclosure requirements for Islamic capital market products. 
“As the Islamic capital market expands and becomes more global, it is increasingly important that issues surrounding investor protection and market integrity are addressed from a cross-jurisdictional perspective.  It is therefore critical for regulators and standard-setters such as the IFSB and IOSCO to further examine disclosure regimes for Islamic capital market products, with a view to allowing more informed investment decision-making and to promote the further growth of the Islamic capital market,” said Datuk Ranjit Ajit Singh, Chairman of the SC, who is also an IOSCO Board member and the Vice-Chair of the IOSCO Emerging Markets Committee.
Jaseem Ahmed, Secretary General of IFSB, emphasised that promoting cross-border financing and investment through Islamic finance is critical to attaining the depth and scale in Islamic capital markets needed to be competitive. “This will require the adoption of robust regulatory and disclosure practices that give confidence to investors and consumers alike.  IFSB hopes that this collaboration with IOSCO will facilitate a process leading to a set of practices that could be harmonised or mutually agreed upon,” he said.
David Wright, Secretary General of IOSCO said, “The recent financial crises highlighted the importance of sound disclosure regimes in mitigating systemic risk and building confidence in the financial markets. Given the tremendous growth of the Islamic Finance industry - an increasingly important segment of the global financial markets – it is essential to achieve greater harmonisation in disclosure requirements across jurisdictions where Islamic capital market products are offered.” 
Participants of the closed-door roundtable also discussed the importance of effective disclosure requirements in facilitating greater cross–border Islamic capital market activities, analysed the risks and challenges arising from inadequate disclosures in the area of Sukuk and Islamic Collective Investment Schemes and identified potential approaches which can be adopted by standard-setters, regulators and market participants alike.
The roundtable, held at the Securities Commission today, was attended by senior regulators, international institutions, academia and leading market practitioners from 16 jurisdictions.
(C.P.I Financial / 18 Sep 2012)


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Friday, 14 September 2012

Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) may set up shariah board to develop Islamic capital market


KARACHI: For developing an Islamic capital market in line with best practices globally, the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) is contemplating the establishment of a shariah board, an official said on Saturday.

The board, comprising eminent Islamic scholars and market professionals, would ensure that all the products/ services offered under this umbrella are in conformity with the shariah principles.

“Also, efforts will be made for consolidation of existing Islamic institutions and development of innovative shariah- compliant institutions, products and services in order to deepen the capital market,” the official said.

It may be mentioned here that in consultation with relevant stakeholders, the SECP has drafted a comprehensive three-year Capital Market Development Plan (2012-14).

The said plan envisages introduction of key structural and regulatory reforms, development of equity, derivative, debt, commodities and currencies markets, development of shariah-compliant investment alternatives, and measures for improving governance, risk management, efficiency and transparency in capital market operations.

Talking about the future roadmap, the official said that in line with the international best practices, efforts would be undertaken for the National Clearing Company of Pakistan (NCCPL) to function as central counter party with the establishment of a settlement guarantee fund; and consolidation of risk management at NCCPL.

Besides, for developing the commodities market, the SECP might explore the possibility of allowing new commodity exchanges to function in the country, as presently the potential offered by this market segment was not being utilised to the maximum.

“The said measure will also facilitate healthy competition and business in this segment while contributing towards greater market outreach,” he said.

Regarding new product/system development, the future SECP agenda includes cross-listings of derivatives based on foreign indices at Pakistani stock exchanges to boost activity in index futures market.

For investors in the commodities segment, efforts will be made for introduction of new futures contracts in commodities like cottonseed oilcake, crude palm oil and maize, and rolling currency contracts on foreign currency exchange rate pairs.

To accelerate growth in the debt market in coordination with relevant stakeholders, the possibility of listing of government debt instruments at the stock exchanges will be explored and integration of National Savings Scheme instruments into the mainstream capital market, he said.

Further, to promote transparency and price discovery of debt securities and to minimize pricing issues of debt securities, establishment of an independent Bond Pricing Agency (BPA) conforming to international standards, is in the pipeline.

The BPA is expected to contribute towards stimulating activity in the primary and secondary debt markets, increasing market depth, reducing information asymmetry, increasing credibility of financial statements through accurate asset-liability valuation, product development etcetera, he added.

(The International News / 09 Sept 2012)


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Saturday, 30 June 2012

Malaysia: Overseas expansion key in future Islamic capital market


KUALA LUMPUR: The next phase of growth of the Islamic capital market would be characterised by greater internationalisation, which would see more product as well as service providers expanding beyond their home market
The Securities Commission’s executive director of Islamic capital market Zainal Izlan Zainal Abidin said more investors would seek products or instruments with international exposure.
Speaking at the 7th Islamic Markets Programme yesterday, he said there would also be greater diversity in terms of currencies used in issuing syariah-compliant instruments.
Izlan said the Islamic finance industry was at a crucial stage where it needed to redefine and establish the enabling environment that would spur its next phase of growth. Islamic finance, he said, had developed into an industry with global appeal, marked by a 15% average annual growth rate over the past decade, to reach US$1.3 trillion today.
As for Malaysia’s Islamic capital market, the Capital Market Masterplan 2 is expected to grow at an average rate of 10.6% annually, over the 10-year period to 2020.
Izlan said Islamic finance had developed not only in traditional Muslim markets like Malaysia and the Middle East, but also in conventional markets and financial centres such as the United Kingdom, with a growing number of jurisdictions across the globe at various stages of developing their capabilities in Islamic finance.
Themed “Building the Environment for the Growth of Islamic Finance,” the IMP attracted 41 local and international participants including Islamic finance practitioners, members of academia and regulators.

(The Star Online / 28 June 2012)


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Saturday, 28 April 2012

Turkey showcases role of Islamic money and capital markets

The Central Bank of Turkey, which is hosting this year's IFSB Summit, is organising as a pre-Summit event, a landmark Country Showcase in association with the Yildiz Technical University in Istanbul on the pertinent theme "The Role of Interest-free Financial Instruments in the Money and Capital Markets."
The theme of the Turkey Showcase has important synergies with the Summit theme, 'Global Financial Reforms: The Changing Regulatory Model and Islamic Finance' which aims to evaluate whether reforms in financial regulation structure and prudential standards equally equip the Islamic financial services industry in addressing its future challenges as well as identifying the priority areas in the prudential regulation of Islamic finance that may need focus and attention by regulators and market players alike.
The main Summit on 16 and 17 May will discuss 'International Regulatory Initiatives to Enhance Global Financial Stability'; 'Impact of International Regulatory Initiatives on the Islamic Financial Services Industry'; 'Regulatory Harmonisation and Cross-border Linkages in Islamic Finance'; 'Global Financial Infrastructure of Islamic Finance'; and 'Global Regulatory Reform and the Prospects for the Islamic Financial Services Industry.' The Keynote Address of the Summit will be delivered by Dr. Mahmoud Mohieldin, Managing Director of the World Bank.
The Turkey Showcase will be opened by Prof. Dr Güler Aras, Dean of the Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Yildiz Technical University, who will give the keynote and welcome address. This will be followed by a panel discussion on "The Role of Interest-free Financial Instruments in the Money and Capital Markets", with the confirmed participation of Dr Ahmet Faruk Aysan, Member of the Board, Central Bank of Turkey; Bekir Sitki Safak, Executive Vice President, Turkish Capital Market Board; Dr Mustafa Kemal Yilmaz, Executive Vice Chairman, Istanbul Stock Exchange; Meliksah Utku; Deputy General Manager, Albaraka Turk Participation Bank; and Hulusi Horozoglu, Director, Global Islamic Banking, Head of Saudi Arabia & Oman, Citigroup. The panel discussion, which will be moderated by Mushtak Parker, promises a major opportunity for IFSB Summit delegates to engage with the latest developments and opportunities in the emerging Turkish Islamic capital market.
The Country Showcases, a traditional pre-Summit event, is an important platform for IFSB member and non-member countries to articulate their Islamic finance initiatives, incentives and experiences in adopting and promoting the growth of a sound and stable Islamic financial services industry. This year will feature two Country Showcases - Turkey and Malaysia. The Malaysia Country Showcase is organised by Bank Negara Malaysia in association with the Malaysia International Islamic Finance Centre (MIFC) initiative. Both Showcases will be held on 15 May 2012.
Another traditional pre-IFSB Summit event is a 'Special Session' in the afternoon of the same day of the Country Showcases, which normally focuses on a pertinent issue facing the industry. This year's Special Session on 'Promoting Financial Inclusion through Islamic Microfinance' could not be timelier.
Financial Inclusion, Microfinance and SME Financing - all part of the same coin - has now emerged as an important global agenda in ensuring sustainable long-term economic growth. The G20 summit in 2010 recognised financial inclusion as one of the main pillars of the global development agenda. While financial inclusion is part and parcel of the social and ethical goals that Islamic finance seeks to promote, there is a need for a more focused debate, from a comparative perspective, of the most efficacious institutional platforms, distribution channels and regulatory and supervisory structures in relation to Islamic Microfinance.
The Session will be chaired by H.E Yaseen Anwar, Governor, State Bank of Pakistan. Speakers include H.E Dr. Mohamed Khair Ahmed Elzubear, Governor, Central Bank of Sudan, Professor Dr. M. Azmi Omar, Director General, Islamic Research and Training Institute (IRTI), IDB Group; Michael Tarazi, Senior Policy Specialist, Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP), The World Bank; Jahangir Alam, Executive Director, Central Bank of Bangladesh; and Ali Sakti, Researcher, Islamic Banking Directorate, Bank Indonesia and Mr. Chams-Eddine Aklil, Chief Technical Advisor in Sustainable Economic Development Programme (DEVED), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Germany.
(C P I Financial / 25 April 2012)

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Friday, 13 April 2012

Brunei must find niche in Islamic capital markets


MUARA, Brunei - Brunei's Islamic finance sector must find a niche in Islamic capital markets and reposition itself to find new opportunities in order to catch up with other industry players in the region, an expert said.

Sri Anne Masri, managing director of Pro Ethica Training and Research, said more building blocks are needed in the country to pave a way for the creation of more Islamic products and services such as equity funds, wealth management, and murabahah.

"Just looking at sukuk, we are far behind our Malaysian counterparts," said Sri Anne during a seminar co-hosted by Universiti Brunei Darussalam's Faculty of Business, Economics and Policy Studies (FBEPBS), Sultan Omar 'Ali Saifuddien Centre for Islamic Studies of UBD and the United Kingdom's Markfield Institute of Higher Education (MIHE).

Malaysia has issued US$26 billion (S$33.8 billion) worth of sukuk to date, compared to Brunei's $3.851 billion since the government's first issuance on April 6, 2006.

"Islamic finance has been running for 20 years and challenges and opportunities has cropped up in the market. The overview of Brunei's market shows that the Sultanate has political stability, strong Islamic framework and a strong regulatory framework.

"Brunei has the capacity and is financially capable to spearhead the finance industry from oil and gas towards economic diversification through strong government to grow Brunei into an Islamic financial hub," said Sri Anne.
However, Sri Anne said that Brunei is not pacing fast enough compared to regional players and is important for the country to find a niche in areas such as Islamic private wealth management, Islamic advisory services and private equity.

Once pending regulations from Autoriti Monetari Brunei Darussalam (AMBD) are finalised, it will help in creating the necessary infrastructure for Islamic capital markets, she said.
"With this we will move forward. What is more important is to see what products the market is interested in so they can build the supply base to attract foreign investors into Brunei and build it up from there," she said.

During a question and answer session that followed, Sri Anne said fear of failure is hindering many players in Islamic finance from progressing.

"But failures are what make us better. Looking at sukuk defaults in 2007, what happened in the Islamic finance industry in Saudi or the US, that has made us better now. The international players in terms of sukuk issuance are more careful in looking at the substance of the sukuk contracts," she said.

"We don't want to make ourselves too close to conventional (banking) and just change the name from bonds to sukuk without having the real essence tied into it.

(Asia One Business / 12 April 2012)


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