Posts Tagged ‘Finance’

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Benchmark a major step for Islamic finance

In News on December 22, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , ,

Last month, the world’s first Islamic interbank benchmark rate (IIBR) was launched. It was the result of a collaborative approach taken by many Islamic financial institutions, industry associations and Sharia scholars over the course of 24 months to address a decades-old industry challenge: how to decouple Islamic finance from a conventional western pricing benchmark (Libor) when an “Islamic” alternative was not available. The objective was to support and preserve Islamic finance authenticity.

The IIBR is an interbank benchmark that offers a reliable and realistic standard to better measure the cost of funding for Islamic financial institutions. As contributed pricing for Sharia-compliant funding, it represents the DNA of an Islamic banking industry that is today focused on commercial banking over investment banking.

IIBR brought together more than 20 Islamic finance institutions to create a proprietary Islamic pricing benchmark. It is a major indication to the world that Islamic finance has come of age and can be seen as a sustainable and rapidly developing feature of global financial markets. The benchmark is designed to be used to price a number of Islamic instruments including common overnight to short-term treasury investment and financing instruments such as murabaha, wakala and mudaraba, retail financing instruments such as property and car finance, and sukuk and other Sharia-compliant fixed-income instruments. It can also be used for the pricing and benchmarking of corporate finance and investment assets.

We expect the benchmark to grow organically as industry use and acceptance increase. As the industry gets used to the idea of its own proprietary benchmark and its scope becomes more global, we expect to see banks use the rate to price their interbank liquidity placements. As that gains traction, banks will start to use it for their corporate and retail banking facilities. The rate has reached its full potential when we see investment banks providing syndicated Islamic financing (loans) and debt (sukuk) issuance using the rate.

Since the launch of IIBR, it has received much attention around the world for the positive step that it is.

Understandably though, the significance of IIBR and what it means for the Islamic finance industry, indeed the very position of Sharia-finance in Islam and the wider world, means that it provokes strong opinion and debate. And we must address the critics if we are to achieve the full potential of this initiative. After all, these commentators are important additional stakeholders.

All collaborations start with open minds and transparent dialogue, and so here I hope to address some of the key points raised.

What is the difference between IIBR and Libor – the London interbank offered rate? Put simply, IIBR measures expected profit while conventional benchmarks such as Libor measure interest rates.

The IIBR question for contributors explicitly refers to the cost of raising Sharia-compliant funding and is therefore based on returns generated by Islamic assets.

How is IIBR preserving the authenticity of Islamic finance?

The IIBR rates represent the aggregate risk profile of Islamic financial institutions, by way of their assets on the balance sheet, and the geographies in which they operate. This is important for two reasons.

On an economic level, now more than ever, conditions in Europe or the US do not necessarily reflect the conditions in the Middle East funding market, although there will inevitably be a connection as global financial markets are always intertwined.

How is IIBR representative and reflective of global Islamic finance treasury funding costs?

This is only a beginning. At present, we have a strong base in GCC countries, we have three major Malaysian banks and are in conversations with others, and we have started conversations with banks in Turkey, Pakistan and other jurisdictions.

How will IIBR address cross-border funding costs?

The precondition for cross-border funding is establishing local rates, and we are starting a dialogue with more countries with established Islamic banking industries. The more important point is that a transparent process or methodology is in place for price contributions, and its integrity is overseen by our benchmark committee with rules that will punish banks, including expulsion, that violate the agreement they have signed.

Why are only murabaha contribution rates used?

Murabaha is the predominant form of funding for Islamic banks. However, the IIBR is instrument-neutral as decided by the Islamic benchmark committee, and in the future, when other instruments such as wakala or mudaraba become more widespread, a higher proportion of contributions could be derived from other rates.

Is IIBR only for Islamic financial institutions?

IIBR, like Islamic finance, is for all people and institutions for all times. As an accurate and transparent measure of market activity, it is suitable for a variety of uses in the modern financial markets of the world. With IIBR, conventional banks will now have more confidence in their counterparty Islamic banks because their rates will be benchmarked and publicly available.

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Articles

In News on October 31, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , ,

Islamic Finance is growing at an unprecedented rate and it is no surprise that many investors are tapping into the Shariah compliant sector. It is already estimated that Islamic Finance will be worth $2 trillion dollars by 2012 and this figure my soar in the upcoming years. Read More »

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Islamic corporate financing focus for summit

In News on October 5, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , , , ,

Senior Islamic bankers and corporate borrowers will meet for discussions that will seek to boost deal flow in Islamic syndicated lending, trade finance and project finance in an upcoming corporate finance summit in Abu Dhabi.

Read More »

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Islamic corporate finance in focus

In News on September 8, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , , , , , , ,

MANAMA: The Islamic corporate finance market has steadily undergone an evolution in terms of product sophistication and market reach.

This is due to an increasing number of businesses looking to include Islamic finance as a component of their corporate funding mix.

Read More »

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Central Bank will review controversial curbs on retail lending

In News on August 22, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , , , , , ,

The Central Bank plans to review controversial caps on retail lending at the start of next year as concerns mount that the rules may be able to be circumvented.

It is collecting feedback about the regulations, which brought to an end an era of hefty loans and large overdrafts.

“The Central Bank is still receiving feedback from banks and customers. We will collect all of this information until it gets [to] such a time to study it and submit it to the board of directors to see if we need to amend the regulations,” said Saleh Al Tenaiji, the senior manager at the Central Bank’s banking supervision and examination department.

Some of the feedback was from lenders wanting to clarify methods for calculating lending to customers, he said.

Introduced at the start of May, the regulations cap the amount banks can lend to customers at 20 times their salary and set the period of loan repayment at 48 months.

Since then, some customers have complained to the Central Bank that the rules have curtailed their ability to take out loans and extend overdrafts.

Banks too have been hurt by the regulations. Loan income fell in the second quarter for some lenders.

To what extent the rules are curbing credit growth is tricky to determine.

Total loans and advances dipped in May compared with April, but they rose 0.7 per cent in June, Central Bank data show.

Analysts have also said that some banks may be able to get around the rules as they seek to maximise profits. For example, lenders could offer unsecured loans to customers to cover a down payment for a car purchase or a mortgage.

“There’s almost always a way banks can circumvent the rules,” said Raj Madha, a regional banking analyst at Rasmala Investment Bank. “The Central Bank has to hope banks believe in the spirit of the regulations and abide by them.”

The Central Bank introduced the caps to curb the lending-fuelled consumerism that made the financial system vulnerable to a credit crunch once the global downturn struck. It hopes the new rules will protect both customers and lenders from a repeat of the wave of consumer debt that soured during the downturn.

“When people take out a loan they need to be able to pay it back adequately and within a suitable time,” said Mr Al Tenaiji.

Within the property market, the Central Bank is also planning new rules to ensure different borrowing limits for first-time buyers and investors. Those rules will be intended to curb excessive lending to speculators.

Attempts by other central banks to bring in caps on retail lending have achieved mixed results. The UK government tried to bring in similar rules in the 1970s but soon abandoned them.

Regionally, Qatar implemented similar rules this year, capping the amount people can borrow to no more than 2 million rials (Dh2m) on loans with a maximum maturity of six years, and 400,000 rials on loans of no more than four years.

In Europe, the banking sector relies on a sufficient supply of information to banks about customer-credit risk, as well as high levels of transparency to customers about banking products, say analysts.

Plans for a credit bureau in the UAE are at a more formative stage. Regulations are in the process to require banks to supply credit information about their customers to a central database.

Such a bureau should help banks to make better informed decisions about lending to customers.

Source – thenational.ae

Articles

CIMA launches advanced diploma in Islamic finance

In News on August 11, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , , , , , , ,

CIMA has launched its new advanced diploma in Islamic finance, following the launch of CIMA’s certificate in Islamic finance four years ago, which has recently been renamed the CIMA diploma in Islamic finance.

John Willsdon, a leadership and development specialist at CIMA, said, “Islamic finance is becoming much more prominent throughout the financial institutions of the world, rapidly growing from a niche industry to a mainstay of finance. CIMA’s qualifications in Islamic finance have been developed with this switch in mind, and to help meet a global shortfall of skilled Islamic finance professionals. Read More »

Articles

Poll finds mixed views on economy

In News on August 1, 2011 by noorislamicbank Tagged: , ,

About half the people living in the UAE are optimistic about the country’s economy and their own financial futures, but a vast majority lament that their salaries are not keeping pace with the cost of living, according to a survey by Bayt.com and YouGov.

According to the quarterly Mena Consumer Confidence Index released yesterday, 49 per cent of respondents said they expected their finances to improve in the next year. And 51 per cent said better times were in store for the UAE’s economy.Those mixed feelings were coupled with negativity about jobs, however, with only about a third of people saying they thought the number of jobs available would increase in the next year. Read More »

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