the holy war of islamic finance

Islami Bank given 10 days to explain militants' accounts

vanhelsing | 15 March, 2006 16:25

The Daily Star - Wed. March 15, 2006

Rejaul Karim Byron

Bangladesh Bank (BB) yesterday served a show-cause notice to the chief executive of Islami Bank Bangladesh Ltd concerning the alleged irregularities in maintaining 'militant-linked' accounts and asked him to reply within 10 days.

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Brown to boost Islamic banking

vanhelsing | 12 March, 2006 19:14

The sharia finance industry is one of the fastest-growing markets in the world, and is estimated to be worth between £200 billion and £300 billion globally.

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Niche banks find growth in Muslim market

vanhelsing | 10 March, 2006 18:15

Specialized services for Islamic communities help local lenders expand. Big banks not far behind.
By Shaheen Pasha, CNNMoney.com staff writer


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - In the quest to find new and profitable ways to attract consumers, the banking industry has found religion.

Islamic banking is emerging as a small but growing trend among lenders in the United States, as niche players create specialized products and services for Muslims that fall within the tenets of Islamic law, or Shariah.

Shariah prohibits investments in the liquor, wine, casino, pornography, gambling and pork processing industries, and forbids Muslims from accepting or paying interest -- a challenge for Western banks that are based in the interest-paying system.

Currently there are three banks that offer Islamic banking in the U.S., including international giant HSBC (Research), but experts expect that number to rise as the Muslim population grows and the community begins to demand more specialized services.

No-interest mortgages

Despite the difficulties in creating an entirely different finance system, banks such as Ann Arbor, Mich.-based University Bank, a wholly owned subsidiary of holding company University Bancorp (Research), are willing to put in the extra work to create banking alternatives that appeal to the growing market.

While industry experts say it's difficult to determine the exact size of the Islamic market in the U.S. -- given the lack of information from the Census Bureau -- national data accumulated from government studies and independent religious groups estimate that there are between 5 million to 7 million Muslims living in the U.S. And with the Department of Homeland Security indicating that there is a rising number of immigrants from Muslim countries entering the U.S. in recent years, industry experts said its a smart move for banks to start focusing on the growing Muslim community.

University Bank recently formed the University Islamic Financial Corp., a subsidiary that offers Muslims home financing, deposit accounts and Islamic mutual fund shares.

The bank's deposit accounts allow Muslims to open accounts where any profits are shared with customers rather than paid as interest. Stephen Ranzini, president and chairman of University bank said the company currently has $5.5 million in Islamic-compliant deposits.

And instead of traditional mortgages, the bank essentially sets up a special trust for the property the consumer is trying to buy. The borrower leases the property on a rent-to-own basis -- a system called ijara in Islam -- and agrees to take ownership at the end of the agreement, usually written as a 30-year contract. The bank makes a profit from the rent on the property. If the house is sold before it's paid off, the customer would pay the rest of the money committed to the trust with proceeds from the house's sale.

Ranzini said the company is in negotiations with a government-sponsored enterprise to create a secondary market for its Islamic mortgages, which will allow the company to offer another mortgage alternative, called murabaha, nationwide in the near future. Under murabaha, the bank buys the property and sells it to the consumer in monthly installments at the acquisition price plus an agreed profit rate.

He added that the company expects to grow its assets -- pegged near $60 million at the end of 2005 -- to over $100 million in the near-term.

Chicago-based Devon Bank also offers a murabaha mortgage product, and plans to expand its Islamic banking to include compliant money market and checking accounts and CDs upon approval from federal regulators, said David Loundy, corporate counsel for the bank.

While Loundy declined to comment on the bank's financial assets tied to the Islamic bank, he said its compliant mortgages account for over half of the company's residential mortgage volume.

A growing community

"The banking market is being saturated and firms have to figure out ways they can grow," said Alois Pirker, securities and investments analyst at independent research and consulting firm Celent LLC. "The Islamic community is growing and if a bank can capture that community, there is big potential there."

Pirker said that regional and community banks that have stronger ties to the Muslims in their community will lead the charge. But larger banks are going to have to start branching out to remain competitive.

International banks have already dipped their toes into Islamic financing abroad and found success. Banks such as Citigroup (Research), HSBC and Deutsche Bank (Research) have created Islamic subsidiaries focused on the Middle East and Asia.

Rushdi Siddiqui, global director of Dow Jones Islamic Markets said the boom in oil prices, which meant big profits for many Muslim investors abroad, raised awareness of the Islamic market in recent years.

The Institute of Islamic Banking & Insurance, an independent Islamic finance academic and research group in London, says that more than 250 Islamic banks around the world manage more than $200 billion.

Domestically, however, Islamic banking is still in its very early stages, although Islamic products such as mutual funds, have proved to be profitable, Siddiqui said. The Dow Jones Islamic Market Index for the U.S., which tracks investments that are in compliance with Islamic laws against investing in prohibited industries, were up 5.06 percent in 2005, as compared to a 3 percent rise in the S&P 500.

A learning curve for regulators

Banks have been hindered from expanding into Islamic banking, in part, due to a lack of regulatory understanding of the products, experts said.

In a report last year, the Chicago Federal Reserve indicated that "Islamic finance is sometimes better understood by the banks and finance houses that have developed and marketed the Islamic finance products than by the regulators whose approval they need."

William Rutledge, executive vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in a speech before the Arab Bankers Association of North America that regulators are making a more concerted effort to learn about the risks associated with Islamic banking by participating in Islamic finance conferences and learning from international regulators that are already supervising Islamic banks.

That's a positive first step towards making Islamic banking more available to Muslims living in the U.S., according to Islamic advocates.

"The rise of Islamic banking is a sign of the maturity of the Muslim community in America," said Rabiah Ahmed, spokeswomen for the Council of American-Islamic Relations. " "The trend is definitely increasing."

First sharia bonds index created

vanhelsing | 10 March, 2006 16:37

By Josephine Moulds (Filed: 07/03/2006)
The Daily Telegraph (London)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2006/03/07/cnbonds07.xml

Citigroup and Dow Jones have created the first index of bonds that comply with sharia law as Muslim investors demand more innovative investment products.
Banks will be able to structure new products around the index to attract Muslim high-net-worth individuals and retail investors to the growing Islamic debt market.
The Islamic financing market is worth $300bn (£171bn). Within that the bond market is the fastest growing area at 25pc a year.
Bankers expect this new index to improve secondary trading by providing benchmark pricing for Islamic bonds, or sukuk.
The index will include investment-grade bonds of at least $250m that comply with sharia law and the official standards for tradable sukuk.
Interest payments are banned under sharia law so bonds are structured like an asset sale, rental agreement or profit-sharing arrangement where the investor can share in a borrower's profits.
Dubai Ports World recently issued the biggest sukuk to date at $3.5bn to fund its takeover of UK ports operator P&O. The bonds, convertible into shares, were structured so the proceeds are invested in a joint venture partnership that generates income for the bond investors.
Demand for Islamic bonds has outstripped supply pushing down borrowing costs and prompting interest from non-Muslim borrowers. Usman Ahmed, deputy managing director for Citigroup Islamic Investment Bank said: "Any issuer that appreciates the benefits of diversifying its investor base and increasing price tension among different types of investors can consider Islamic financing."
 
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