http://www.aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=6&id=19674


DAVOS-Islamic Finance "Safe" Billing is Myth: Qatar Regulator

28/01/2010 



DAVOS, Switzerland, (Reuters) - It's a myth to assume Islamic finance products 
are safer than conventional products and underlying risks should be studied 
more carefully, Qatar's top regulator said on Wednesday. 

Despite being billed as a safer alternative to traditional banking because 
assets must underpin deals, Islamic bondholders have found they may not have 
any more legal safeguards than conventional counterparts in the event of 
default. 

Such issues were highlighted after sukuk -- or Islamic bonds -- had the first 
ever defaults last year. 

Sukuk, one of the flagship products in the $1 trillion Islamic finance 
industry, are structured as profit-sharing or rental agreements and returns are 
derived from underlying assets because Islamic laws prohibits paying or earning 
interest. 

Dubai-owned property developer Nakheel narrowly avoided a default last year on 
its $4.1 billion sukuk thanks to an emergency bailout fund from Abu Dhabi. 

"There is some assumption that some of it is cosmetically more comforting, but 
when so many Islamic instruments are now trying to mimic the effect of 
conventional products, you need to examine if they carry the same risk 
profile," Philip Thorpe, chief executive of Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory 
Authority, told Reuters. 

"It's a myth for anyone to assume anything about financial products, including 
Islamic finance," he said. 

"If you go into any form of investment without asking fairly basic questions, 
you will bear the consequences when things go bad. There was a lot of 
excitement over Islamic financial products, but not a lot of research...You 
have to look at underlying risks." 

Thorpe added that recent events in the Gulf, including the debt crisis in 
Dubai, have raised the tolerance threshold of regulators. 

"The role of regulators is to identify risks and in some instances to become a 
bit more interventionist," he said. 

"If we saw a product that was unsafe for investors, we would not permit it to 
proceed. Regulation has never been about free markets. Regulation is not a 
consensual act. It's a political act...Recent events may have moved the bar up 
in terms of regulator tolerance." 

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