Sharia finance needs real deal, not copycats

KUALA LUMPUR: Sharia banking needs to develop more of its own products and 
avoid imitating conventional financial instruments in structures that 
compromise the spirit of Islam, a leading religious scholar said.

Sharia instruments have to satisfy Islam's objective of ethical and 
equitable investing while retaining a commercial proposition that can draw 
investors who plough in funds with the aim of reaping returns.

Scholars say Islamic bankers sometimes tailor sharia instruments according 
to market demands to ensure they can be more easily sold as Islamic assets 
vie for investors that also have access to a wider range of conventional 
banking products.

"People tend to, to a certain extent, dilute some of the principles or 
objectives of certain contracts in order to accommodate conventional 
features," Mohammad Akram Laldin said in an interview on Thursday.

For example, in the mudaraba partnership contract where the bank provides 
capital finance for a venture, the parties are required to share the profits 
but the bank bears any monetary loss. However, this is sometimes tweaked as 
investors demand capital protection, he said.

Akram cited the diminishing musharaka and takaful, or Islamic insurance, as 
examples of pure breed Islamic products that are not derived from 
conventional finance.

The diminishing musharaka is a partnership where a bank gradually reduces 
its equity in a project and ultimately transfers ownership of the asset to 
the participants.

The $1 trillion Islamic finance industry is growing 10-15 per cent a year 
mainly because of a deluge of Middle East oil money.

But religious scholars are worried that some industry practitioners could be 
watering down the strict requirements of Islamic law in a quest to broaden 
the sector's appeal.

The Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions, 
or AAOIFI, a body that sets Islamic financial standards across the Middle 
East, rocked markets last year when it said 85 per cent of Islamic bonds did 
not comply with Islamic law because of repurchase agreements.

Most Islamic bonds have been sold with a repurchase undertaking - a promise 
that the borrower will pay back their face value at maturity, or in the 
event of a default, mirroring the structure of a conventional bond.

AAOIFI said this promise contravenes the obligation to share risk in the 
case of several types of Islamic bonds. The bonds should be bought at market 
value at maturity.

Akram, a Jordan and UK-trained scholar who has been involved in religious 
teaching for about 13 years, said the Islamic industry's tendency to copy 
conventional instruments stemmed from a lack of experts skilled in both the 
sharia and finance.

"We have this gap in the market, between the sharia practitioners and market 
practitioners in terms of knowledge as well as exposure," said Akram who 
sits on various sharia advisory boards including HSBC Amanah.

"The result of this is you can see that there is a lot of conventional 
products that are being 'Islamised' because most of the product development 
team are people from conventional (markets) which have conventional 
practice." Sharia advisers are a small and influential breed, sitting on the 
Islamic boards of institutions and ruling on whether or not proposed Islamic 
products meet the sharia's conditions.

Agencies

http://www.godubai.com/gulftoday/article.asp?AID=16&Section=Business


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