Dear Readers

I had the opportunity to interview Shariah scholar Dr Daud Bakar while
he was in Kuala Lumpur recently. We discussed at length Amanie’s plans
to expand its operations. The story (also available at my industry
blog: http://islamicfinanceasia.blogspot.com) is pasted below.

If you know of other developments in other Shariah consulting firms, I
would appreciate a leg up. I would be more than happy to get in touch
with them and share the developments with felolow interested parties
in this journey through Islamic finance.

Cheers.

-- habhajan singh
(kuala lumpur, malaysia)


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Amanie plans expansion into Australia, Europe
(The Malaysian Reserve, 19 March 2010)

By Habhajan Singh

A local Islamic finance consulting company anchored by prominent
Shariah scholar Dr Mohd Daud Bakar is looking to expand its presence
in Australia and Europe to tap the growing business opportunities in
those regions, attempting to tap into changes in regulation to
accommodate Islamic finance and also the growing need to structure
Shariah-compliant products.

Amanie Business Solutions is looking at opening up offices or
partnerships in Australia, while the choice for Europe is between
London and Luxembourg.

"There are concrete proposals to the [Australian] Government to amend
some laws to accommodate Islamic finance. These are some of the areas
of interest," Dr Daud Bakar told The Malaysian Reserve.

He was referring to the Australia financial centre report presented to
the Australian Parliament and made public in mid-January which had
recommended on withholding tax on offshore borrowings and on Islamic
finance, to improve its ‘access to offshore pools of savings at
competitive rates, so as to provide more diversified and cheaper
funding for Australia’s investment needs’. Commonly known as the
Johnson Report, it was commissioned by the Government in September
2008 as part of its commitment to secure Australia’s future as a
leading financial service centre.

The move would make Amanie a Shariah consultancy with one of the
widest global presence. Most Shariah consultants tend to concentrate
in either London or Dubai, while Malaysia is populated more by
individual Shariah scholars who work mostly with Islamic banks and
takaful operators who require their services.

The developments coming out of Australia would have been the impetus
for legal firm Zaid Ibrahim’s to open offices in Sydney and Melbourne
in the December 2009.

One of the largest local legal firms in Malaysia, Zaid Ibrahim had
stated that its primary focus would be to promote Shariah-compliant
business. Zaid Ibrahim, with offices in Singapore, Thailand,
Indonesia, Vietnam and Dubai, had set up in 2008 an Islamic finance
advisory firm called ZI Shariah Advisory Sdn Bhd.

Dr Daud Bakar, who also chairs the influential Bank Negara Malaysia’s
Shariah Advisory Council (SAC), is no stranger to the Islamic finance
scene in Australia. Amanie has advised a number of deals originating
from there, including LM Investment Management Ltd’s (LM) Islamic
property fund and Crescent Investments Australasia Pty Ltd’s equity
fund, both being the first of their kind in that part of the world.

"LM came to see us in Dubai. In fact, they were our first clients in
Dubai," he said.

The Dubai-based vehicle, Amanie Islamic Finance Consultancy and
Education LLC chaired by Dr Mohamed Ali Elgari, signed off the fatwa
for Crescent’s fund. The other signatories on that document, displayed
on the company’s website, are Dr Daud Bakar, Dr Muhamad Amin Ali
Al-Qattan and Dr Osama Al-Dereai.

LM, which described itself as privately owned specialist Australian
income funds manager, floated the LM Australian Alif Fund. It said
that it is a 'Shariah compliant fund, with fatwa confirming the
Shariah compliant status' of the funds and its investments, suitable
for investors seeking 'Australian assets delivering profit in a
Shariah compliant manner, and is available for investment in a range
of major international currencies'.

As for the European move, industry observer note that European cities
like London, Dublin and Luxembourg are vying to be international hubs
for Islamic finance.

Luxembourg, for example, is key domicile of funds in Europe and have
amended a number of taxation laws to accommodate Islamic finance
funds. "Here, they would be interested in originating and listing of
funds," said one observer.

Dr Daud Bakar said that Amanie sees 'potential business expansion' in
Luxembourg. "We have some experience endorsing few Islamic funds
licensed from Luxembourg using UCIT 3 and SICAV structure," he said.
UCITS3 is an European Union initiative. Funds go through a stringent
regulatory process which then allows it to be floated in the EU
jurisdictions without much further local clearance. SICAVs, a vehicle
much like an umbrella for funds, are increasingly being cross-border
marketed in the EU under the UCITS directive.

Asked what prompted the move to expand further, Dr Daud Bakar said:
"Looking at global financial movements, we’ve seen some strong
interest in some jurisdictions like South Korea, Australia,
Luxembourg, Kazakhstan. We like Kazakhstan, where we have partners who
take care of our interest.

"We are a global Shariah firm, originating from Malaysia. We then
expanded to DIFC [Dubai International Financial Centre] in 2008. Now
we are seriously considering to position Amanie in other new potential
markets and jurisdictions. Islamic finance is a global industry. We
need to be close to out clients, be in the same time zone. We’re proud
to fly the Malaysian flag in other countries."

(This story appeared in The Malaysian Reserve on 19 March 2010. The
Malaysian Reserve is a daily business/finance newspaper published out
of Kuala Lumpur, with a sectoral page on Islamic finance on Mondays,
edited by Habhajan Singh. Industry blog:
http://islamicfinanceasia.blogspot.com/)


end


      

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