Assalamulaikum,

Sanak Eric, ini menarik, bisa cerita sedikit mengenai usaha yang pernah dicoba?

Gimana kalau dicoba lagi, tentu saja jangan ajak pengkhianat bekerja sama...

Wassalam,

Delil

  ericska kariman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Sebetulnya, saya sudah coba menjalankan-nya
tetapi apa daya, orang yang diberi amah
berkhianat.

Mungkin yang perlu dibenahi, manusia-nya dahulu

wassalam

eric st pangeran
Houston, USA


>From: Delil Khairat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: [RantauNet] Western funds find faith in Islamic investing
>Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2002 19:33:09 +0000 (GMT)
>
>
> Assalamualaikum,
>Terima kasih responnya.
>Kapan ya, Ekonomi Islam bisa maju di Indonesia, negri dengan populasi
>muslim terbesar. Kita jauh tertinggal dari tetangga Malaysia.
>Upss...bukankah semestinya Ranah Minang bisa jadi pionir dalam hal ini?
>Wassalam,
>Delil
> ries woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>Sdr Delil yth, terima kasih atas kiriman article nya.
>Ries Woodhouse Geneva
>
> >From: Delil Khairat >Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >To:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: [RantauNet] Western funds find faith in
>Islamic investing >Date: Sun, 17 Mar 2002 16:03:45 +0000 (GMT) > > > >
> >Assalamualaikum, > >Berita tiga minggu lalu dari The Financial Times,
>insyaallah belum basi. > >Wassalam, > >Delil > > > >Western funds find
>faith in Islamic investing >By James Mawson >Published: February 24 2002
>15:50 | Last Updated: February 24 2002 17:08 > > > >US and European fund
>managers running specialist Islamic funds held their breath after the
>architects of the September 11 attacks on the US were found to be Islamic
>extremists. It was feared that they would be caught up in the worldwide
>hunt for the secret sources of terrorist money > >Yet, nearly six months
>on, as Muslim s from around the world gather in Mecca for their hajj, the
>fund managers - who manage the funds on behalf of banks in the Middle East
>and South East Asia - are anticipating something of a
>revival. HSBC, the UK-listed bank, which has $3bn (£2bn) assets under
>management and three Islamic funds, is predicting growth of assets under
>management of up to 40 per cent this year. > >It was not until 1996 that
>the Fiqh Academy of scholars in Jeddha, which rules on a permissible code
>of conduct for Muslims, permitted the launch of the first Islamic equity
>funds. > >However, some fund managers keen to tap into the potentially
>lucrative market of 1.5bn Muslims and more than $100bn of assets had
>already jumped the gun. The first mutual fund was launched by Kleinwort
>Benson in 1986, followed by the Al-Ahli International Trade fund in 1987 -
>both were launched without the official seal of approval. > >Today,
>market-leaders incl ude HSBC, Citigroup, the US banking group, Wellington,
>the US specialist, and Permal, the subsidiary of Worms & Cie, the
>Swiss-based bank. > >Under Sharia law, which governs the lives of the
>followers of Islam, investors are not allowed to hold stakes in banks or
>insurance companies because they are usurious.
> Nor are they allowed to buy the shares of companies whose main business
>is alcohol, pork, defence, gambling or entertainment. > >Yet there are
>disagreements among scholars about what is halal, or lawful. Notably, there
>is a divide between the Middle East, where there is a strict interpretation
>of Sharia law, and South East Asia. > >The regions take different
>approaches to debt, with Malaysia, in particular, allowing non-asset backed
>securities. > >Early on, these disagreements stemmed the flow of new money
>into the funds. The pioneers, who had licked their lips at the prospect of
>winning a lucrati ve slice of the potentially huge market, were disappointed
>by the scholarly squabbles. > >But, according to Iqbal Kahn, chief
>executive officer of HSBC's Dubai-based Amanah finance division, the recent
>standardisation work of the Accounting and Auditing Organisation for
>Islamic Financial Institutions, a Bahrain body, has narrowed the
>differences and encouraged new sales of Islamic fund products. > >This has
>given fund managers new hope of
> a revival of Islamic investing. So too has the growing interest of
>non-Muslim investors. In Egypt, members of the Coptic Church, the Christian
>minority, use Islamic funds. In Malaysia, one of the world's largest Muslim
>nations, roughly 20 per cent of investors in Islamic funds are Chinese. >
> >In these cases, investment is not strictly based on financial criteria.
>According to Mr Kahn, non-Muslim investors buy into Islamic funds out of
>goodwill for their host country and a desi re to fit in. Sometimes, too,
>there are tax advantages for investing. > >But there are also financial
>opportunities. The FTSE Global Islamic index, which tracks 912 companies,
>was launched at the start of 1999 on 47.30 points. Last week it was at
>about 83.00, after rebounding from a dip suffered after September 11. >
> >Stella Cox, director of Dawney Day, a UK niche investment boutique, and
>fellow of the London-based Institute of Islamic Banking and Insurance,
>estimates that there is up to $5bn in more than 100 authorised Islamic
>investment funds. Of this, 60 p
>er cent is put into equities screened for compliance with Sharia
>guidelines. The rest, for the most part, is invested in property or cars,
>which are then leased to customers under a fee system called Ijara. > >The
>terrorist attacks in New York and Washington have not dented fund managers'
>plans for new funds. > >In the aftermath, several Islamic funds were
>launched, including Mutajarah, a fund of hedge funds from Towry Law Asset
>Management, a Malaysia-based subsidiary of AMP, the Australian insurer. >
> >Al-Rajhi, Saudi Arabia's largest pure Islamic finance bank, wants to
>capitalise on its reputation by launching a Luxembourg-based Islamic fund.
> > >This is giving new hope to Islamic fund management specialists. Mr Kahn
>says: "If the market rises and institutions and [government's] investment
>authorities take more of a leap into Islamic funds, then we could see
>growth of up to 40 per cent this year. > >"If everything does not go so
>well, then this could be nearer 15 to 20 per cent." > > >Delil Khairat
> >London Guildhall University >84
>Moorgate >London >Mobile: +44 77 89 202 204 >Home: +44 20 899 50 435 > >
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>London
>Mobile: +44 77 89 202 204
>Home: +44 20 899 50 435
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Mobile: +44 77 89 202 204
Home: +44 20 899 50 435



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