A number of new initiatives
have given Islamic trade finance and export credit insurance a major
boost. MUSHTAK PARKER explains Trade facilitation between member
countries of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), especially
the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) states, and an increased role
for Islamic trade finance and export credit insurance, is set for a
major boost. This is due to the launching of several new initiatives and
the fact that the stated target for intra-Islamic trade of 20 per cent
of the total trade of OIC countries has been achieved. (source)
It is hoped that the impact of these
initiatives will be pervasive across the multilateral agency and private
sectors. The stark challenge ahead for the global economy are
underlined by the spectre of ordinary people protesting across capitals
around the world against economic mismanagement and the perceived greed
and failure of the western banking and financial system, together with
the manifold fallout of the global economic recession, the sovereign
debt crisis in the Eurozone, the continued bailout of the banking
sector, flatline GDP growth especially in the developed economies,
rising unemployment and the continued difficulty businesses have in
getting credit.
Whether the G20 meeting, or the EU
finance ministers summit in October will make much meaningful progress,
given the lack of political leadership and the ambivalence of the
politicians, remains a moot point.
But in the MENA region, in the wake of
the so-called “Arab Spring” and the on-going situations in Iraq, Libya,
Yemen and Syria, there is an increasing recognition that the best way to
create jobs, especially in a demography where some 65 per cent of the
population is under the age of 30, is through stimulating economic
growth.
This in turn requires more robust trade
and investment facilitation between the MENA and OIC regions spearheaded
by government agencies, multilaterals, the banking sector and
small-and-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which is the backbone of most
of the MENA and OIC economies.
Indeed, the buzzwords these days in the
corridors of power in Ankara, Riyadh, Kuala Lumpur etc are “intra-Asia
trade and investment”. This pitches West Asia (the MENA region) with
south and East Asia. Over the past decade or so the direction of trade
between MENA and East Asia has been increasing robustly to the extent
that most Saudi, Kuwaiti and Abu Dhabi oil exports go to countries such
as China, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea.
The latest trend for instance in sukuk
origination is for GCC issuers to raise funds in the Malaysian local
currency market. Already Gulf Investment Corporation (GIC), whose
shareholders include the governments of the six GCC states, namely,
Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman,
and whose mandate is to promote private enterprise and support economic
growth in the GCC region, in August issued a RM750m (US$254m) Sukuk
Wakala bi Istithmar under its existing 20-year RM3.5bn (US$1.18bn)
medium-term notes programme.
This is the second such issuance under
the programme, and, according to Hisham Al-Razzuqi, GIC chief executive
officer, “we anticipate more issuers from the GCC region following suit
in tapping into non-traditional sources to obtain long term funds”.
Other GCC sukuk issuers in the Malaysian markets include National Bank of Abu Dhabi (a RM500m sukuk) and the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) (RM100m sukuk).
Other GCC sukuk issuers in the Malaysian markets include National Bank of Abu Dhabi (a RM500m sukuk) and the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) (RM100m sukuk).
The Abu Dhabi National Energy Company
(TAQA) is also in the process of launching its debut sukuk in Malaysia
as part of its RM3.5bn sukuk programme ostensibly to diversify its
sources of funding.
Mohammed Mubaideen, investor relations
manager at TAQA, emphasised that any sukuk offering will be subject to
market conditions. “Markets are very volatile at the moment, and it is
very difficult to have a clear vision. The company would like to
diversify its sources of funding. The Malaysian market has great
potential and is one of the markets that we are looking at. The proceeds
of the proposed sukuk issuance will be used for general corporate
purposes,” he added.
But he has no doubt that “the role of
Islamic finance will become more important in the region” over the next
few years especially to serve the oil and gas industry in the MENA
countries.
Perhaps it is not surprising that in his
2012 budget, Malaysian Finance Minister Mohd Najib Abdul Razak, who is
also the Prime Minister, announced several initiatives to attract
overseas issuers to use the Malaysian International Islamic Financial
Centre (MIFC) as the hub for sukuk origination and also to enhance the
internationalisation of Islamic finance.
The measures announced include the
extension of income tax exemption given for non-ringgit sukuk issuance
and transactions by another three years until the year of assessment in
2014; a tax deduction on expenses incurred for Sukuk Wakala (Agency
Sukuk, which is usually complemented with a Commodity Murabaha
component) for a three-year period commencing from the year of
assessment 2012; the provision of a RM200m seed capital fund by I-VCAP, a
subsidiary of Value Cap Sdn. Bhd., an investment vehicle of the
Malaysian Ministry of Finance, to promote Shariah-compliant exchange
traded funds (ETFs) and exchange traded commodities (ETCs) by providing
matching loans subject to a maximum of RM20m; and the establishment in
2012 of a RM2bn Shariah-compliant SME Financing Fund to be managed by
selected Islamic banks with the aim of further strengthening the
contribution of SMEs to economic growth and where the government will
finance two per cent of the profit rate.
Trade and finance are inextricably
linked. Not surprisingly given the proliferation of Islamic finance in
Asia and the Middle East over the last two decades with an estimated
average annual growth rate of 20 per cent, the role of Islamic finance
in financing trade, investment, SMEs and economic growth is assuming
greater importance. This is reflected in the economic and financial
policies of several countries and multilaterals.
“The recent developments in some Arab
countries,” emphasised Dr Ahmad Mohamed Ali, president of the IDB, at
the influential 84th development committee meeting at the 2011 annual
meeting of the World Bank Group/International Monetary Fund (IMF) held
in Washington at the end of September, “make it imperative for the IDB
Group to assist in the country-owned formulation and implementation of
employment-focused reform and development agenda. In this regard, the
IDB Group has formulated a multi-tiered programme to assist the affected
Arab countries in achieving better alignment between economic growth
and employment generation objectives, particularly through support to
SMEs and improved access to trade and micro-finance facilities.”
This programme, according to Dr Ali, includes several initiatives such as:
• the Arab Financing Facility for
Infrastructure recently established by the IDB in cooperation with the
World Bank and its private sector funding arm, the International Finance
Corporation (IFC), which “will mobilise new resources of up to US$1bn
to support inclusive economic growth objectives”
• the Cross-Border Trade Facilitation
and Infrastructure Programme, which is in the final stages of being
jointly launched by the IDB, the World Bank, the Arab Fund for Economic
and Social Development, the Arab Trade Financing Programme, the African
Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, and the Agence Francaise
de Developpement
• The SR1bn Saudi SME Fund, which is in the process of being launched by the IDB and its private sector funding arm, the Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD) along with other partners with the aim of supporting the growth of SMEs in the non-oil private sector
• the IDB’s Interim Assistance Strategy for Egypt and Tunisia, two “Arab Spring” countries undergoing political and economic transformation, which covers the period 2011 to 2013 and comprises an estimated financial envelope of US$2.5bn and US$1.5bn, respectively. The strategic thrusts of the interim strategy will be to support those sectors, which will rapidly help in economic revival and employment generation
• the Arab Youth Employment Creation Fund whereby the IDB and the IFC will mobilise up to US$2bn over the next five years to support job creation and skills training opportunities for Arab youth.
According to IDB figures, the cumulative net approvals for 19 MENA member countries of the multilateral development bank of the Muslim World at the end of August 2011 totalled US$39.5bn, which is about 52 per cent of the total approvals of the bank since it started operations in 1976. Total gross approvals of the IDB to date amounted to US$78,854.6m. Total trade finance operations approved by the IDB to date has reached US$36,959.3m. But put this against the total trade of the 56 IDB member countries of US$3.374 trillion in 2009, then the sheer scale of the challenge faced by the IDB as a group becomes apparent.
• The SR1bn Saudi SME Fund, which is in the process of being launched by the IDB and its private sector funding arm, the Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD) along with other partners with the aim of supporting the growth of SMEs in the non-oil private sector
• the IDB’s Interim Assistance Strategy for Egypt and Tunisia, two “Arab Spring” countries undergoing political and economic transformation, which covers the period 2011 to 2013 and comprises an estimated financial envelope of US$2.5bn and US$1.5bn, respectively. The strategic thrusts of the interim strategy will be to support those sectors, which will rapidly help in economic revival and employment generation
• the Arab Youth Employment Creation Fund whereby the IDB and the IFC will mobilise up to US$2bn over the next five years to support job creation and skills training opportunities for Arab youth.
According to IDB figures, the cumulative net approvals for 19 MENA member countries of the multilateral development bank of the Muslim World at the end of August 2011 totalled US$39.5bn, which is about 52 per cent of the total approvals of the bank since it started operations in 1976. Total gross approvals of the IDB to date amounted to US$78,854.6m. Total trade finance operations approved by the IDB to date has reached US$36,959.3m. But put this against the total trade of the 56 IDB member countries of US$3.374 trillion in 2009, then the sheer scale of the challenge faced by the IDB as a group becomes apparent.
In the first nine months of 2011, IDB
Group approvals for the MENA region amounted to US$2.4bn. In addition,
the bank has allocated an extra US$250m for 2011 specifically to support
youth employment generation in the countries undergoing transition in
the Arab region.
The pressure on IDB Group entities such
as the Dubai-based International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation
(ITFC) to boost intra-Islamic trade is immense. Currently intra-Islamic
trade accounts for a mere 16 per cent of the total trade of member
countries and the stated target of the bank is to boost this to 20 per
cent by 2015.
At a meeting last month at IDB headquarters in Jeddah aimed at promoting intra-Islamic trade and finance, Waleed Al-Wohaib, CEO of ITFC, warned that “OIC countries have to include intra-trade in their national plans”, and rued the fact that intra-Islamic trade is still stagnant at 16 per cent. Thus far, ITFC has approved US$13bn in trade finance and this year alone the figure is set to top US$3bn.
At a meeting last month at IDB headquarters in Jeddah aimed at promoting intra-Islamic trade and finance, Waleed Al-Wohaib, CEO of ITFC, warned that “OIC countries have to include intra-trade in their national plans”, and rued the fact that intra-Islamic trade is still stagnant at 16 per cent. Thus far, ITFC has approved US$13bn in trade finance and this year alone the figure is set to top US$3bn.
The IDB Group has a major perception
problem in that its terms of financing trade, especially commodity
Murabaha and Instalment Sale facilities, is perceived by the market to
be less competitive and flexible compared with the general banking
sector.
At the IDB board of governors annual meeting held in Jeddah in June this year, Egypt’s alternative governor to the IDB, Sameer Sayyad, strongly urged “a periodic review of the IDB Group’s pricing policy and its mobilisation of resources at competitive prices, to help reduce the cost of financing projects in member countries, under conditions as easy as those applied by similar financing institutions”.
At the IDB board of governors annual meeting held in Jeddah in June this year, Egypt’s alternative governor to the IDB, Sameer Sayyad, strongly urged “a periodic review of the IDB Group’s pricing policy and its mobilisation of resources at competitive prices, to help reduce the cost of financing projects in member countries, under conditions as easy as those applied by similar financing institutions”.
The ICD has been the first to respond,
making it clear that it is already reviewing its mark-up and repayment
schedules to make them more flexible as well as lowering its financing
costs. It is also giving priority to targeting its financing to SMEs in
member countries.
One area where increased competition is
beckoning is in Islamic liquidity management primarily through Commodity
Murabaha (Tawarruq) platforms. In Istanbul last month, Muhammed Bin
Ibrahim, the deputy governor of Bank Negara Malaysia, the central bank,
leading a Malaysian Islamic Finance Road Show to Turkey, highlighted
three key areas of collaboration between the two countries.
These include encouraging the Turkish
financial and business community to use Malaysia as a platform to raise
funds such as sukuk and Islamic syndication. Also, Malaysia’s Economic
Transformation Programme (ETP) offers the Turkish business community
investment opportunities; and Turkish financial institutions and
relevant entities are invited to become members of Bursa Suq Al Sila’,
the world’s first end-to-end Islamic multi-currency commodity trading
platform, which facilitates liquidity management, in the Islamic
financial market and institutions.
“This fully-electronic platform,”
explained the deputy governor, “facilitates sukuk structuring, Islamic
financing and investment transactions, including inter-bank placements
and customer deposits, by applying the concept of Murabaha and Tawarruq.
Since its establishment in 2009, 23 commodity trading participants from
Malaysia, the Middle East and Europe have been registered in Bursa Suq
Al-Sila’, contributing to the growth in its trading volume where 1370
trades were recorded in Q1 2011 with a total value of US$18bn as
compared to 728 trades in the final quarter of 2010 that totalled an
estimated US$11bn.”
The two countries are due to sign a
Strategic Framework Agreement, which would identify important bilateral
areas of cooperation and which is aimed at boosting Turkish-Malaysian
trade from the current US$1.5bn to US$5bn over the next few years.
The other Commodity Murabaha trading platforms are Bahrain’s Bursa Al Bait and the warrants issued on the London Metals Exchange (LME), which has traditionally been the “backbone” of Commodity Murabaha trading, primarily used for short-term liquidity management and for servicing investment and current accounts at Islamic banks.
The other Commodity Murabaha trading platforms are Bahrain’s Bursa Al Bait and the warrants issued on the London Metals Exchange (LME), which has traditionally been the “backbone” of Commodity Murabaha trading, primarily used for short-term liquidity management and for servicing investment and current accounts at Islamic banks.
But in October a new Commodity Murabaha
trading platform was launched at the Jakarta Futures Exchange (JFX) in
Indonesia, one of the world’s largest suppliers of primary commodities
such as palm oil. The platform is a collaborative effort between JFX,
Bank Indonesia (the central bank), the Commodity Futures Trading
Supervisory Board and the National Syariah Board of the Ulema Council of
Indonesia.
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