www.nationmultimedia.com - Fifteen years ago, Muslims wishing to take out a mortgage, use a
credit card or deposit money into a current account would have been hard
pushed to do so and stay compliant with Shariah law.
With few Islamic banks around - and a limited range of Shariah products
- banking as a Muslim invariably involved compromising either your
faith or your financial needs.
Today, in many markets, such compromise is no longer necessary. Islamic
banking is becoming a part of the mainstream, widely available across
financial products and geographies. In 2012, Islamic banking assets are
expected to reach US$1.1 trillion (Bt34.7 trillion) globally, up 33 per
cent on 2010, according to Ernst & Young. Within just a few years,
Islamic banking has transformed into a global industry.
There are three major drivers behind this extraordinary journey - three
reasons why I believe Islamic banking will keep on growing far into the
next decade. (source)
First, increased competition has resulted in a widening of the Islamic
product offering, bringing it within the scope of larger numbers of
Muslims. In the early 2000s, a move by Islamic banks to make
Shariah-compliant products more commercially compelling was a real
game-changer in the industry. For the first time, Islamic banks were
reaching customers for whom the commercial aspects of banking were just
as important as Shariah compliance. Conventional banks, keen to retain
their Muslim customers and make the most of the opportunity, have
subsequently joined the fray, helping to grow the total market around
the world.
Second, as the Islamic banking proposition has become more attractive.
Muslims have converted from conventional banking at a rapid pace,
spurring the industry to make products offered even more sophisticated.
Muslims accustomed to using credit cards, for example, will not want to
lose this benefit when switching to Islamic banking. Whether in terms of
access, technology, products or services, they expect nothing less than
they have been getting from conventional banks, and Islamic banks are
responding. Muslims now have a choice: to bank in a Sharia-compliant
way, they no longer need to sacrifice the convenience, products and
services they have been used to.
Third, the industry is receiving increasing regulatory support with
governments in many markets actively encouraging the development of a
healthy Islamic banking ecosystem. In the UAE, all new local banking
licences granted in the last 15 years have been for Islamic banks.
Countries such as Oman, Uganda and Nigeria are opening up their markets.
Issuance of Sukuk, or Islamic bonds, has become widespread, and Islamic
finance is used increasingly for government support programmes. In
Bahrain for example, Standard Chartered Saadiq now works with
independent employment authority Tamkeen to provide Shariah-compliant
financing for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
Malaysia - probably the world's most successful Islamic banking market -
shows what can be achieved. Here, concerted government action has
pushed Islamic banking past the tipping point to represent around a
quarter of total banking assets.
The next big step for the global Islamic banking industry will be to
close the gap with conventional banking when it comes to the range of
products and services on offer. Islamic wealth management, for example,
is clearly lagging behind, with Shariah-compliant funds comprising less
than 0.25 per cent of total assets under management. It is a classic
chicken-and-egg story. To attract wealthy Muslim clients, you need a
competitive range of products and services, but to get this, you need
scale. However, with the strong growth in Islamic assets, and Islamic
banking providers putting increased pressure on fund managers to
respond, there is a good chance Islamic wealth management will catch up
within the next few years.
For all the industry's recent growth, Islamic banking still represents a
fraction of total banking assets globally, and the great majority
(roughly only one in every eight Muslim with a bank account, banks
Islamic) of Muslims still bank conventionally. Penetration remains low
in some of the world's largest Muslim countries, such as Pakistan and
Indonesia at 9 and 4 per cent respectively. There are several reasons
for this, the most obvious being a simple lack of awareness of what
Shariah banking has to offer.
Regulatory barriers also persist in some countries. While different
markets will develop at different speeds, support from governments and
regulators will help keep up the pace of change. Opening markets to
international Islamic banks will help, too. International providers tend
to accelerate development in individual markets with their ability to
migrate best practice, product sophistication and banking expertise
between geographies. At Standard Chartered, for example, we work with
regulators in a number of countries to help develop their framework for
Islamic banking, using our experience from other markets.
Clearly, by tapping into their global networks, international Islamic
banks also play a role in facilitating cross-border banking for Islamic
customers. This is essential if the industry is to attract more fast-growing SME customers as well as high net-worth individuals who
wish to stay Shariah-compliant without missing out on growth
opportunities in foreign markets.
The purpose of all banking, Islamic or conventional, is to help people
to reach their aspirations. It is about connecting with customers and
meeting their financial needs in a way that fits with how they live
their lives. In the last few years, Islamic banking has caught up fast
to meet this core requirement.
It is still very early days for Shariah banking, but one thing is
clear: with around 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, the upside for
Islamic banking is huge, and the best is yet to come.
Wasim Saifi, Standard Chartered Bank.
Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/Closing-the-gap-the-next-big-step-for-Islamic-bank-30183459.html - June 5, 2012
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