www.thestar.com.my - KUALA LUMPUR: The Islamic finance industry will grow 15% annually in
the next decade, after syariah- compliant banking assets surged in Asia
in the past year, according to a global standards-setting body.
Holdings
in Malaysia rose 27% to RM344bil in the 12 months to April 30,
according to the central bank. In Indonesia, they climbed 43% to 144.3
trillion rupiah (US$15.2bil), official data show.
Rising consumer
demand for banking services was helping drive the market, Jaseem Ahmed,
secretary general of the Kuala Lumpur-based Islamic Financial Services
Board (IFSB), said in a June 21 interview.
Government spending
programmes in the key Islamic centres of Asia and the Middle East were
bolstering economic growth and bringing in more funds for lenders, Rafe
Haneef, chief executive officer at HSBC Amanah Malaysia Bhd,
said on Tuesday. Industry assets may reach US$1.1 trillion in 2012,
compared with US$826bil in 2010, according to a report from Ernst &
Young LLP. (source)
“Islamic banking assets worldwide have been growing at
an average rate of 15% to 25% annually,” Rafe at the syariah-compliant
unit of HSBC Bank Plc, said in an interview. “More and more countries, such as Egypt, are shifting to Islamic banking.”
Syariah
banking in Indonesia accounted for 3.8% of the total in April, while
the ratio was 24% in Malaysia, data from the monetary authorities show.
Saudi Arabia’s US$94bil of financial assets that comply with religious
tenets represent 26% of the market in the six-member Gulf Cooperation
Council, according to a June 21 report from Deloitte Middle East Islamic
Finance Centre in Manama, Bahrain.
Lenders’ assets have the
potential to grow further as more countries adopt Islamic financing and
sell sukuk, according to law firm Lee Hishammuddin Allen & Gledhill.
Oman
and Hong Kong are in the process of drafting legislation, while Turkey,
Afghanistan and South Africa are planning sukuk sales. Egypt was
looking to introduce Islamic banking in a “big way,” HSBC’s Rafe said.
Issuance
of bonds that comply with Islam’s ban on interest climbed to US$20.8bil
in 2012 from US$14bil in the same period in 2011, led by the Middle
East, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. HSBC Bank predicts full-year offerings will surpass 2011’s record of US$36.7bil.
“The
outlook is positive for Islamic finance, with growth being primarily
focused on consumer demand,” Megat Hizaini Hassan, a partner and head of
the syariah-compliant finance practice at Hishammuddin Allen, said in
an e-mail on Monday. “The emergence of new markets would be the main
driver.”
The IFSB predicted in 2007 that the global Islamic
finance industry would reach US$2.8 trillion by 2015. Jaseem declined to
give a new forecast. “The industry is strong and growing and it’s
expanding geographically,” he said.
Syariah-compliant notes have
returned 5% this year, according to the HSBC/Nasdaq Dubai US Dollar
Sukuk Index, while debt in developing markets gained 6.9%, JPMorgan Chase & Co’s EMBI Global Composite Index shows.
Average
yields on global Islamic bonds dropped three basis points to 3.46% on
Wednesday, the lowest level since August, according to HSBC. They
declined 16 basis points, or 0.16 percentage point, this quarter.
The
difference between the average and the London interbank offered rate
narrowed three basis points to 242, the least since April 20, the HSBC
index shows. The gap shrunk six basis points since March 30.
The
International Monetary Fund predicts economic growth in Asia and the
Middle East will outpace the United States this year as governments
boost spending to shore up their economies from the euro-area debt
crisis. – Bloomberg
Asset Projections
Gross domestic
product in the Middle East and North Africa will increase 4.2 percent in
2012, compared with 2.1 percent in the U.S. and a contraction of 0.3
percent in Europe, the Washington-based fund forecast in its latest
outlook report issued in April. Asia’s developing countries will see
growth of 7.3 percent, it said.
Malaysia, the biggest market for
sukuk, has implemented a 10-year $444 billion development program to
build power plants, roads and railways. Indonesia, home to the world’s
largest Muslim population, plans to tap last year’s $2.5 billion budget
surplus to fund construction projects.
Malaysia is targeting
Islamic banking assets to reach 40 percent of the total by 2020. In
Indonesia, they will account for 15 percent to 20 percent within 10
years if growth is sustained, Halim Alamsyah, deputy governor of Bank
Indonesia, said in a speech on May 7 in Bandung in western Java.
“Islamic
finance has developed not only in traditional Muslim markets like
Malaysia and the Middle East, but also in conventional markets,” Zainal
Izlan Zainal Abidin, executive director for Islamic capital markets at
the Securities Commission, said in an e-mailed statement yesterday.
There are “a growing number of jurisdictions across the globe at various
stages of developing their capabilities in Islamic finance,” the note
said.
--With assistance from Yudith Ho in Jakarta. Editors: Simon Harvey, Sandy Hendry
To contact the reporter on this story: Liau Y-Sing in Kuala Lumpur at yliau@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Sandy Hendry in Hong Kong at shendry@bloomberg.net. 06-28-12 0006EDT
Source: http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/6/29/business/11570141&sec=business - June 29, 2012
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