www.thejakartaglobe.com - Indonesia’s three best-performing Islamic bond funds say a rebound in
corporate sukuk sales is failing to keep up with demand from investors
chasing higher returns as government yields decline.
Insight
Investments Management’s top-ranked I-Hajj Syariah Fund wants to boost
company holdings from 80 percent if more securities become available,
President Director Tony Henri said in an interview in Jakarta last week.
Akbar Syarief, fund manager at MNC Asset Management, overseeing the
second-best performer, said his confidence in finding buyers is not
matched by certainty there will be sufficient supply.
“Right
now the concern is that when money comes in, there may not be securities
to invest in,” Jakarta-based Syarief, whose MNC Dana Syariah vehicle
returned 3.8 percent this year, said in a June 26 interview. “Corporate
sukuk will always be in high demand.” (source)
The yield on
Indonesia’s Shariah-compliant rupiah bond due August 2018 fell 1.12
percentage points in the past year to 6.20 percent, compared with the
8.1 percent average return for Indonesia’s six sukuk funds over the same
period. Bank Muamalat Indonesia lifted its June sale to Rp 800 billion
($85 million) from Rp 500 billion after investors sought 2.2 times the
amount first offered, Finance Director Hendiarto said.
Corporate
sales have reached Rp 1.5 trillion so far this year, compared with just
Rp 200 billion for the whole of 2011. Etty Retno Wulandari, a
Jakarta-based director at the Capital Market and Financial Institution
Supervisory Agency, said last month she expected 2012 offers to get to
Rp 3 trillion. However, official data shows the 20 percent average
growth in outstanding corporate sukuk over the past five years still
trails the 40 percent expansion in Islamic banking
assets.
‘Don’t actively trade’
“Our
fund could be much bigger but Islamic bond issuance isn’t growing as
fast as banking assets,” Insight’s Henri said. “We don’t actively trade
the company sukuk because once we sell it, it is difficult to look for
new products to invest in.”
Worldwide sales of bonds that
comply with Islam’s ban on interest climbed to $21 billion in 2012 from
$14 billion in the same period of 2011, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg. Offerings reached a record $36.7 billion last year.
Malaysia,
the world’s largest sukuk market, has exempted investors from paying
taxes on capital gains made on Shariah-compliant debt denominated in
currencies other than the ringgit through 2014. Indonesia offers no
similar incentive because it is committed to keeping Islamic products on
an equal footing with non-Islamic securities, the Capital Market
Agency’s Wulandari said last month.
Tax benefits
“There
needs to be tax benefits for the Shariah-compliant capital market to
grow,” Insight’s Henri said. “Issuing Islamic bonds requires more
processing and there needs to be a pay-off to make them more or equally
lucrative as conventional bonds.”
The I-Hajj Syariah fund
returned 4 percent this year and 10.3 percent in 2011, the most among
the six Indonesian sukuk vehicles tracked by Bloomberg, which advanced
by an average of 3.1 percent in 2012 and 8.8 percent last year.
Assets
held by Islamic bond and stock funds in Indonesia increased by an
annual average of 96 percent over the last five years and account for 3
percent of the nation’s total managed funds, Capital Market Agency data
show.
“We plan to launch more sukuk funds going forward, if
there are products,” MNC Asset’s Syarief said, adding that he would like
to increase his allocation for corporate notes to 70 percent from 50
percent. “Government Islamic bonds tend to be more volatile and yield
lower, so we need to balance our fund with corporate
notes.”
‘Bright outlook’
Global
Shariah-compliant bonds returned 5.1 percent this year, according to
the HSBC/NASDAQ Dubai US Dollar Sukuk Index, while debt in developing
markets gained 7.8 percent, JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI Global Index
shows.
The average yield on Islamic bonds fell one basis
point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 3.44 percent on June 29, the lowest
since August, according to the HSBC/NASDAQ Sukuk index. The difference
between the average yield and the London interbank offered rate, or
Libor, narrowed three basis points to 240 basis points.
Corporate
Islamic debt sales in Indonesia this year amount to just 2 percent of
Malaysia’s 23.4 billion ringgit ($7.4 billion) of issuance in the same
period, even though the former nation’s Muslim population is twelve
times as big as its neighbors.
“Indonesia’s corporate sukuk
market has a bright outlook,” Ruben Sukatendel, a Jakarta-based
portfolio manager at BNI Asset Management, said in a June 27 interview.
“It
is possible that Indonesia’s Islamic capital market may catch up to
Malaysia’s if we see synergy between market players and regulators,”
said Sukatendel, who oversees BNI Dana Syariah, the country’s debut
sukuk fund and the third-best performing this year.
Source: http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/business/indonesia-company-sukuk-shortage-curbs-returns-islamic-finance/528341 - July 3, 2012
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