Wednesday January 07, 2009

Islamic finance lack depth but demand rising


Thursday, March 29, 2007

GULF Arab companies face constraints in using Islamic finance because of its lack of depth, but will increasingly use it for debt and private equity as demand grows among Muslims, regional business leaders say.

Western companies are looking to Islamic debt to tap Middle East petrodollar wealth and Gulf Arab firms are using Islamic financing as they spend oil windfalls on acquiring firms in Europe, the United States, and Asia, speakers at the Reuters Middle East Investment Summit in Dubai said this week.

"The beauty of Islamic finance is that it can coexist with Western finance," said Peter Barker-Homek, Chief Executive of Abu Dhabi National Energy Co (Taqa), which is planning to raise as much as US$2 billion this year by selling Islamic bonds to finance acquisitions.

"It is an alternative investment base but isn't as deep as conventional finance."

Secondary trading in Islamic bonds, or sukuk, is nearly nonexistent, with most bought and held to maturity. Syariah law bans payment of interest, allowing money to be earned only from physical assets. This makes it difficult to trade debt or receivables for anything other than par value.

But as the sophistication of Islamic markets and products grows, Muslim investors will increasingly shun conventional finance and a greater proportion of petrodollars will be invested along Islamic principles, summit participants said.

Islamic financial institutions, including nonbank operations such as insurance firms, manage more than US$800 billion, according to data cited by the Islamic Development Bank in its 2005-2006 annual report.

Gulf firms are raising syariah-compliant money to fund takeovers of Western companies. British luxury car maker Aston Martin, for example, was acquired earlier this month for US$925 million by a consortium including Kuwait's Investment Dar, which invests according to Islamic law.

The world's 1.2 billion Muslims are increasingly insisting that their money be invested according to Islamic principles, which ban alcohol, gambling and pornography. Reuters