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Entries categorized as ‘Europe’

First Shariah compliant money market fund in Europe launched

October 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

First Shariah compliant money market fund in Europe launched

Bank of London and the Middle East (BLME) has launched the first Shariah compliant money market fund in Europe. Using Luxembourg’s specialised investment funds law, BLME has appointed European Fund Administration (EFA) and Banque et Caisse d’Epargne de l’Etat (BCEE) for fund servicing and custody.

 BLME Umbrella Fund SICAV-SIF, worth over $50 million, invests in a diversified portfolio of high quality Islamic money market instruments, such as commodity murabaha (exchange contract trade), sukuk (Islamic bonds) and ijara (assets leasing).

To respond to the significant market growth in Islamic investments, EFA has tailored the fund to its open fund accounting architecture and transfer agency platform while offering specific training to a dedicated team.

BLME is an independent UK wholesale Shariah compliant bank based in London authorised by the Financial Services Authority. It offers innovative Islamic investment and financing products to businesses and high net-worth individuals in the European, the US, South-East Asian and Middle East and North Africa regions.

EFA is an independent company specialised in administrating investment vehicles. It manages 2,700 funds units worth over €100 billion for more than 215 clients.

Categories: Europe · Growth · Islamic Mutual Funds
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Islamic finance courses and postgraduate qualifications booming in the UK and Europe

July 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Guardian: Islamic finance courses and postgraduate qualifications booming in the UK and Europe

london bridge

With global finance on its knees, this summer’s business graduates face an even trickier jobs market than most. But there is one area of banking still experiencing boom time – Islamic finance – and universities have been quick to grasp its possibilities.

This September will see new courses and postgraduate qualifications in Islamic finance springing up throughout the UK and elsewhere in Europe, reflecting the fact that it has become one of the fastest-growing sectors of the global banking industry, expanding by between 15% and 20% a year. Assets held by institutions adhering to Islamic finance principles now amount to nearly 1 trillion dollars.

In the UK, interest in the sector also reflects the government’s commitment to promoting Britain as an Islamic finance centre. The UK already leads Europe in the number of Islamic finance training courses it offers, from entry to postgraduate level, and in 2006 saw the launch of the Islamic Finance Qualification, a joint initiative between a Lebanese business school and the Securities and Investment Institute.

London gateway

Last December, the Treasury published a paper setting out the government’s aim for London to be "Europe’s gateway to international Islamic finance". This acknowledged that the industry was still young and therefore not yet experiencing skills shortages, but predicted that it soon would be. It stated: "The pool of potential applicants in the UK will have to keep up with the rapid growth of the market."

Universities have responded enthusiastically. Newcastle University is offering an MSc in finance and law with Islamic finance from next academic year. Henley Business School at the University of Reading has been offering an MSc in investment banking and Islamic finance since last year, with students spending the second part of the year in Kuala Lumpur. The University of Bangor in Wales has also been running its Islamic finance MA and MSc for a year and is considering introducing a new MBA in the subject, while the first students to take an Islamic finance option as part of an executive MBA offered in Dubai by Cass Business School will graduate this summer. Durham, which has been offering postgraduate research degrees in Islamic finance for some time, is now introducing a taught MA and MSc (the MSc is more quantitative), to respond to demand. Elsewhere in Europe, Reims Management School is offering a new specialist course in Islamic banking and finance for students on its masters in management programme, taught in English.

Student demand is driving the subject as much as any urging from governments. According to Rodney Wilson, founder and director of the Islamic finance programme at Durham, it is coming mainly from south-east Asia, particularly Malaysia, and the Middle East, although there is plenty of interest from the UK as well.

Joanna Gray, professor of financial regulation at Newcastle Law School, says she is keen that their new degree course is not just seen as something for Muslims. "It’s for anyone interested in a fast-developing industry that in the UK has been quite busy in the past few years to accommodate forms of investment in finance that are sharia-compliant."

Sharia principles

Islamic finance really dates from the mid-1970s, with attempts to make products available through conventional banking, such as loans and mortgages, compatible with sharia principles. Sharia law prohibits any transaction that involves paying interest or investing in certain economic sectors such as gambling or pornography. It demands that both the investor and recipient of the investment must share any risk, and transactions have to be underpinned by tangible assets.

In the years immediately after 9/11, anything involving money and Muslims was viewed with suspicion by many in the west because of fears about terrorism, and Islamic finance is still taking off faster in the UK and France than in the US. But in the current global financial climate the principles it is based on have struck a chord.

"There is an extent to which, to a westerner, Islamic finance products look very similar to ethical finance products," says Stefan Szymanski, professor of economics at Cass. "There is a demand for morally upright investment vehicles, and Islamic finance is the Islamic version of that."

Philip Molyneux, head of the business school at Bangor, suggests that even if western banks do not want to introduce specific Islamic finance products – and an increasing number do – they still want to know how it is that many Islamic institutions escaped the worst effects of the credit crunch.

He has been surprised that demand for the MA and MSc has come not just from recent graduates and bankers wanting to improve their career prospects, but also from sharia scholars, who play a key role in Islamic finance. Any new financial product must be passed by them as sharia-compliant, so many financial institutions must now have scholars standing by ready to give their verdict. These scholars often disagree, and can even change their minds, but this offers plenty of scope for the kind of intellectual arguments that universities relish, not to mention graduate jobs.

On the whole, most of the new Islamic finance courses steer well clear of religious issues in favour of legal and financial questions because these are what most interest students. Khalid El Sheik applied for Bangor’s Islamic finance MA because, having taken a first degree in computer science in Sudan before switching to a career in marketing, he felt his CV needed a business boost. He saw it as a chance to mark himself out from other students and to have a headstart in an area that was likely to offer plenty of future employment opportunities. "I had read about Islamic banking and how it was going to increase in future, and how most of the banking sector is now looking to it," he says. His fellow students at the university, including one from China, had the same idea, he says.

Szymanski agrees that it is the idea of the moment in many universities, and while Cass is still waiting to see how the market develops before introducing any similar courses, it is certainly considering the possibility.

"You just have to measure how many billions of dollars Islamic finance already handles in a year," he says. "If that grows over the years, it will become a universal part of every business school."

Categories: Europe · Training and education · United Kingdom
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Bahrain’s Arab Banking Corporation to push Islamic finance in Europe

May 12, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Bahrain’s Arab Banking Corporation to push Islamic finance in Europe

eiffel-tower

Bahrain-based bank ABC said it will start to market Islamic financing products to European clients left hamstrung by the sustained gridlock in the credit markets.

The firm has until now only actively marketed mainstream products to clients of ABC International Bank Plc, the London-headquartered European division of Arab Banking Corporation.

"We are aiming to target the wholesale market, especially companies in Europe that are interested in seeking Islamic finance solutions, for example sukuk, leasing, and general corporate facilities," said Faisal Alshowaikh, the newly- appointed head of Islamic financial services at ABC International.

Read the rest …

Categories: Europe
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Islamic banks aim to expand into Europe

December 18, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Islamic banks aim to expand into Europe

The Islamic banks of London are preparing to gain more business from the 15 million European Muslims, who, other than those who live in London, they have had little effect upon.

By 2010 it is predicted that Islamic banking will reach a value of $1 trillion, a prediction that has led the UK to woo the sector with laws passed to enable easier transactions and the intention to deliver a sovereign Islamic bond.

London has approximately £3.5bn/$7.14bn Islamic bonds listed, with many large Islamic bond and loan deals occurring through the city, providing the British capital with an advantageous position compared to its European counterparts.

Farrukh Raza, speaking for the Islamic Bank of Britain, highlighted the British advantage by stating that whilst visiting a French conference about Islamic finance half the time was spent talking about the UK.

Islamic banks operating in Britain are required by European law to do so successfully for two years before being permitted to expand onto the continent.

France, which has 10% of its population made up of Muslims, over six million people, has no Islamic banking institutions.

There is a huge opportunity for Islamic banking throughout Europe, particularly in France, according to Derek Weist, Bank of London and the Middle East official.

However, there is the need for a change in regulations to make Islamic banking transactions easier.

Categories: Around the world · Europe · Growth

Islamic Finance – Europe’s key challenge, says Deutsche Bundesbank

December 12, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Islamic Finance – Europe’s key challenge, says Deutsche Bundesbank

The global banking industry must start providing Sharia-compliant finance products to meet growing demand and to gain new customers, legislators must ensure a level playing field for Islamic finance, and European banking supervisors working with Basel II-derived rulings must ensure that the risk weights of Islam-compliant finance products are fair and correct.

Last week, Rudolf Böhmler, Executive Board member at Deutsche Bundesbank, told an audience at the 2nd Islamic Financial Services Forum, that Europe must accept the challenge of Islamic banking. Demand had skyrocketed – 25% of the world is now Muslim – and the banks had to accept that this demand was not only in the traditional high net-worth market but was being fuelled by the growth of the Muslim middle-classes in Europe and other Western financial areas.

Böhmler used the UK as an example to show how a market for Sharia finance products can also function in non-Muslim countries. He said “Back in 2004, the Islamic Bank of Britain obtained a licence from the Financial Services Authority (FSA), making it the first Sharia-compliant bank to open for business in the UK. Since then, the European Islamic Investment Bank has been established and numerous credit institutions (e.g. HSBC) have a so-called “Islamic window”. The British government’s efforts to create a level playing field for Islamic finance and conventional products have been successful in the City of London.” Böhmler said that countries must adapt their legal and taxation frameworks and remove or mitigate obstacles.

Capital adequacy rules also need to be adapted. Currently supervisors and Basel II are not very favourable in their allocation of risk weightings to Sharia banking products. This is often through the lack of supervisors’ experience of these products and needs to be investigated and rectified. Islamic banking is no riskier than any other business and risk weighting needs to reflect the true risk levels.

Categories: Around the world · Challenges · Europe