The Islamic Finance Blog – News and Information

Entries categorized as ‘Middle East’

Shariah-compliant water fund set to launch

May 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Shariah-compliant water fund set to launch

niagara

Bahrain-based Robeco Middle East has announced that it will be launching one of the world’s first Islamic water funds.

The launch will be in association with their boutique SAM, one of the world’s leading asset managers in the field of sustainability investments, and in conjunction with Gatehouse Bank, one of the leading Islamic banks.

It will offer, on a global basis, the first-ever Sharia-compliant investment strategy in the area of water.

This investment strategy offers professional investors with a long-term investment horizon the opportunity to participate in the worldwide growth of forward-looking, sustainability-oriented companies involved in the entire value chain of water, while adhering to Sharia norms.

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Categories: Innovations · Islamic Mutual Funds · Middle East
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Sukuk market in the Gulf needs to be regulated

April 30, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Sukuk market in the Gulf needs to be regulated

burj al arab

The Gulf can foster growth in Islamic bonds (sukuk) market by adopting regulations and going in for measures such as credit rating, say analysts.

Even as the GCC holds a lion’s share in the global sukuk market, estimated at $130 billion (Dh477bn), it lags behind when it comes to regulations. And a model like the one followed by Malaysia can help it tap the massive potential that the segment holds, they said.

"The GCC market holds a significant share of global market when it comes to volume. But if we talk of a regulated market, the comfort levels of having prudent policy guidelines from regulators are still not there, whether it is related to type of issuances or ratings," said Moinuddin Malim, Head of Corporate and Investment Banking, Badr-Al-Islami. Mashreq.

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Categories: Challenges · Middle East · Sukuk
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Islamic fund eyes private buyouts

June 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Islamic fund eyes private buyouts

money 

Global Investment House, Millennium Capital and Dubai Islamic Bank have received approval from the Central Bank of Bahrain for a US $500 million Islamic buyout fund.

The fund will provide investors access to Shariah compliant private equity investments, which the partners see as a largely untapped asset class across the region.

As seed investors, Global, DIB and Millennium Capital will be contributing 13% of the fund’s capital. Global will be the investment manager to the Fund, while Millennium Capital will act as investment advisor.

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Categories: Africa · Bahrain · Islamic Investments · Islamic Mutual Funds · Middle East

The Growing Influence of The Gulf as a Global Financial Centre

June 28, 2008 · 1 Comment

The Growing Influence of The Gulf as a Global Financial Centre

jedda

…. The GCC is well positioned to act as a key hub in global financial markets, serving the wider Asia-MENA region. To enable the GCC to leverage its position, an important development would be the creation of a larger, deeper debt market, whether based on Western-style bonds or the Sharia model, building on the region’s strength in Islamic finance.

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Categories: Growth · Middle East

Islamic banks “are making mark”

May 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Islamic banks “are making mark”

A new report from a global strategic management consulting firm shows that Islamic banks are making their mark in non-Muslim countries.

The AT Kearney study reveals that these wholesale banks target a broad set of corporate, institutional and high net worth clients, both Muslims and non-Muslims.

While Sharia-compliant banking has traditionally focused on the GCC and Malaysia, there has recently been a dramatic increase in the number of Islamic banks outside the core markets, most remarkably in the UK, where the number of Islamic banks has more than doubled over the past 12 months.

At the same time, their products remain popular in their core markets, where Islamic banks consistently outgrow their conventional competitors.

“While Islamic banks in their core markets take a universal banking approach, with retail, corporate and investment banking business lines, they focus on wholesale banking in the UK,” said AT Kearney Middle East manager of financial services Dr Alexander von Pock.

Assets in the Islamic banking sector grew to over $250 billion globally in 2006, according to the UK Treasury.

In the GCC, this segment expanded to 15 per cent of the total system and is expected to reach 50pc within the next few years.

The success at home enables these banks to export their business abroad, as Islamic banks from the GCC are the major shareholders behind all of the newly set-up Islamic banks in the UK.

However, the strategic approach they take on differs between them and their home countries.

“Islamic investments have often been outperforming conventional investments, hence Western, non-Muslim investors are becoming more interested in Islamic finance.

“They account for up to 40pc of buyers,” AT Kearney Dubai associate director Maktoum Al Maktoum.

Categories: Growth · Middle East
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