Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Islamic Finance: Concepts, Products, Issues Usman Hayat, CFA, FRM Director Islamic Finance & ESG Investing 30 Oct, 2009.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Islamic Finance: Concepts, Products, Issues Usman Hayat, CFA, FRM Director Islamic Finance & ESG Investing 30 Oct, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Islamic Finance: Concepts, Products, Issues Usman Hayat, CFA, FRM Director Islamic Finance & ESG Investing 30 Oct, 2009

2 Page 2 Agenda Islamic finance @ CFA Institute Big picture & common misconceptions Concepts & applications Issues Q&A

3 Page 3 Islamic Finance @ CFA Institute Growing field, GBOK, CBOK? Academic & professional qualifications available Globally, 10% members “interested”, regional variations (2009 survey) Approach: Integrate in life long learning PublicationsEvents (SRP) Multimedia www.cfawebcasts.org

4 Page 4 Old Ideas, Young Industry 2009 AD = 1430 Hijri; but industry barely 40 50s & 60s: initial theoretical work, some experimentation 70s: DIB, IDB, petrodollars 80s: OIC’s IFA, initiatives in Malaysia, Bahrain, Pakistan, Sudan 90s: AAOIFI, Dow Jones & FTSE indexes, growth in number & type of funds 00s: IFSB, IIRA, more innovation, credit cards to hedge funds, more petrodollars

5 Page 5 Industry Statistics Size estimates go up to US $1 trillion (small) 2007 asset mix, as per IFSL 2009 Report: Commercial banks (74%) Investment banks (12%) Sukuk (11%) Funds (2%), Takaful (1%) Major countries, as per The Banker: Iran, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, UK Estimated 300 IFI, 50+ countries Industry reports available on the net for free Growth story, favorable outlook

6 Page 6 Common Misconceptions Practice exclusive to Muslims, modes exclusive to Islam No time value of money in pricing Dominant form of finance in Muslim countries No gap between Islamic finance theory & practice All Muslims highly sensitive to Shari’a compliance in finance

7 Page 7 Islamic finance Finance that complies with Shari’a Primary Sources Qura’n (the Holy Book) Sunnah (or tradition of Prophet Mohammad) “The obligation of the Shari’a is to provide the wellbeing of all humankind, which lies in safeguarding their faith, their human self (nafs), their intellect (’aql), their progeny (nasl) and their wealth (mal)” Al-Ghazali

8 Religion & Economics Economics takes human behaviour as given Religion seeks to influence human behaviour –Accountability to God should be a permanent concern –Earning an honest living an act of worship –Moral economy of Islam (a theoretical ideal) neither communism, nor capitalism Depends on belief in God (which is up to the individual)

9 Islamic finance Concepts Islamic commercial jurisprudence: human dealings, default ruling is permissibility Test of impermissibility: _ Purpose involves prohibited activities (socially responsible, ethical) _Structure involves Riba or Gharar or both On riba & gharar: “…the talented jurist Ibn Taymiyya …famously stated that two prohibitions can explain all distinctions between contracts that are deemed valid or invalid: those of riba and gharar.” Page 8, “Islamic Finance: Law Economics, and Practice” (2006) by Mahmoud A. El - Gamal

10 Riba & Gharar (simplified) Riba No perfect translation; excess, usury Lending money on interest Absolute prohibition; money not commodity Why? unnatural? unfair? evidence? Excessive Gharar No perfect translation; risk, uncertainty Trading of risk unbundled from an asset Applies to commutative contacts Why? disputes? externalities? evidence? Implication: asset & enterprise, risk-sharing

11 Application RibaGharar Capital Market _Equity funds: business, debt & income screening _Sukuk: ownership of assets _Debt trading constrained Derivatives (or at least their trading) largely avoided Banking _Trade, lease, share _No money borrowing/lending Sales/leases of assets after purchases Insurance / Takaful Avoid interest bearing investments Mutuality (risk- sharing, solidarity group) Note: Sin industries to be avoided in all cases

12 Opportunities Inclusive, simple, tied to real economy Small size means growth potential; petrodollars to invested Responsible investments also growing More countries promoting Islamic finance Industry reports & surveys still suggesting double digit growth Page 12

13 Challenges Covering gap of centuries in decades Global economy - lending money, trading risk Legal, regulatory, tax issues Lack of global Shari’a standards Industry requires multidisciplinary expertise And the form versus substance debate… Page 13

14 Form vs Substance Concern on similarity in substance (banking & fixed income) Profit/rent on trade/lease or price of credit? Innovation or replication? risk-reward sharing? economic justice? Conflict of interest in Shari’a governance? Shari’a adjustments: AAOIFI statement 2008 OIC’s IFA resolution on tawarruq 2009 Page 14

15 Financial Crisis & Islamic Finance We did better (Proponents) You got hit by real estate (Critics) Much noise, but not a sound debate: What were the reasons toxic products were avoided by IFI? Real estate investments business or Shari’a issue ? Can a small segment in the same market be unaffected in a market wide turmoil? Page 15

16 Summary Old ideas, young industry, long term future Belief in God implies moral economic behaviour Avoid sin industries, don’t lend money on interest, don’t trade risk Asset & enterprise required; equity preferred Business & career opportunities, lots to happen! Page 16

17 Q&A Page 17

18 Learning Resources Books Webcasts/podcasts Websites & social media Training Professional qualifications Academic qualifications Page 18


Download ppt "Islamic Finance: Concepts, Products, Issues Usman Hayat, CFA, FRM Director Islamic Finance & ESG Investing 30 Oct, 2009."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google