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Malaysia raises profile as an Islamic fund hub

Malaysia now has more sharia funds than Saudi Arabia, but is still second in terms of assets under management. Malaysia’s efforts to promote itself as a global Islamic investment hub are paying off.

The country has overtaken Saudi Arabia in terms of the number of locally domiciled sharia funds, and is second to the huge Middle East market in terms of sharia assets under management (AUM), based on data from financial services research firm Cerulli Associates.

As of November 2008, sharia funds domiciled and managed in Malaysia totalled 145, compared to just 131 in Saudi Arabia. These range from investments in money markets and sukuks (bonds) to regional and global equities.

Malaysia has, over the past few years, worked to establish itself as a centre for sharia fund manufacturing, in line with its efforts to promote itself as a global Islamic investment hub. Malaysia now possesses the most highly developed regulatory structure for Islamic finance in the world, according to Cerulli.

So far, Malaysia has attracted eight international sharia fund managers by offering a host of tax and other incentives.

However, in terms of sharia AUM, Saudi Arabia is still the clear winner worldwide. Sharia AUM in Malaysia has grown from $1.4 billion in 2003 to $4.6 billion in November 2008. That’s nevertheless just a fraction of Saudi Arabia’s $13.9 billion in sharia AUM. Malaysia’s sharia AUM is also small compared with the estimated $40 billion in AUM of conventional funds managed onshore.

“Malaysian-domiciled sharia funds are still unable to compete with Saudi funds in terms of asset size,” says Ken Yap, Singapore-based head of Asia-Pacific research at Cerulli.

To illustrate his point, Cerulli data shows that the AlAhli Saudi Riyal Trade Fund in Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest sharia portfolio, with $3.6 billion in assets. In contrast, Malaysia’s largest sharia portfolio — Public Ittikal Fund — has $421 million in assets.

“While the Malaysian sharia market has shown impressive growth, managers need to do more to build up assets in each of its sharia funds, rather than simply continuing to launch more funds,” says Shiv Taneja, London-based managing director at Cerulli. “This means marketing sharia funds to high-net-worth individuals and institutions, and working with the banks, including Islamic banks, to improve sharia fund distribution to the public.”

Saudi Arabia’s obvious advantage over Malaysia, Cerulli’s Yap notes, is the deep pockets of its institutional, high-net-worth and retail investors.

In Malaysia, the focus has been mostly on retail investors — understandably so because they are an easy target for the asset management arms of banks, for example. Asset management companies with a conventional funds business in Malaysia are also setting up sharia units and they are targeting existing clients.

“The sharia funds in Malaysia are focused more towards the retail client base, which needs more variety and, thus, fund managers need to launch more funds. In Saudi Arabia, the funds are focused more towards the wholesale client base,” says Trica Sum, a Singapore-based analyst at Cerulli.

Both Saudi Arabia and Malaysia are capable of attracting and managing offshore funds, but the Gulf state has done more to cultivate that market over the years.

Cerulli’s Yap believes that in the near-term the potential for sharia AUM growth in Malaysia still rests with the retail market. Over the long-run, however, he says there is strong potential for growth in the offshore market of sharia firms in Malaysia, the demand from institutional investors and pension funds in Malaysia, and in new businesses from new Islamic fund management company license holders.

Malaysia’s Securities Commission has awarded eight foreign Islamic fund management licenses to Aberdeen Islamic Asset Management, BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management, Nomura Islamic Asset Management, Kuwait Finance House (Malaysia), DBS Asset Management, CIMB-Principal Asset Management, Global Investment House and Reliance Asset Management.

The Malaysia government allows 100% foreign ownership of Islamic fund management companies, in line with its bid to attract more key fund players to the country. The incentive is part of ongoing liberalisation measures in Malaysia’s capital market as well as being aimed at complementing the broader Malaysian International Islamic Finance Centre (MIFC) initiatives of positioning the country as a hub.

Islamic fund management companies are allowed to invest all their assets overseas and will be given income tax exemption on fees received until 2016. They will also be able to tap into M$7 billion ($2.1 billion) in seed money from the Employees Provident Fund, the national pension fund for the private sector in Malaysia. Tax incentives are also being offered to existing stockbrokers that set up Islamic subsidiaries.

Cerulli estimates that global sharia fund assets totalled around $35 billion in October 2008 and had been growing at 23% over the past five years, well ahead of conventional mutual funds. Although this rate is expected to ease during the course of the global financial crisis, the firm believes Islamic finance has only started to take root in many Muslim nations and has plenty of room for expansion.

Source:AsianInvestor, 19.02.2009

Filed under: Islamic Finance, Malaysia, News, Services, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Malaysia gives out more Islamic fund licenses

The country steps up efforts to become a global hub for Islamic investments by awarding licenses to Aberdeen, BNP Paribas and Nomura.

Malaysia’s Securities Commission has awarded three new foreign Islamic fund management licenses to Aberdeen Islamic Asset Management, BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management and Nomura Islamic Asset Management. That brings to eight the total number of fund houses allowed to operate Islamic fund operations in the country.

The three fund houses already have a presence in the traditional asset management industry in Malaysia, as part of the five licenses issued under a special scheme announced in 2005 that allowed foreigners to gain access to the local market after eight years of strict capital controls.

The securities commission believes that the growing interest among foreign fund houses in the Islamic licenses up for grabs in Malaysia reflects their confidence that the country can be a global hub for Islamic fund and wealth management activities. Malaysia has an equities market that is more than 85% sharia-compliant, is the world’s largest issuer of Islamic bonds, and has more than 13 Islamic unit trust funds. Sharia principles generally preclude investment in businesses such as conventional financial services, alcohol, pork-related products, gambling, leisure and entertainment. Sharia principles also preclude interest-bearing investments and investments in companies with unacceptable levels of debt.

“Despite the global slowdown, the coming on board of these three international players reflects the strong growth potential in niche areas like Islamic fund management,” says securities commission chairman Dato’ Sri Zarinah Anwar. “This will help add depth and breadth to the Islamic finance industry, of which Malaysia commands a leadership role.”

The Malaysia government allows 100% foreign ownership of Islamic fund management companies, in line with its bid to attract more key fund players to the country. The incentive is part of ongoing liberalisation measures in Malaysia’s capital market as well as being aimed at complementing the broader Malaysian International Islamic Finance Centre (MIFC) initiatives of positioning the country as a hub.

Islamic fund management companies are allowed to invest all their assets overseas and will be given income tax exemption on fees received until 2016. They will also be able to tap into M$7 billion ($2.1 billion) in seed money from the Employees Provident Fund, the national pension fund for the private sector in Malaysia. Tax incentives are also being offered to existing stockbrokers that set up Islamic subsidiaries.

Fund management companies are hungry for a portion of the wealth of the Islamic community – especially those communities in the oil-rich Middle East – and Malaysia is creating the platform for them to be able to do just that. The opportunities are vast. The world’s Muslim population is estimated at around 1.5 billion, that’s around 22% of the world’s 6.7 billion population.

There are more than $202 billion in Islamic bank deposits worldwide growing by around 10% to 20% annually and around 300 Islamic financial institutions with assets of more than $560 billion, according to modest industry estimates. Boston-based financial services research firm Cerulli Associates notes that there are around $65 billion in sharia-compliant investments worldwide. Around 53% of those assets, or $35 billion, are held in mutual funds. Specifically, $33.6 billion is managed by local fund managers, while $1.4 billion is managed by foreign fund managers.

Islamic fund management is expected to sustain the growth of Malaysia’s asset management industry. Other countries in Asia are attempting to be an Islamic hub of sorts, either in banking or asset management. Malaysia is ahead of the pack in Asia and other markets in terms of manufacturing Islamic funds and this is among its main attraction for fund houses that want to set up shop there. The industry is still growing at a considerable pace and demand for unit trust products continues to be strong.

In granting the approval to the three fund houses, the securities commission considered, among other things, the scope of operations that will be established by each of the firms in Malaysia, their fund management experience, brand value, expertise in various markets, geographical presence, and compliance and risk management capabilities.

Atsushi Yoshikawa, president and CEO of Tokyo-based Nomura Asset Management says Islamic fund management is one of the fund house’s “most important strategies”.

Vincent Camerlynck, global head of business development and member of the executive committee at BNP Paribas Investment Partners in Paris, confirms that Malaysia will serve as a strategic hub for the fund house’s Islamic business and complements its Europe and Middle East centres.

The launch of BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management Malaysia complements the fund house’s overall exposure to the Islamic fund industry through partnerships such as the SAIB BNP Paribas Asset Management in Saudi Arabia; products such as the BNP Paribas Islamic Equity Optimiser Funds, Easy ETF DJ Islamic Market Titans 100; advisory services such as the i-VCap’s listing of the MyETF Dow Jones Islamic market Malaysia Titans 25, Asia’s first Islamic ETF; and developments in setting up sukuk (Islamic bonds) and murabaha (Islamic financing) private placement funds.

BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management Malaysia will be led by executive director Hisham Abdul Rahim, who has 12 years of experience in the financial services industry, including Islamic finance and asset management.

Gerald Ambrose, managing director of Aberdeen Asset Management in Malaysia, says the Islamic fund license is key to the firm’s expansion in the country. Aberdeen Asset Management was the first foreign fund house to set up operations in Kuala Lumpur to manage portfolios for institutional clients in 2005. That made Aberdeen, through its Aberdeen Asset Management Sendirian Berhad entity in Malaysia, the first foreign fund manager to have a presence in Malaysia in eight years.

Having an Islamic fund management license will allow Aberdeen to tap the retail market in Malaysia. Aberdeen manages an ‘Amanah’ or an Asia ex-Japan equity fund that is sharia-compliant, which has around $100 million in assets, for a client. The client has a set of advisors and sends Aberdeen a list of stocks that it can’t invest in. It is a unit trust with Middle Eastern subscribers, run by a bank there that has given Aberdeen the mandate to manage the fund from its Singapore office.

Islamic fund management licenses were previously granted to Kuwait Finance House (Malaysia), DBS Asset Management, CIMB-Principal Asset Management, Global Investment House and Reliance Asset Management.

See here for full article from Asian Investors

Source:AsianInvestor

Filed under: Banking, Islamic Finance, Malaysia, News, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Islamic Financing in Latin America: Brazil & Malaysia

Investment opportunities in Islamic markets, basic concepts of Islamic finance and the importance of regulator agencies in developing these markets were among the main topics of the fifth edition of “The Islamic World’s Financial and Capital Markets: Opportunities and Challenges.” Brazil’s Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM) and the Brazilian Securities, Commodities and Futures Exchange (BM&FBOVESPA) sponsored the conference, which took place on December 8th.

Mercado Financeiro Islamico – ABC do Brasil 12.2008

Islamic Finance in Asia: MALAYSA the Islamic Finance Hub

Malaysia Opportunities in Islamic Finance – Bank Negara 12.2008

Islamic Finance Defined and Market Review – HSBC 12.2008

In his opening remarks, CVM Director, Sergio Weguelin, highlighted the importance of establishing a dialogue between market participants with the goal of bringing our two different systems close together. “These are two financial cultures that have much to offer to each other. (Islamic finance) has grown 15% annually, according to IOSCO (International Organization of Securities Commissions,)” he said. Weguelin added that “a larger incorporation by the traditional financial system of concepts that guide Islamic practices, such as the requirement to share risks, would have minimized the abuses that led to the subprime-mortgage crisis.”

BM&FBOVESPA’s International Director, João Lauro Amaral, highlighted the growth potential pf this market in his presentation. “Today the Exchange only has 30 non-resident investment accounts from the Middle East or other Islamic countries, mostly from the United Arab Emirates, which shows the potential we have for developing the growth between our markets,” he said, referring to the participation of Islamic investors in emerging markets such as Brazil.

Banco ABC Brasil S.A.’s International Department Director, Angela Martins, explained principles and characteristics of Islamic finance, such as the concept of Sukuk – “a certificate issued under Islamic law, backed by a contract accepted by Shariah law,” she said. She also explained that money in the Muslim world is not viewed as a commodity, but “as means to add value, without which one would not be able to generate wealth,” she said.

The Vice-President of Global Capital Markets at HSBC in New York, Alexei Remizov, highlighted the importance of the Islamic finance industry in the Persian Gulf countries. Nik Ramlah Mahmood and Kris Azman Abdullah, Directors at Malaysia’s financial regulator agency, discussed Islamic capital markets in Malaysia, and Anthony Saint, with London’s Gatehouse Bank, discussed operations of Islamic banks in the U.K.

Source: Mondovision, 13.12.2008

Filed under: Banking, BM&FBOVESPA, Brazil, Exchanges, Islamic Finance, Library, Malaysia, News, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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