August 15, 2008

Friday
Sha'aban 12, 1429


 
 
Courtesy:http://www.dawn.com/2008/08/15/ed.htm#5
Islamic equity funds



By Syed Imad Asad

ISLAMIC finance signifies financial services, mechanisms,
practices, transactions and instruments that comply with provisions given in the
fundamental Islamic texts. Thus, Islamic finance not only includes banking, but
also capital formation, capital markets and all types of financial
intermediation.

In recent years, Islamic finance has not only increased
in size. It has also become complex as finance professionals compete furiously
to produce new Sharia-compliant transactions and instruments. Becoming a segment
within the global financial market, it has gained considerable interest as an
alternative model of financial intermediation.

However, in the 1980s and
most of the 1990s, Islamic finance did not have much of this dynamism. On the
asset side, the activities of Islamic financial institutions mainly involved
ijara, mudaraba and musharaka. The need for liquidity, portfolio and risk
management tools, and derivative instruments was strongly felt, and there were
numerous calls for the promotion of financial engineering and the introduction
of new products.

Along with other developments, this resulted in the
introduction of Islamic equity funds (IEFs). Overall, IEFs have been the most
popular among all Islamic investment funds. According to FTSE, IEF assets are
forecasted to increase from $15.5bn to $53.8bn by 2010. According to other
reports, the assets have already reached $20bn.

The industry is dominated
by Saudi Arabian funds and fund managers, accounting for more than 70 funds out
of about 300 IEFs globally. In fact, Saudi British Bank’s Amanah GCC Equity Fund
was reported as the best performing Islamic equity fund in 2007. On the other
hand, Bahrain is becoming the centre for IEF registrations because of the
kingdom’s efficient regulatory system. International investment firms with
Islamic divisions are focusing on Dubai.

IEFs are different from
conventional equity funds because they select their placements on the basis of
their compatibility with the Sharia. In order for a stock to be considered
Sharia-approved, it must satisfy certain requirements set by Islamic scholars.
These standards may differ in different jurisdictions depending upon how
strictly the Sharia is interpreted.

However, the basic condition is the
same throughout the Muslim world: an enterprise must not conduct business
activities prohibited by Islamic texts. These include gambling, alcohol,
pornography, etc. Financial ratios (debt-to-equity ratio, cash and
interest-bearing securities-to-equity ratio and cash-to-asset ratio) and
cleansing mechanisms (to purify investments that are tainted by forbidden
activities) are also used by various Sharia boards and authorities.

It
must be mentioned that a country may or may not have a national screening body.
For instance, in Malaysia, it is done by the Securities Commission; whereas in
the Middle East financial institutions prepare their own list of Sharia-approved
stocks.

One of the factors that gave an immense boost to IEFs was the
introduction of the Dow Jones Islamic Market Index (DJIM) in 1999 as a subset of
Dow Jones Global Indexes (DJGI). DJIM Indexes intend to measure investable
equities that fulfil Sharia requirements. At present, with more than 70 Islamic
indexes (which include regional, country, industry and market-cap-based
indexes), it is one of the most comprehensive families of Islamic market
indexes.

Other conventional index providers have also entered the field.
In 2000, FTSE launched the FTSE Global Islamic Index. Unlike Dow Jones that has
an independent Sharia Supervisory Board, FTSE indexes are evaluated by Yasaar
Research Inc. In 2006, Standard & Poor’s (S&P) introduced the S&P
Sharia Indices, followed by in 2007 the S&P GCC Sharia Indices and the
S&P Pan Asia Sharia Indices. S&P has contracted with Ratings
Intelligence Partners (RI) to provide the Sharia screens and select the stocks
based on these standards.

As reported by the Financial Times, these
indexes do not enjoy complete acceptance by Muslims. The screening principle
allowing total debt ratios of up to 33 per cent is considered objectionable by
some scholars. They claim that it is akin to declaring a kind of food that has a
small quantity of pork in it as halal. The indexes maintain that their
legitimacy comes from the concerned Sharia authorities. In other words, as long
as their Sharia supervisors agree with these practices, the indexes need not
change them.

The future of IEFs does not look gloomy at all. However,
Muslim scholars need to be careful while interpreting and applying the Sharia.
They need to make sure that Islamic principles are properly observed and that
they don’t present or accept an un-Islamic idea as Islamic just because there is
more profit in it.


ABDUL WAHID OSMAN BELAL

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