Asia

MARC assigns final rating of AIS to Bank Muamalat Malaysia Berhad's Sukuk of up to RM2.0 Billion; Outlook stable

MARC has assigned a final rating of AIS to Bank Muamalat Malaysia's Islamic Senior Notes Programme (Senior Sukuk) of up to RM2.0 billion under the Islamic principle of Wakalah Bi Al-Istithmar with a stable outlook. Upon review of the final documentation of the Senior Sukuk, MARC is satisfied that the terms and conditions of the Senior Sukuk have not changed in any material way from the draft documents on which the earlier preliminary rating of AIS was based. The full details on the assigned rating have been provided in Bank Muamalat's preliminary rating announcement on June 24, 2014 which can be accessed at www.marc.com.my.

Muhith urges banks to spend more on education from CSR funds

Finance Minister AMA Muhith on Thursday urged Bangladesh’s banking sector to spend more from their corporate social responsibility (CSR) funds on the education sector. Appreciating Shahjalal Islami Bank (SIBL) and Dutch-Bangla Bank for their CSR contributions to the education sector, the Finance Minister said these two banks believe that education has been the most contributory element to human development. He was speaking at a function arranged marking the distribution of scholarships by the SIBL at the city’s Officers Club. At the function, some 500 students from across the country received scholarships from the SIBL. Muhith also appreciated the Bangladesh Bank governor for his campaign to encourage banks to spend more on their CSR activities.

A booster shot for Islamic finance

The current annual growth rate for Indonesia’s Islamic finance market is 16.5 percent, down from 24.2 percent in 2013, and 49.2 percent in 2011. A large part of this decline can be attributed to the most recognisable instrument of Islamic finance, sukuk. The OJK is now preparing a new blueprint due at the end of the year to expand Islamic finance in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy. It says the new blueprint may include additional benefits to current fee and tax incentives to revive the domestic sukuk market, and also said it was considering extending the beneficial issuance fee for sukuk to issuance of sharia-compliant securities. The document will also address issues in Islamic finance including lack of economies of scale, consolidation opportunities, and the role of foreign ownership.

Takaful's high growth potential in Malaysia

In its 'Standpoint Commentary' Malaysian Insurance and Takaful: Stable Fundamentals Amid Evolving Dynamics, RAM Ratings highlights the high growth prospects for Takaful in Malaysia. Under the new Acts, i.e. the Financial Services Act 2013 (FSA) and the Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 (IFSA), composite insurers and Takaful operators (TOs) are required to legally separate their general and life/family businesses by 2018. While RAM Ratings believes this would strengthen regulatory oversight of the sector, the additional capital and resource requirements could be significant for smaller players. RAM Ratings believes that the consensus medium-term forecast of 7-10 per cent growth for general and life insurance and double-digit growth for Takaful is largely achievable.

HK sukuk attracts US$1b on debut

Hong Kong sold US$1 billion (RM3.19 billion) of sovereign Islamic bonds in its first-ever issue of the securities, attracting orders for 4.7 times the amount on offer. The dollar-denominated five-year notes were priced at a 2.005 per cent profit rate. The United Kingdom, which along with Hong Kong is rated the highest investment grade, sold sukuk for the first time in June at a coupon of 2.036 per cent. Those notes yielded 1.76 per cent yesterday. The Hong Kong sukuk was priced at 23 basis points above similar-maturity US Treasuries, the narrowest spread ever achieved on a benchmark dollar issuance from an Asian government outside Japan. The city has changed its tax laws to help pave the way for sales of syariah-compliant debt.

Japan's BTMU to boost Islamic business with first sukuk

The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (BTMU) hopes to expand its Islamic finance business across Asia and the Gulf, buoyed by a landmark multi-currency sukuk programme set up in Malaysia. BTMU, part of the Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, set up its sukuk programme in June. The programme will allow its wholly-owned Malaysian unit, BTMU Malaysia Berhard, to raise the equivalent of $500 million via sukuk with tenors of up to 10 years. It provides an alternative funding source for BTMU Malaysia to manage its liquidity to match increasing and growing exposures in multi-currency sharia-compliant financing. No timeframe was given for the first transaction, although the bank is increasingly active in the Islamic capital market.

Mega Islamic bank will boost Islamic finance growth, says expert

The creation of a mega Islamic bank will push Malaysian banks to look beyond local shores should the proposed merger of CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, RHB Capital Bhd and Malaysia Building Society Bhd materialise. While the local market for Islamic finance remains lucrative, banks should not be content to remain in the local market as a market downturn could cause a reversal of fortunes. Low risk tolerance is why local banks are not expanding their reach overseas. Some attempts thus far to go abroad have been on a partnership basis contributing knowledge and technical expertise. In addition, local banks’ issuance of Islamic sukuk in the international arena is still low relative to international banks.

EPF says has right to vote on merger of RHB Capital, CIMB Group

The Employees Provident Fund (EPF) stressed it has the right to vote on the proposed merger between RHB Capital Bhd (RHBCap) and CIMB Group Holdings Bhd as it is the major shareholders of both entities. The pension fund’s chief executive officer Datuk Shahril Ridza Ridzuan reminded that it has the interests of 14 million members at stake. Some within the board of RHBCap were against allowing the pension fund to vote in the merger deal. The dissented parties thought that it was “inconceivable” that the EPF had not been engaged in prior discussions relating to the proposed merger between RHBCap and CIMB in which the pension fund holds a 41.34% and 14.46% stake respectively.

Securities Commission Malaysia: Biannual Newsletter - Islamic Wealth Management

Jan - June 2014 issue of the Malaysian ICM bulletin published by the Securities Commission Malaysia (SC) is now available online.

Islamic fund and wealth management is an integral component of Islamic financial system. This is attributed to the significant rise in income and wealth of certain Islamic countries over the last four decades as well as the emergence of Islamic finance as a viable alternative to conventional finance. The benefits of Islamic fund and wealth management cut across racial and religious boundaries as it not only benefit Muslims who wish to see their wealth preserved and enhanced within the Shariah framework, but also to non-Muslims who may view this from an ethical perspective of managing wealth.

Bank Islam Expects 20 Per Cent Growth In Financing This Year

Bank Islam Malaysia expects a 20 per cent growth in its financing activities this year, says Managing Director, Datuk Seri Zukri Samat. He said this would be slightly lower compared with the 25 per cent growth registered last year. Zukri added that this was probably impacted by some of Bank Negara Malaysia's measures to slow down the debt growth in the household sector. On its aim to become Malaysia's first mega Islamic bank, he said the bank was open to any merger and acquisition proposal but is not in talks with any party at this point in time. Towards this end, he said the bank was looking for synergies to complement the areas that the Islamic bank is lacking, for instance, corporate banking.

Malaysia ready to become mega regional takaful operator, says Ernst & Young

Malaysia is ready and has the potential to become a mega takaful operator in the region given its strong track record, right capitalisation, capable expertise and broad knowledge of the industry, said Ernst & Young. Its global Islamic finance leader, Ashar Nazim, said the local takaful operators had the right ‘ingredients’ to build upon and grow beyond Malaysian borders into Asean region as well as into various parts of the world. Country managing partner and Islamic finance leader of Ernst & Young Malaysia, Datuk Rauf Rashid, said there was huge untapped market in the region that would translate into tremendous demand for takaful businesses.

Indonesia Reaps $1.5b From Sukuk Sale

Indonesia raised $1.5 billion from the sale of dollar-denominated sukuk on Tuesday, which is to help finance the country’s budget deficit. Foreign investors submitted $10 billion worth of bids on Tuesday, or six times the amount offered. The government awarded 35 percent of the sukuk to Middle East and Islamic funds, 30 percent to investors based in Asia, including Indonesia, 20 percent to US funds and 15 percent to European investors. The 10-year Islamic bonds were sold at 4.35 percent yields, as compared with 6.125 percent paid on notes maturing in 5.5 years in September 2013 and the record-low 3.3 percent on 10-year sukuk sold in 2012. Foreign holdings of the country’s bonds increased to Rp 437.4 trillion as of Sept 2, accounting for some 37 percent of the total debt.

Sukuk Rally Shows Strength in Indonesia Demand: Islamic Finance

An eight-month rally in Islamic bonds showed its resilience as an Indonesian sukuk drew record bids before debuts by Luxembourg, Hong Kong and South Africa. A Bloomberg index tracking dollar-denominated Shariah-compliant debt from 43 sovereign and corporate issuers rose to an all-time high this week, as supply was limited amid the worst quarter for new issuance since 2010. Luxembourg and Hong Kong have hired arrangers for their sales planned for September. South Africa has hired banks for its debut offering of Shariah-compliant notes, while Bangladesh and Tatarstan are also planning maiden sales. While the average yield on debt that complies with Muslim tenets has dropped to a three-month low, it’s almost twice that available on U.S. Treasuries.

Malaysia, GCC states remain top Islamic finance players, says Bahraini economist

Malaysia and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries remain the leaders in the Islamic finance industry, despite the emergence of new participants vying to get a piece of the pie. Bahrain Economic Development Board chief economist, Dr Jarmo Kotilaine, said an established financial industry required many component parts for its sustained development and the Islamic finance architecture was much more developed and complete in the Gulf and Malaysia than any other part of the world. Other centres can support the global growth of Islamic finance but are unlikely to challenge the established role of Southeast Asia and the Gulf, he said.

CEO: Scale remains a priority for CIMB Islamic

CIMB Islamic said it will pursue a larger balance sheet to help win more business, regardless of whether a proposed merger with two smaller peers happens. In July, CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, RHB Capital Bhd and Malaysia Building Society Bhd secured regulatory approval to begin merger talks. The enlarged entity aims to compete against conventional banks that dominate larger and more lucrative deals in Islamic finance and could prompt further consolidation in the domestic market. The lenders have until Oct 8 to finalise the pricing, structure and other terms of the merger. Earlier this week, Maybank dismissed rumours that it was considering a merger with Bank Islam, the country’s largest, full-fledged Islamic bank.

Malaysia's Zeti sees investment as next step for Islamic finance

Zeti envisages the development of Islamic investment intermediation will come once a new generation of risk-sharing contracts can be applied to investment products and this will enable Islamic finance to help ensure more inclusive and more balanced growth.

Indonesia's sovereign sukuk attracts $10 billion order book

The Indonesian government raised $1.5 billion worth of Islamic bonds on Tuesday, attracting the largest order book ever achieved for a sovereign sukuk from southeast Asia. The 10-year sukuk drew strong investor demand - order books were worth $10.2 billion - helping reduce the yield of sukuk which had originally started in the vicinity of 4.625 percent on Monday, before being trimmed to 4.35 percent. Indonesia's sukuk kickstarts what looks to be a busy month for sovereign issuance, with Luxembourg, Hong Kong and South Africa conducting investor meetings ahead of their respective transactions. Indonesia's sukuk was rated Baa3 by Moody's. CIMB, Emirates NBD Capital, HSBC and Standard Chartered acted as lead managers.

Khazanah eyes Sukuk issuance in eastern Europe

Khazanah Nasional Bhd is considering the issue of Sukuk or Islamic bonds in Eastern Europe following the opening of its office in Istanbul, Turkey, last November. Executive director and chief financial officer Mohd Izani Ghani said the office was established to tap investment opportunities around Turkey, North Africa and Eastern Europe. He, however, said Khazanah was not planning on issuing a foreign currency Sukuk. There is a push for Khazanah to do 'kebab' sukuk but the interest rate environment in Turkey is on the high side and volatile, he added. The lender wants to do sukuk in other currencies that can match the stable environment, currency and interest rates in the country, he said.

Scale a priority, with or without merger-CIMB Islamic CEO

CIMB Islamic said it will pursue a larger balance sheet to help win more business, regardless of whether a proposed merger with two smaller peers happens. In July, CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, RHB Capital Bhd and Malaysia Building Society Bhd secured regulatory approval to begin merger talks. The lender's chief executive Badlisyah Abdul Ghani said that scale is important in being effective in business, so whether that scale is achievable under the current proposed merger talks or something else, the bank will continue to pursue it. The lenders have until Oct. 8 to finalize the pricing, structure and other terms of the merger. Details have yet to be ironed out, but the new Islamic bank could have assets worth 122 billion ringgit ($38.3 billion).

Takaful venture? Not just yet, says Allianz

Allianz SE believes that it is not economically viable to enter into Malaysia's domestic takaful market just yet, board member Manuel Bauer said. He believes that growth in the Islamic insurance sector is beginning to cool down and would therefore be a struggle to justify any major investments to its shareholders. Bound by Bank Negara Malaysia's restrictions that caps foreign ownership at 70% in a local insurers, he said, Allianz's is answerable to its shareholders if it decides to take certain acquisition risk. Bauer also argued that the domestic takaful market has been stagnant and not performing as well as one thought it to be. Bauer said that taking into account Allainz's position in Malaysia as market leaders in both life and general business, the takaful potential figures are not convincing.

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