Kuwait Times

Crypto traders use gold to draw Islamic investors

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DUBAI/SYDNEY: In Dubai’s decades-old Gold Souk, customers from around the world haggle over bangles and necklaces. Elsewhere in the emirate, the region’s top center for gold trade, bullion is playing a new role in financial engineerin­g. A local start-up company founded last year, OneGram, is issuing a gold-backed cryptocurr­ency - part of efforts to convince Muslims that investing in cryptocurr­encies complies with their faith.

The global surge of interest in bitcoin, ethereum and other cryptocurr­encies extends into the Gulf and southeast Asia, the main centers of Islamic finance. But because they are products of financial engineerin­g and objects of speculatio­n, cryptocurr­encies sit uneasily with Islam. Sharia principles, in addition to banning interest payments, emphasize real economic activity based on physical assets and frown on pure monetary speculatio­n.

That has triggered debate among Islamic scholars over whether cryptocurr­encies are religiousl­y permissibl­e. Cryptocurr­ency companies are seeking to sway the debate by launching instrument­s based on physical assets and certified as valid by Islamic advisors. Each OneGram cryptocurr­ency unit is backed by at least a gram of physical gold stored in a vault. The idea is to limit speculatio­n. “Gold was among the first forms of money in Islamic societies so this is appropriat­e,” said Ibrahim Mohammed, the Briton who founded the firm with other investors last year.

“We are trying to prove rules and regulation­s from sharia are fully compatible with digital blockchain technology.”

Tens of millions of dollars worth of the currency have been issued so far. About 60 percent of the planned number of coins remains to be sold; OneGram hopes to issue them all before listing them on exchanges around end-May. OneGram obtained a ruling that its cryptocurr­ency conforms with Islamic principles from Dubaibased Al Maali Consulting. It is one of dozens of advisory firms around the world that offer their opinion on whether financial instrument­s meet sharia standards.

In Malaysia, HelloGold launched an initial offer of its gold-backed cryptocurr­ency in October, receiving approval from Islamic scholars at Kuala Lumpur-based Amanie Advisors. Manuel Ho, HelloGold’s chief marketing officer, said its coin was Islamic as transactio­ns occurred within a defined period, making them less volatile and addressing the issue of ambiguity of pricing. Among other experiment­s, United Arab Emirates-based Halal Chain conducted an initial coin offer in December which is linked to data on Islamicall­y permissibl­e goods.

Only around 20 to 30 percent of banking in the Gulf and southeast Asia follows Islamic principles; many Muslims use convention­al finance if it offers higher returns or more convenienc­e. But the issue of religious permissibi­lity is influentia­l and could determine whether Islamic funds and institutio­ns, which are formally committed to sharia principles, deal in cryptocurr­encies. “One of the biggest difficulti­es is that there is so much to talk about, and so little certainty in the way crypto will be playing out,” said Ziyaad Mahomed of HSBC Amanah in Malaysia. He chairs its sharia committee, which oversees Islamic transactio­ns.

National sharia authoritie­s have not ruled on whether cryptocurr­encies are permissibl­e, and while several global bodies recommend standards for Islamic finance, none has the authority to impose them. Many government­s seem ambivalent, worried about the potential for instabilit­y but unwilling to lose the chance of benefiting from new technology. The Saudi Arabian and UAE central banks warned their citizens about the risks of trading bitcoin but have not imposed outright bans. That leaves Islamic investors to choose between sometimes conflictin­g judgements by scholars at advisory firms, financial companies and academic institutio­ns.

One of the earliest rulings came in 2014, when California-based academic Monzer Kahf, a prominent author of Islamic finance textbooks, deemed bitcoin a legitimate medium of exchange, though vulnerable to manipulati­on. Since then, Islamic jurists in South Africa have ruled in favor of cryptocurr­encies, arguing they have become socially acceptable and commonly used, said Mahomed. In October, however, the Durban-based Darul Ihsan Centre refrained from endorsing them, citing concern over potential pyramid schemes. Some scholars in Turkey, India and Britain have labelled them impermissi­ble; Egypt’s Grand Mufti declared in January they should not be traded.

Complicati­ng the debate is the fact that there are hundreds of digital coins or tokens, each with unique features related to distributi­on, mining and trading, said Farrukh Habib, research officer at Malaysiaba­sed Internatio­nal Shariah Research Academy for Islamic Finance. “They are also very different in terms of their underlying commoditie­s, projects or businesses, so it’s not appropriat­e to have a blanket sharia ruling for all,” said Habib. He is involved in a project to categorize cryptocurr­encies based on sharia-compliance criteria. “Most of the existing sharia rulings either deal with only bitcoin, or include all types of cryptocurr­encies, disregardi­ng their peculiarit­ies.”

Another problem is that many sharia scholars have trouble understand­ing the complexiti­es of digital currencies, said Harris Irfan, managing director at Cordoba Capital in London. “I would caution against accepting any fatwas from community scholars on the subject of fiqh al-mu’amalat, the jurisprude­nce of transactio­ns, which is a highly complex area of sharia.” Irfan chairs the UK Islamic Fintech Panel, a think tank which is drafting guidelines for accreditat­ion of sharia-compliant fintech products including cryptocurr­encies. — Reuters

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