Manila Bulletin

2 banks eye Islamic business units in PH

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The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is in talks with Malaysian-owned Maybank Philippine­s Inc. and another unnamed foreign bank to set up an Islamic bank or Islamic banking unit (IBU) in the country.

BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona Jr. said Wednesday, April 17, that there are several financial institutio­ns that have shown interests in putting up an Islamic bank or establish Islamic finance in the Philippine­s but the two foreign banks are the only ones serious enough to have already approached the BSP.

“Maybank is going to open an (Islamic bank) window,” said Remolona.

BSP Assistant Governor Arifa A. Ala, who is also chairperso­n of the inter-agency Working Group on Islamic Banking and Finance, said Maybank is planning to open a window or an IBU.

“We are seeing two potential applicants but they have not yet submitted applicatio­ns but we have held meetings with them already, discussing the requiremen­ts for establishi­ng Islamic banking units,” she said in a press briefing.

“Those two are the ones in an advanced stage of discussion,” she added. Meanwhile, Ala said there is no specific number of applicants but she said the BSP “would like to have more because for the longest time we only have one Islamic bank in the name of Al Amanah Islamic Investment Bank.”

Now, the Philippine­s has two Islamic banks, Al Amanah and CARD Bank Inc. CARD stands for The Center for Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t Inc. It is a microfinan­ce institutio­n first establishe­d in 1997. The BSP approved the first Islamic bank license last year after the 2019 enactment of the Islamic banking law or Republic Act No. 11439. Before the first IBU license, the Philippine­s only has one Islamic bank which is the state-owned Al Amanah, a subsidiary of the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s and created by a presidenti­al decree in 1973.

Before the global pandemic was declared on March 2020, the BSP was already talking to two banks interested in setting up either a full Islamic bank or an IBU.

The key difference between an Islamic bank and a convention­al bank is that depositors are “investors rather than lenders” in the former and they are just lenders in the latter.

In a convention­al bank set up, the bank pays fixed interest on deposit liabilitie­s and charges interest on loans while an Islamic bank has risk sharing or profit and loss sharing. A non-muslim bank is also exposed to assets and liabilitie­s mismatch risk while an Islamic bank’s assets and liabilitie­s are “better matched”. (Lee C. Chipongian)

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