Khaleej Times

Inflows spur pakistan’s corporate sukuk market

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karachi — Growth of Shariah-compliant investment funds in Pakistan is helping fuel demand for sukuk, or Islamic bonds, giving local firms new funding options while strengthen­ing the case for Islamic pensions in other majority-Muslim countries.

Strong demand for Islamic funds, and in turn sukuk, could encourage other countries trying to deepen their Islamic capital markets, in particular in the Gulf region.

Pakistan’s Islamic banks lag their convention­al peers, holding around 13 per cent of total deposits, while Islamic mutual funds and private pensions have a far greater market share.

Islamic mutual funds held Rs242.7 billion ($2.3 billion) in assets as of December, or 37 per cent of the total, official statistics show.

Almost two-thirds of assets in the country’s voluntary pension system (VPS) are now managed under Islamic principles.

All 10 VPS managers offer Islamic pension products, worth a combined Rs14.5 billion, or 63 per cent of total VPS assets with the largest VPS product being sharia-compliant. Attractive yields, tax exemptions and greater flexibilit­y in choosing external managers have made VPS products popular, which in turn adds to demand for sukuk, said Abdullah Ghaffar, head of investment banking at Al Baraka Bank Pakistan.

“Mutual funds, both fixed income as well as equity funds, have become big time investors in existing and new sukuk issues taking place because of the huge assets under management under their disposal.” Two recent sukuk transactio­ns from manufactur­ing companies attracted significan­t interest from such investment funds, while equity funds are also becoming active in initial public offerings, Ghaffar added.

Reforms from Pakistan’s capital market regulator have also helped equity-like financing vehicles, known as modarabas, to grow their combined assets above Rs41 billion. —

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