Arab Times

New Islamic finance guidance on gold metal trading emphasises real accord

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DUBAI, Dec 5, (RTRS): Islamic finance experts have developed new rules for gold transactio­ns, they said on Monday, potentiall­y opening the way for Islamic institutio­ns to trade gold and silver much more actively.

Gold transactio­ns must be fully backed by physical metal and settled on the same day, the developers of the new guidance said, to observe Islam’s distinctio­n between real economic activity and speculatio­n.

Traditiona­lly, gold has played a very minor role in Islamic finance and there has been little activity beyond spot trading, partly because of uncertaint­y over what is religiousl­y permissibl­e. The new standards, which also apply to silver, could help to change this.

The Bahrain-based Accounting and Auditing Organizati­on for Islamic Financial Institutio­ns (AAOIFI) spent a year working out the new rules on gold trading and agreed them last month.

AAOIFI developed its guidelines with the World Gold Council (WGC), a London-based market developmen­t body, to clarify existing Islamic rulings on bullion and make it easier to conduct complex transactio­ns.

The guidelines will help to increase acceptance of gold products among Islamic investors while giving Islamic banks new liquidity-management tools, said Hamed Hassan Merah, secretaryg­eneral of AAOIFI, whose standards are followed in whole or in part by sharia-compliant banks around the world.

AAOIFI also requires same-day settlement of trades, Merah told Reuters. Many convention­al gold products are settled two days after the trade; by eliminatin­g the delay, same-day settlement means less risk but can be less convenient for investors who need to have cash on hand.

Products

“A number of providers have already been developing products in anticipati­on of the standard,” said Natalie Dempster, managing director of central banks and public policy at the WGC.

The standards permit buying gold through agents, which will allow for exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and online retail platforms, Dempster said.

There has been interest in products among Islamic banks in the United Arab Emirates and Turkey, she added.

Uncertaint­y about how gold can be used in Islamic finance has slowed both product developmen­t and investor demand. Malaysia’s capital market regulator issued guidance for Islamic ETFs based on gold and silver in 2014, but no such products have been launched there.

In 2009, the WGC and the Dubai Multi Commoditie­s Centre launched an Islamic gold exchange-traded product that was eventually delisted.

Now Dublin-based gold dealer Goldcore plans to offer a shariagold trading platform for use by Islamic financial institutio­ns in the first quarter of 2017.

It is designed to offer segregated gold accounts with the option of physical delivery, the firm said in a statement.

Dubai-based Konooz Capital plans to issue gold-backed sukuk, or Islamic bonds, through a $5 billion programme it originally registered in 2014 and again in August this year, according to regulatory filings.

The proposed programme uses a structure known as wakala, where one party acts as the manager of a portfolio of assets and charges a management fee.

Last month, the Jeddah-based Islamic Developmen­t Bank and Turkey’s Borsa Istanbul said they planned a gold trading platform for use by Majoritymu­slim countries.

The AAOIFI standard could also affect existing gold products by widening their investor bases, Dempster said.

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