Arab News

Britain’s Islamic finance market widens with govt, private moves

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LONDON: The scope of Britain’s Islamic finance market is widening with several initiative­s from the government and private sector, although the country is about to lose one of its six full-fledged Islamic banks.

In June, Britain became the first Western country to sell sovereign sukuk (Islamic bonds), helping boost its industry credential­s as competitio­n intensifie­s among global financial centers for a slice of Islamic business.

Britain has 22 firms that offer Shariahcom­pliant financial products and they held an estimated $19 billion in assets last year, according to a report by lobby group TheCityUK. These include six full-fledged Islamic banks such as Bank of London and the Middle East, European Islamic Investment Bank, Gatehouse Bank and the Islamic Bank of Britain (IBB).

Last week a government official said the central bank would look into developing a liquidity management tool for use by Islamic banks, while Britain’s export credit agency expects to guarantee sukuk for the first time next year, an issue by a customer of European plane maker Airbus.

In May, the Bank of England widened the types of sharia-compliant debt instrument­s that Islamic banks can use in their liquidity buffers, under a policy statement known as PS4/14.

Islamic banking accounts for only a tiny fraction — less than 1 percent — of the

Britain has 22 firms that offer Shariahcom­pliant financial products and they held an estimated $19 billion in assets last year, according to a report by lobby group TheCityUK. These include six fullfledge­d Islamic banks such as Bank of London and the Middle East, European Islamic Investment Bank, Gatehouse Bank and the Islamic Bank of Britain (IBB).

British banking sector, far below the share of roughly a quarter seen in the Gulf.

But taken together, the new official initiative­s seem likely to create a more benign environmen­t for Islamic finance, allowing banks to operate more flexibly and efficientl­y, and therefore more cheaply. Depending on how quickly it moves ahead, the plan for the liquidity management tool could conceivabl­y put Britain ahead of some Gulf countries in providing options in this area.

“PS4/14 is a strong enabler...this is very powerful for us,” Sultan Choudhury, CEO of Birmingham-based IBB, said on the sidelines of an industry conference in Dubai.

The new rules allow Islamic banks to hold a variety of instrument­s, ranging from sukuk issued by the Qatari government to those issued by Saudi Arabian firms, Choudhury said.

The IBB, a unit of Qatar’s Masraf Al Rayan MARK.QA, is now moving into the wholesale business and plans to change its name to Al Rayan Bank in December, subject to regulatory approval, as it looks to appeal to a wider customer base.

Despite this, London-based European Islamic Investment Bank is now in discussion­s with regulators to relinquish its banking licence, the lender said in a regulatory filing.

Under a 2012-2016 strategy, EIIB is exiting legacy private equity investment­s, seeking more stable income from its asset man- agement and advisory services.

Dropping its deposit-taking licence would remove cumbersome capital and reporting requiremen­ts. In July, EIIB failed to secure regulatory approval to appoint a chief financial officer.

Other banks are also adjusting their strategies. London-based Gatehouse Bank aims to generate more deals outside the domestic property market, its recently appointed chief executive told Reuters in August.

Bank of London and The Middle East, Britain’s largest Islamic bank, is developing private banking services with Malaysia’s Bank Muamalat.

Non-banks are also spotting opportunit­ies, such as asset management firm London Central Portfolio (LCP), which has launched two sharia-compliant property funds since December.

“We have every intention of rolling this out across all future funds,” said Naomi Heaton, chief executive of LCP.

“With the Islamic finance industry growing rapidly and far quicker than the convention­al fund sector, we wish to continue to capitalize on this market.”

Last week, London’s Battersea Power Station project announced it had secured a 467 million pound ($754 million) Islamic syndicated loan, one of the largest Islamic transactio­ns ever conducted in the country.

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