Khaleej Times

Islamic equity fund eyes Gulf investors

Shariah-compliant firms in India offer potential

- Times. — nithin@khaleejtim­es.com

mumbai — While a leading Indian asset management company launched a Shariah-compliant equity fund almost two decades ago, Islamic finance is still in its infancy in the country, says the head of the fund house. “The number of such funds will grow only if there is greater participat­ion by existing funds, making a stronger commercial rationale for their proliferat­ion,” Arvind Sethi, managing director and CEO, Tata Asset Management Ltd, told Khaleej

“We are making progress in that direction.”

Tata Asset Management was among one of the first Indian fund houses to launch a Shariah fund, the Tata Ethical Fund in 1996. About six years ago, a similar fund was launched by another asset management company. However, last year, a leading fund house, which was planning to launch a Shariah-compliant fund, backed out at the last minute.

Both the leading stock exchanges in India, the Bombay Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange have introduced their versions of the Indian Shariah equity indices over the last five years.

Sethi noted that a few early initiative­s in Islamic finance in the Indian banking and non-banking finance companies (NBFC) space have been challenged in a court of law. The matter is still sub-judice at some level, accounting for the fact that Islamic finance is still in its infancy.

Tata Ethical fund is an open-ended equity fund which invests in a diversifie­d equity portfolio based on principles of Shariah. The investment objective of the scheme is to provide medium- to long-term capital gains by investing in Shariahcom­pliant

The number of such funds will grow only if there is greater participat­ion by existing funds

Arvind Sethi,

equity and equity-related instrument­s of well-researched value and growth-oriented companies.

“We would like to promote the fund in the Middle East subject to local regulation­s,” said Sethi. “We understand that these regulation­s are likely to change in the UAE, which is a significan­t market. We would then like authorised distributo­rs to adopt this fund for investors.”

According to him, some Gulfbased institutio­nal investors are investing in the Tata Indian Shariah equity fund, the US dollar share class fund by the fund house.

Encouraged by the performanc­e of the rupee-denominate­d Shariah fund, Tata Asset Management launched the dollar-denominate­d offshore fund about five years ago for internatio­nal investors wanting to invest in Indian equities in a Shariah-compliant manner. “This fund is broadly a replica of the rupee-denominate­d fund, with the same portfolio manager, Shariah board, etc.,” Sethi added.

The Tata Ethical Fund has outperform­ed its benchmark index (S&P CNX Shariah Index) consistent­ly by a wide margin over various periods of time, Sethi said. It has been rated a five-star performer by Value Research, a leading independen­t mutual fund research house, in a wider universe of diversifie­d equity funds in India.

As on March 31, the Tata Ethical Fund had a corpus of Rs2.96 billion across 24,500 investment accounts. Interestin­gly, the fund has attracted non-Muslim investors, who today account for about 60 per cent of the corpus.

India has a large universe of Shariah-compliant companies across a wide array of industrial sectors, Sethi said. “Within this universe, there is significan­t potential for value creation,” he added.

Tata Asset Management has over 26,000 investment accounts from NRI investors in rupee-denominate­d onshore funds. A large proportion of these investors are from the Gulf, “and we look to opportunit­ies to reach out to them,” he added.

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