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Islamic banks: Trouble beneath calm waters?

by Reuters on Sunday, 07 June 2009
IFSB boss Rifaat Abdel Karim.

As Western regulators stress test top banks, Islamic finance wants to tighten its regulatory and disclosure framework amid concerns that unhealthy banks may have slipped under the radar.

Few islamic financial firms have reported headline-grabbing losses so far, but the industry's relatively modest size and opaque framework could mask more trouble than appearances suggest, according to bankers and lawyers.

Rather than stress testing individual banks as in the US, however, Islamic bankers and lawyers say that the Islamic finance sector needs better disclosure rules within stronger regulatory frameworks.

A narrow regulatory approach that examines individual firms rather than the sector and poor disclosure laws could have allowed weak Sharia banks to escape the authorities' attention, potentially sparking an Islamic banking crisis.

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"Rather than just looking at one bank and examining the risks there, you need to look at a more macro level of the industry," said Rifaat Ahmed Abdel Karim, who heads Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB), a top industry body.

"We need to see who's connected with what. It's not only the individual banks, but how they are connected at the macro level because then you can see who's exposed to what."

Since the global economic and property slump, Sharia banks' earnings have dropped by up to 40 percent on year. Firms such as Kuwait's Investment Dar and Dubai's Tamweel and Amlak Finance are trying to restructure.

UBS has forecast Dubai house prices could fall up to 70 percent from a fourth-quarter peak. A Reuters poll predicted prices will drop more than 40 percent in 2009 and 2010 before recovering in 2011.

The slide in property markets could highlight weakness in the regulation of the Islamic banking industry.

"In certain countries where the regulations are not as tight as in some jurisdictions, we may find one or two institutions that may pass through the sieve for a while," said Vaseehar Hassan Abdul Razack, chairman of Unicorn International Islamic Bank Malaysia, adding that Bahrain and Malaysia were well regulated.

"Many of the Islamic banks globally, and especially in the GCC, are real-estate oriented; so this could be one risk factor."

Unlike the US, which recently put 19 top lenders through ‘stress tests' to see which can survive a severe downturn, and Europe which is preparing to do the same, there have been few calls for Islamic banks to be tested to see if they need extra capital to weather heavier losses.

While the US stress test results showed all banks were solvent, regulators ordered them to raise nearly $75bn to build a capital cushion.


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