Saturday, 16 August 2008

How a Hawala Works

In the most basic variant of the hawala system, money is transferred via a network of hawala brokers, or hawaladars.

  • A customer approaches a hawala broker in one city and gives a sum of money to be transferred to a recipient in another, usually foreign, city.
  • The hawala broker calls another hawala broker in the recipient's city, gives disposition instructions of the funds (usually minus a small commission), and promises to settle the debt at a later date.
  • The unique feature of the system is that no promissory instruments are exchanged between the hawala brokers; the transaction takes place entirely on the honor system.
  • As the system does not depend on the legal enforceability of claims, it can operate even in the absence of a legal and juridical environment.
  • No records are produced of individual transactions; only a running tally of the amount owed by one broker to another is kept.
  • Settlements of debts between hawala brokers can take a variety of forms, and need not take the form of direct cash transactions.

The Rest @ Wikipedia

In addition to commissions, hawala brokers often earn their profits through bypassing official exchange rates.

  • Generally the funds enter the system in the source country's currency and leave the system in the recipient country's currency.
  • As settlements often take place without any foreign exchange transactions, they can be made at other than official exchange rates.

Hawala is attractive to customers because it provides a fast and convenient transfer of funds, usually with a far lower commission than that charged by banks.

Its advantages are most pronounced when the receiving country applies distortive exchange rate regulations (as has been the case for many typical receiving countries such as Pakistan or Egypt) or when the banking system in the receiving country is less complex (e.g. due to differences in legal environment in places such as Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia).

Furthermore, the transfers are informal and not effectively regulated by governments, which is a major advantage to customers with tax, currency control, immigration, or other legal concerns.

For the same reasons, governments do not favor the system, and accusations have been made in recent years that terrorist funding often changes hands through hawala networks.

Friday, 15 August 2008

Al Rowad Financial Services PLC

Interesting Company to Watch



Rowad Means "Pioneers".

Al Rowad Financial Services PLC

A brokerage company at Khartoum Stock Exchange (KSE). It is the second established public company working in this field.

The Chairman of the company Mr. Abdul Rahim Hamdi twice Minister of Finance and National Economy of Sudan.
  • He established a number of banks in Sudan, and propagated a bank in the United Kingdom.
    The General Manager Dr. Hamid Al Amin, a banker, ex-manager of department of corporations in Khartoum Stock Market and Feasibility Studies and Research department manager in Al Igbal Consulting Company
  • SDG 350,000,000 on 31 of December 2007
  • Contact Us
    Tel +249 183 777222
    Fax +249 183 777116

    info@rowad.sd

Thursday, 20 December 2007

Saleh Kamel Wants Financial Instruments to move from Sharia Compliant to become Sharia Based

The pioneer and driving force behind modern Islamic finance is Saleh Kamel.
However, he is now calling for Islamic finance to move from being Shari’ah compliant to that of being Shari’ah based.


At the heart of his concern, is a belief that Islamic finance has adopted in part Western models, rather than the purely shari’ah model. Sheik Kamel sees zakat as key to the transformation from Shari’ah compliant to Shari’ah based financial products..


In October 2006, Sheik Kamel called for the establishment of a single worldwide organization to collect and distribute zakat, both Zakat Al-Fitr and Zakat Al-Mal from the 20,000 or so organizations that are currently involved in its collection.


Significantly, the funds will be distributed under the supervision of a committee comprising experts from the IDB, ICCI and the OIC.


On November 28, 2006, the OIC approved Kamel’s proposal.
On December 4, 2006, it was announced that the International Commission for Zakat would be based in Malaysia.


On April 30, 2007, 20 OIC nations, including Saudi Arabia, endorsed the International Commission for Zakat.


-The whole post from the Shimron letters

Wednesday, 19 December 2007

The Islamic Financial Services Board

The Islamic Financial Services Board

An international standard-setting organisation that promotes and enhances the soundness and stability of the Islamic financial services industry by issuing global prudential standards and guiding principles for the industry, broadly defined to include:
  • banking
  • capital markets
  • insurance sectors

The IFSB also conducts research and coordinates initiatives on industry related issues, as well as organises roundtables, seminars and conferences for regulators and industry stakeholders.


Observer Members

1 .
Al Amin Bank Bahrain
2 .
Al Salam Bank Bahrain
3 .
Albaraka Banking Group Bahrain
4 .
Ahli United Bank Bahrain
5 .
Arcapita Bank Bahrain
6 .
Islamic Bank Bahrain
7 .
BNP Paribas Islamic Banking Unit Bahrain
8 .
Kuwait Finance House Bahrain
9 .
Noriba Bank Bahrain
10 .
Unicorn Investment Bank Bahrain
11 .
United International Bank Bahrain
12 .
Islamic International Rating Agency Bahrain
13 .
Venture Capital Bank B.S.C (c) Bahrain
14 .
Islamic Bank Bangladesh Limited Bangladesh
15 .
Bank Islam Brunei Darussalam Berhad Brunei
16 .
Perbadanan Tabung Amanah Islam Brunei Brunei
17 .
UM Financial Inc.
18 .
Egyptian Saudi Finance Bank
19 .
Faisal Islamic Bank Egypt
20 .
FWU Group Germany
21 .
Hong Kong Monetary Authority Hong Kong
22 .
Securities and Futures Commission Hong Kong
23 .
Bank Keshavarzi Iran
24 .
Bank Saderat Iran
25 .
Bank of Japan
26 .
Japan Bank for International Cooperation Japan
27 .
Japan Securities and Dealers Association
28 .
Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. Japan
29 .
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation
30 .
Insurance Commission of Jordan Jordan
31 .
The Islamic Insurance Co. Plc Jordan
32 .
Jordan Islamic Bank for Finance and Investment Jordan
33 .
A'ayan Leasing & Investment Co. Kuwait
34 .
AREF Investment Group Kuwait
35 .
Al-Muthanna Investment Company Kuwait
36 .
Boubyan Bank Kuwait
37 .
First Investment Company Kuwait Kuwait
38 .
Gulf Investment House Kuwait
39 .
Investment Dar Kuwait
40 .
Kuwait Finance House Kuwait
41 .
The Securities House Kuwait
42 .
Rasameel Structures Finance Company Kuwait
43 .
Wethaq Takaful Insurance Company Kuwait
44 .
The International Leasing & Investment Company Kuwait
45 .
Al Baraka Bank Lebanon
46 .
Affin Islamic Bank Berhad Malaysia
47 .
Lembaga Tabung Haji Malaysia
48 .
Aseambankers Malaysia Berhad
49 .
Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ (Malaysia) Berhad
50 .
AmBank Berhad Malaysia
51 .
Bank Islam Malaysia Berhad Malaysia
52 .
Bank Kerjasama Rakyat Berhad Malaysia
53 .
Bank Muamalat Malaysia Berhad Malaysia
54 .
CIMB Islamic Malaysia
55 .
Al Rajhi Banking and Investment Corporation (Malaysia) Bhd
56 .
Hong Leong Islamic Bank Malaysia
57 .
Kuwait Finance House ( Malaysia ) Berhad Malaysia
58 .
Malaysian Rating Corporation Berhad Malaysia
59 .
Nomura Asset Management Malaysia Sdn Bhd
60 .
RHB Islamic Bank Berhad Malaysia
61 .
Rusd Investment Bank Labuan Malaysia
62 .
EONCAP Islamic Bank Berhad Malaysia
63 .
Syarikat Takaful Malaysia Berhad Malaysia
64 .
Takaful Ikhlas Sdn. Bhd. Malaysia
65 .
Bank Al-Maghrib Morocco
66 .
Arab Islamic Bank Palestine
67 .
First Habib Modaraba Pakistan
68 .
Dubai Islamic Bank Pakistan Limited Pakistan
69 .
Alsafa Islamic Banking Commercial Bank of Qatar
70 .
Doha Bank
71 .
Qatar International Islamic Bank Qatar
72 .
Qatar Islamic Bank Qatar
73 .
Qatar National Bank Qatar
74 .
Al-Jazira Bank Saudi Arabia
75 .
Al-Rajhi Banking Investment Corporation Saudi Arabia
76 .
Islamic Corporation for the Insurance of Investment and Export Credit Saudi Arabia
77 .
National Commercial Bank Saudi Arabia
78 .
Saudi British Bank Saudi Arabia
79 .
Fitch Ratings Singapore Pte Ltd
80 .
The Islamic Bank of Asia Singapore
81 .
Oasis Crescent Capital (pty) Ltd South Africa
82 .
Al Salam Bank Sudan
83 .
Animal Resources Bank Sudan
84 .
Industrial Development Bank Sudan
85 .
Omdurman National Bank Sudan
86 .
Sudanese Banks Association Sudan
87 .
Sudan Financial Services Company Sudan
88 .
The National Pensions Fund Sudan
89 .
Al Rowad Financial Services Co. Sudan
90 .
Byblos Bank Africa Ltd Sydan
91 .
Tadamon Islamic Bank Sudan
92 .
Sheikhan Insurance and Reinsurance Co Ltd Sudan
93 .
Albaraka Turkish Finance House Turkey
94 .
Kuwait Turkish Participation Bank Turkey
95 .
Bank Asya Turkey
96 .
Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank United Arab Emirates
97 .
Badr Al Islami United Arab Emirates
98 .
Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank United Arab Emirates
99 .
Amlak Finance United Arab Emirates
100 .
Commercial Bank International United Arab Emirates
101 .
Dubai Bank United Arab Emirates
102 .
Dubai Islamic Bank United Arab Emirates
103 .
HSBC Amanah United Arab Emirates
104 .
National Bank of Dubai United Arab Emirates
105 .
National Bank of Umm Al Qaiwan United Arab Emirates
106 .
Sharjah Islamic Bank United Arab Emirates
107 .
SALAMA - Islamic Arab Insurance Co. UAE
108 .
Dubai Islamic Insurance and Reinsurance Co. UAE
109 .
UBS AG Dubai UAE
110 .
European Islamic Investment Bank UK
111 .
Guidance Residential LLC United States of America
112 .
Dow Jones Indexes United States of America

Saturday, 15 December 2007

Iraqi2 OFAC December as Specially Designated Nationals

The following entities have been added to OFAC's SDN list:
AL-AHMAD, Ahmad Muhammad Yunis (a.k.a. AL-BADANI, Ahmad Muhammad Mahmud 'Abdallah; a.k.a. AL-BARRANI, Ahmad Muhammad Al-Abdullah), Al-Mazzah Al-Jabal District, 6 Subdistrict, 3 area, Al-Iskan complex, 40/2, Fifth Floor, Damascus, Syria; DOB 19 Sep 1978; POB Al-Anbar, Iraq; nationality Iraq; Passport H0347417 (Iraq) issued 20 Feb 2003 expires 19 Feb 2011; passport place of issue: Al-Anbar, Iraq (individual) [IRAQ2]

AL-AHMAD, Sa'ad Muhammad Yunis, Damascus, Syria; DOB 1 Jan 1981; POB Baghdad, Iraq; nationality Iraq; Identification Number 159014 (Iraq) (individual) [IRAQ2]
AL-AZAWI, Hatem Hamdan, Diyali, Al-Khalis Sector, Iraq; Deli Abbas, Iraq; DOB circa 1937 (individual) [IRAQ2]

AL-DULAYMI, Hasan Hashim Khalaf (a.k.a. "ABU WISSAM"), 30th Street, Al-Yarmuk Area, Jadat Al-Jaysh District, Damascus, Syria; House #43, Lane #17, Subdivision #808, Al-Dawrah, Baghdad, Iraq; DOB 1942; POB Baghdad, Iraq; nationality Iraq (individual) [IRAQ2]
AL-DURI, Thabet, Karkh District, Baghdad, Iraq; Rukan al-Din, Syria; DOB 1943; alt. DOB 1944; POB Dur, Iraq (individual) [IRAQ2]

AL-RAWI, Fawzi Mutlaq (a.k.a. AL-RAWI, Fawzi Isma'il Al-Husayni; a.k.a. "ABU AKRAM"; a.k.a. "ABU FIRAS"), SYRIAN BA'TH PARTY COMMAND BUILDING, AL-HALBUNI DISTRICT, DAMASCUS, Syria; SYRIAN GOVERNMENT-OWNED APARTMENT , AL-MAZZAH DISTRICT, DAMASCUS, Syria; DOB 1940; POB RAWAH CITY, IRAQ; citizen Syria; nationality Iraq; CHAIRMAN, IRAQI WING OF THE SYRIAN BA'TH PARTY (individual) [SDGT]

AL-TIKRITI, Ahmed Watban Ibrahim Hasan (a.k.a. AL-TIKRITI, Ahmad Watban Ibrahim Hasan; a.k.a. MUHAWDAR, 'Imad 'Udi), Al-Hadda Hotel, Sana'a, Yemen; Al-Ra'is Building, Mina Street, Tartus , Tartus, Syria; Jirmanah Neighborhood, Damascus, Syria; DOB 1975; alt. DOB 1979; POB Baghdad, Iraq; nationality Iraq (individual) [IRAQ2]

Friday, 14 December 2007

HSBC

From Banking in Dubai FAQ


You'll usually need a residency visa first before you can do this although some banks will accept a letter from your employer saying that your residency visa has been applied for (your employer should be able to tell you which banks) or even a letter of introduction from a bank in your home country.

HSBC is one bank apparently (not confirmed) that does not require a residency visa to open an account. Go to the bank of your choice......

......HSBC Bank Middle East - mixed reports. Some customers are happy, some unhappy. Don't get caught by the office on Jumeirah Beach Road - it's a representative office of their offshore bank (Guernsey?), not a branch of HSBC UAE....

....HSBC is well established in the Middle East but Dubai branches are only in:
  • Bur Dubai (no parking)
  • Jebel Ali with a customer service centre in Mercato Mall on Jumeirah Beach Rd.

......HSBC has a bank presence with branches in most emirates, and also has a representative office on Jumeirah Beach Road in Dubai not connected with the UAE branches. You usually cannot do your normal banking activities at a representative office but they may have an ATM.

Monday, 8 October 2007

Arboon, Ijara and Delorenzo, Fatwa Collector

GROWING INTEREST

When Hedge FundsMeet Islamic Finance

U.S. Firms Hire ScholarsT o Help Design Products;
The 'Rent-a-Sheik' Issue By JOANNA SLATER August 9, 2007; P

HAYMARKET, Va. -- One recent afternoon, New York money manager James Rickards presented Sheik Yusuf Talal DeLorenzo with a dilemma: Could his hedge fund be Islamic-friendly?

Islam prohibits all kinds of speculative behavior that is embedded in Wall Street's DNA.

But Mr. DeLorenzo, a Massachusetts-born convert to Islam, is on a mission to meld centuries-old Islamic law with modern finance in the U.S.Mr. Rickards's fund couldn't bet on currency futures or some of the shares in the Standard & Poor's 500 index, Mr. DeLorenzo said, if he wants observant Muslims to invest.

But some alterations could earn the sheik's approval -- such as holding currencies instead of futures, and buying only S&P 500 companies that aren't debt-heavy or dependent on profit from interest payments. "Music to my ears," Mr. Rickards said. "It sounds like I can still get the effect I'm looking for."

With the Middle Eastern economy booming, partly thanks to soaring oil wealth, the Islamic financial industry has been expanding at a clip of about 15% a year, according to accounting firm KPMG, and is on pace to reach $1 trillion in two years. The money is seeking new outlets and Western financial institutions are seeking new clients -- opening the door for more aggressive methods to reconcile two worlds that don't easily

The issue of what's permissible has opened fault lines within Islamic finance. Malaysian adaptations of Western-style bonds, for instance, have been condemned, then copied, in Muslim countries in the Middle East.

Scholars consulting for Western financial institutions are criticized for bending religious laws to serve financial ends -- the "rent-a-sheik" argument, says one U.S. bank official.

Vendors profit by "capitalizing on people's religious insecurities," says Mahmoud El-Gamal, a professor of economics who holds a chair in Islamic finance at Rice University.

"Don't take my duck, sprinkle holy water on it, and say it's a chicken."Islamic law, or Shariah, stems from the Quran and subsequent interpretations by scholars. In the economic realm, commerce receives divine approval but several verses speak of a prohibition on interest, a practice viewed as exploiting the borrower.

  • An association in Bahrain is the informal authority on Shariah compliance for Islamic financial institutions.
  • But its standards aren't mandatory and don't govern the offerings of Western firms, which retain their own Shariah boards to advise them and issue their own rulings, or fatwas.
  • Top scholars can serve on dozens of boards, earning retainers of up to $20,000 to $40,000 a year per client.
  • Scholars who give their seal of approval sometimes receive a percentage of assets invested.

Mr. DeLorenzo says it's rare to get a percentage of assets, but that one time he accepted such compensation.

  • Among his other clients is Dow Jones parent company of The Wall Street Journal, which retains him and five other scholars to consult on its indexes of Shariah-compliant companies.
  • Mr. DeLorenzo receives an annual retainer of $5,000 plus stipends for attending two to three meetings a year.

Pledging Collateral - Arboon

  • Western banks say they make more than cosmetic changes to create shariah-compliant financial products. London-based Barclays Bank PLC, which worked with Mr. DeLorenzo and a firm called Shariah Capital Inc. on a platform for hedge funds to trade without violating Islamic requirements, had to rewrite a 20-odd-page brokerage contract.

The concept of short-selling -- using borrowed shares to bet on a stock's decline -- was replaced with an Islamic down-payment structure known as an arboon.

Any reference to a "guarantee" was replaced, for instance by a pledge of collateral, because Islamic rules require shared risk by all parties.

NEW OPTIONS

  • The Issue: Hedge funds and financial-services companies are seeking to create new products that can meet Islamic religious requirements.
  • The Incentive: The Middle East's economy is booming, creating demand for new investment options, and Western firms are looking for new clients.
  • The Challenge: Firms are adapting offerings to avoid prohibitions such as charging interest, while religious scholars decide how freely they can interpret Islamic law."There were definitely a few firsts," says Kieran McCann, a director in Barclays Capital's prime-brokerage group.

The gap between Wall Street and Islamic financial law can be uncomfortably wide, especially amid lingering distrust on both sides after the 2001 terrorist attacks on the U.S. But the U.S. also is home to several million middle-class Muslims, one of the largest markets in the West.

A 2004 Zogby poll for Georgetown University found a majority have college educations and earn $50,000 or more a year. Some early steps in providing Islamic alternatives have exposed pent-up demand.Vetting ServicesOnce word began to spread that Devon Bank in Chicago was exploring Islamic financial products in 2002, there was an immediate response from the local Muslim community, says bank vice president David Loundy.

"People said, 'Can you do houses, cars, lines of credit, and how about my sister in Connecticut?'" Some customers went as far as calling scholars in Pakistan to vet the acceptability of Devon's services, he said.

One Devon customer, Ahmed Khan, a technology executive at Dutch-based bank ABN Amro Holding NV, says he owned a home in the late 1980s but was "very uncomfortable" paying conventional mortgage interest and went back to renting.

In 2005 he took out a Devon "Shariah-compliant" mortgage using a method called ijara: The bank bought Mr. Khan's condominium and he pays a monthly sum to buy it from the bank over time, plus a lease payment for using the property.

In the first five years his cost of financing is about 7%, he says, and he paid some fees beyond normal closing costs for the specialized legal structure.

Mr. Khan had to fill out a standard mortgage application, but says it's important for U.S. Muslims to accept such compromises to encourage banks' efforts. "If you don't show that demand, there will never be any supply," he says.

The bank also converts the arrangement to a conventional mortgage for its regulators and the Internal Revenue Service, and advises customers to seek tax advice on whether it's deductible.

Mr. Khan takes the deduction.

Cadre of ScholarsMr. DeLorenzo, 58 years old, is at the center of the push to develop Islamic financial products in the U.S. He also serves on boards of Islamic scholars that rule on their acceptability, as do a cadre of less than 20 top scholars globally -- only a couple of them in North America -- who advise banks and financiers.

Mr. DeLorenzo's clients have included Morgan Stanley, Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., Royal Bank of Scotland PLC, and France's Société Générale SA.An Islamic mortgage that Mr. DeLorenzo helped develop here is serving as a blueprint for a venture in Saudi Arabia. He worked with a Lebanese investment bank to structure the first-ever Islamic bond from a U.S. company, issued last year by a small Texas energy firm.

Mr. DeLorenzo acted as "a cultural bridge between us and the rest of the scholars," says Ibrahim Mardam-Bey of Bemo Securitisation, the Lebanese bank. He can read banks' term sheets as well as the Quran, and has another advantage, says Mr. Mardam-Bey:

"Very few of the other scholars care to read their email."Mr. DeLorenzo, named Anthony at birth, is a grandson of Sicilian immigrants whose family was half-Catholic, half-Methodist, and was raised in neither religion, he says.

He uses the Islamic honorific "Sheik" that religious scholars are free to claim for themselves, but favors business suits and has a trimmed white beard. He was interested in finance from the age of 13, when he asked his mother to buy him shares in Studebaker Motor Co., he says.

As a Cornell University student he hopped a trans-Atlantic freighter to study in Spain, but tired of the trip early and got off in Casablanca. There he became fascinated with Arabic and Arab culture and began to read the Quran. He never returned to Cornell, instead studying in Cairo and Karachi.

He changed his name, married a Pakistani woman and in the 1980s became an adviser on education to the Pakistani government.

After attending a conference on Islamic economics held in Pakistan, he began collecting fatwas on Islamic banking issued by religious scholars across the Muslim world.

In 1989, amid escalating violence in Karachi, armed men attempted to shoot their way into the home where Mr. DeLorenzo, his wife and their three children lived. One of the family's servants was shot in the head. The case was never solved, he says.Mr. DeLorenzo quickly moved his family to Virginia, and his interests turned to the challenges faced by observant Muslims living in the U.S. The Islamic financing options here -- small-scale efforts by cooperatives, rather than financial heavyweights -- left him unimpressed.

"They were charging people too much, making them stand in line for six months to a year, demanding down payments of 40% on a house, and didn't have very good Shariah advice, if any."

Banking Fatwas

He began to establish his reputation as an expert in the late 1990s, after publishing a collection of English translations of the Islamic banking fatwas.

In 2000 he began working with what would become Guidance Financial Group, a company founded by Mohamad Hammour, a former economics professor at Columbia University. The goal: to offer U.S. Muslims a competitively priced Islamic mortgage.

It took a year and a half to hammer out a solution that they believed could not only comply with Shariah, but also clear the various home-finance regulations of individual states. It also needed to be eligible for financing by mortgage giant Freddie Mac.

"We had to essentially reinvent the entire mortgage process -- from the day you talk to the consumer, to the day the mortgage gets sold on Wall Street," says Dr. Hammour.Guidance offers a co-ownership agreement known as a musharaka, a slightly different strategy than that of Devon Bank.

The customer and Guidance jointly form a new corporation to own the home. Part of the customer's monthly payment goes toward buying out Guidance's share and part is a "utility fee," which the home buyer pays in exchange for using the asset.

Guidance says it keeps the fees roughly competitive with the market in 30-year mortgage interest rates, though there are added fees connected with the co-ownership venture. By the end of the term, the home buyer has completely bought out Guidance's stake and wholly owns the house.

Guidance reports the transaction to the IRS as a conventional mortgage, like Devon Bank, and says its customers generally take a regular deduction.

Guidance says it reached $1 billion in such financing in June, and is now operating in 21 states and Washington, D.C.

The firm contends the market for Shariah-compliant mortgages in the U.S. could top $10 billion a year.

Selling Point

Another member of Guidance's Shariah board is a former Pakistani judge, Muhammad Taqi Usmani, whose expertise is a major selling point for Guidance customer Ferzana Mir, a doctor from Pakistan who lives in Plano, Texas. (Mr. Usmani also serves on the Dow Jones Shariah board.)

Dr. Mir refuses interest on her U.S. bank accounts, and says some U.S. Muslims she knows are skeptical of a mortgage like hers because they view its substitutions for interest as "just a play on words." She disagrees: "As you delve into the finer points, you understand how this is different," she says.

Mr. DeLorenzo is pushing the envelope with an even more complex product, the Islamic trading system for hedge funds he helped develop with Barclays and Greenwich, Conn.-based Shariah Capital.

In the summer of 2001, Shariah's CEO Eric Meyer was a hedge-fund manager looking for a new venture. He was impressed by Mr. DeLorenzo's writing on Islamic finance. He sought him out and the two men talked for more than five hours about how to create an Islamic hedge fund.

Mr. DeLorenzo had his doubts. Hedge funds' variety of complex investment strategies -- including "short selling" stocks by selling borrowed shares to bet their price will drop -- poses a problem.

In Islamic finance, investors aren't allowed to sell what they don't own because it represents an unacceptable form of speculation.

There are other prohibitions, too. Because of the ban on interest payments, investors must avoid companies like banks that rely on interest for their income.

For the same reason, they are required to steer clear of firms that carry high levels of debt -- defined in different rulings as around one-third of either market capitalization or assets -- and thus pay a significant amount of interest.

Those are obstacles that would stop some experts.

Monzer Kahf, an economist and consultant in Islamic finance who lives near Los Angeles, says he generally supports Islamic finance efforts, but draws the line at trying to make hedge funds Shariah-compliant:

"What are hedge funds other than advanced forms of speculation?"'Excruciating Detail'

Mr. DeLorenzo and other well-known scholars began by breaking down the entire process of the traditional short sale "in excruciating detail," recalls Mr. Meyer. Some of the scholars' questions stumped even seasoned short-selling pros.

  • One example: If an investor borrows shares in a company, and that company goes bankrupt, who has voting rights?Questions like that were "just exasperating," Mr. Meyer says. "You're thinking, 'It's bankrupt, what does it matter?'
  • But in Islamic finance, you always need to know ownership and control" to make sure the risk is shared among the parties. After months of meetings in London and New York, Mr. DeLorenzo and his fellow scholars adapted the arboon contract -- akin to a down payment that enables the short-seller to take ownership of the share, rather than just borrowing it.
  • To address avoiding companies with too much debt or other issues under Islamic law, Shariah Capital developed new screening software. It taps directly into the quarterly reports that companies file electronically to the Securities and Exchange Commission and weeds out businesses that carry high amounts of debt or reap significant income from interest payments.

Mr. DeLorenzo now holds the title of chief Shariah officer for the company, and can tap into the software and monitor what's being traded at any time.

Two U.S. hedge fund firms have signed up to use the trading platform so far, and Mr. Rickards, the New York hedge-fund manager, is considering joining them.Mr. DeLorenzo says he hopes adapting Islam to modern finance could eventually influence other areas of Islamic law.

Shariah has "essentially been in a coma for several centuries," he contends. "It desperately needs reviving." He says he wants to expand his own small group of colleagues, but encounters cultural obstacles.

He recalls a meeting earlier this year in Dubai where a scholar lectured a group of visiting executives from a multinational investment firm about the sinfulness of conventional finance. "It was worse than bad," Mr. DeLorenzo says.

Write to Joanna Slater at joanna.slater@wsj.com (joanna.slater@wsj.com)

The growth of financial industries in the Islamic world is creating demand for investment professionals with an understanding of Islamic law - a demand that won't be satisfied any time soon.

At a recent regional business summit organized by Reuters, participants said Muslim investors are increasingly sophisticated and increasingly inclined to invest their money according to the stricture of Sharia, or Islamic law, say media reports.

For example, Islamic law prohibits paying interest, which makes it difficult to trade bonds or other debt instruments.

In addition, Islamic law bans investment in companies engaged in gambling, pornography or alcohol products.

Hassan Hakimian, The Cass Business School's associate dean for Off-Campus Programs, told BusinessWeek Islamic finance is growing some 15 percent annually and will continue that growth for at least the next ten years.

At the Reuters summit Atif Abdulmalik, chief executive of the private equity group Arcapita, based in Bahrain, said Islamic investing is now "mainstream."

Keba Keinde, CEO of Dubai's Millennium Finance Corp, which will invest $10 billion in energy, media and telecommunications over the next five years, added, "In terms of finding leverage,

Islamic finance has made progress in adding depth." A number of business schools are adding courses on Islamic finance, BusinessWeek says.

London's Cass school is launching an Executive MBA program in Dubai this fall, saying it sees a demand for more MBAs with experience in the area.


Islamic finance is expanding its reach across sectors ranging from global bond issuance to hedge funds - and even retail banks and home buyers in the U.S.

That portends increased job opportunities for individuals able to work with Sharia-compliant finance concepts that bear exotic names such as Sukuk, arboon and ijara.

"With the Middle Eastern economy booming, partly thanks to soaring oil wealth, the Islamic financial industry has been expanding at a clip of about 15% a year, according to accounting firm KPMG, and is on pace to reach $1 trillion in two years.

The money is seeking new outlets and Western financial institutions are seeking new clients - opening the door for more aggressive methods to reconcile two worlds that don't easily mesh," The Wall Street Journal reports. Separately,

Islamic Finance Information Service reported that worldwide issuance of Islamic bonds, known as Sukuk, soared 75 percent in this year's first half, to a record $24.5 billion. Issued primarily by Muslim-based institutions like the government of Malaysia and the Qatar Real Estate Investment Company, the investments allocate risk among parties to comply with the Quran's prohibition on paying or receiving interest. While marketed mainly within Muslim countries, international Sukuk bonds sold to global investors make up a growing share of the total market. Deutsche Bank was the leading underwriter of international Sukuk bonds, with $952 million issued this year. Meanwhile, Islamic finance is making headway in other, less obvious places. Thursday's page-one WSJ story explains how an American-born Islamic finance pioneer is marketing a Sharia-compliant trading system to hedge funds, and has also helped various banks in the U.S. create mortgage alternatives for Muslims buying homes here. Guidance Financial Group says it's provided over $1 billion in Sharia-compliant home financing in the U.S. The five year old Reston, Va.-based company operates in 20 states and Washington, D.C.

I've noticed a new program , which tries to portray itself as an Islamic CFA, it's called the Certified Islamic Finance Professional, or CIFP.

  • If I'm not mistaken it was created in Malaysia, which is at the forefront of Islamic finance.
  • Another thing i noticed, is that they offer a scholarship program for the CIFP program.
  • A link to the details of the program and quick facts...http://www.inceif.org (http://www.inceif.org/)http://www.bnm.gov.my/index.php?

Honesltly, it's the first time I've heard of this, is it just another TLA, or in this case (FLA) Four Letter Acronym? I don't think it's even close to the other designations, but it does fill a niche for those who might be interested.:)

The Rest @ Quantnet