Archive for United Kingdom

First Sharia-compliant capital savings plan launched in the UK

First Sharia-compliant capital savings plan launched in the UK

By Richard Harris | 16:12:15 | 13 June 2008

Alburaq, the London arm of Bahrain-based Arab Banking Corporation (ABC) today launched what it says is the UK’s first shariah-compliant capital protected savings plan.

The product, which is being offered in partnership with the Bank of Ireland, allows savers to deposit between £500 and £1 million in a five year account, as an alternative to a guaranteed equity bond.

Keith Leach, head of Alburaq at ABC, said despite growing availability of Islamic home finance products there had previously been a dearth of options for Muslims wishing to save money in accordance with their religious beliefs. The new account was an easy way for Muslims to gain exposure to equity markets in a secure way, he added.

‘There are restrictions on the type of companies that are considered allowable,’ he said. ‘The companies must not be over reliant on debt nor must they be engaged in activities that conflict with the principles of shariah.’

‘Many of these principles will be similar to those required by ethical investors.’

The core principle of Islamic finance is that interest is forbidden, though according to Shariah law investment in companies which profit from the sale of alcohol, pork or pornography, for example, is also forbidden, or ‘haram’. Alburaq has a committee of independent scholars to ensure shariah compliance.

At maturity on 5 September 2012 savers will receive their initial capital plus 100% of any gain in the performance of 20 shares selected from the global Dow Jones Islamic Titans 100 Index.

Source: http://www.citywire.co.uk/personal/-/news/money-property-and-tax/content.aspx?ID=305719

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First British takaful firm approved

First British takaful firm approved
by Daniel Stanton on Thursday, 01 May 2008

Britain’s first independent Islamic insurance company has received regulatory approval from the Financial Services Authority (FSA), it was announced on Thursday.

Principle Insurance, formerly known as British Islamic Insurance Holdings, will offer Shariah compliant home and car insurance from later this year.

Abdulaziz Hamad Aljomaih, chairman of Principle, said in a statement: “I believe Principle will go some way in altering the perception of Islamic finance in the UK by showing that progressive, sensible and profitable businesses can be established in accordance with Islamic law.

“Achieving FSA authorisation is a clear vindication of my belief that Shariah compliant financial products are not only equitable and profitable but also conform to the modern day principles of international finance, especially from a regulatory standpoint.”

All of Principle Insurance’s products and services will be approved by the company’s Shariah supervisory committee. This comprises Shaikh Nizam Yaquby of Bahrain; Dr Mohammad Elgari of Saudi Arabia; and Mufti Abdul Kader Barkatulla, who is based in Britain.

Principle will have around US$120 million in capital from institutional and private investors in the Gulf and Asia. Saudi Arabian investors account for 45.7% of the capital.

It aims to focus first on the UK, before looking at entering other European countries and the GCC.

Source: http://www.arabianbusiness.com/518184-first-british-takaful-firm-approved

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The UK’s Development as a Major Marketplace for Islamic Finance

The UK’s Development as a Major Marketplace for Islamic Finance
Anouar Hassoune, Standard & Poor’s – Emmanuel Volland, Standard & Poor’s – 23 Jul 2007

The UK is set to become the first non-Muslim country to be a major financial centre of Islamic finance. This article looks at the conditions that have allowed Islamic finance to grow in the UK, and how it may move forward.

Competition is heating up among the world’s financial centres to attract Islamic issuers and investors. So far, Dubai, Kuala Lumpur, Bahrain and, to a lesser extent, Riyadh and Singapore, are all well placed to capture part of the booming Islamic finance industry. The latest entrant is London, the only financial centre actively involved in Sharia-compliant market intermediation that is not in a Muslim country. London, as a financial centre, has a number of competitive advantages compared with its emerging-market counterparts, including:

* Large size and international reach.
* Deep, efficient markets, where investors can switch from one asset class to another (including in and out of sukuk).
* Liquidity in the secondary market.
* Tremendous human resources and expertise (including research, analysis, operations, and structuring capabilities).

In addition, the legal environment is robust. The tax regime applicable to sukuk coupons will make them deductible – no longer viewing them as rental payments but equivalent to interest. Announced 21 March 2007, among other initiatives pertaining to Islamic finance, this sukuk-friendly amendment to tax law in the UK stands to make London more attractive for issuing and trading sukuk, although Dubai has been so far the most active trading centre for sukuk notes. The largest sukuk to date were those issued by Dubai-based Nakheel Group for US$3.52bn early in the first quarter of 2007. These notes were listed in both Dubai and London.

The overall size of the sukuk market worldwide is estimated at nearly US$70bn,including issuance from Malaysia, Pakistan and, of course, the Middle East. However, the bulk of sukuk are over-the-counter instruments. Listed sukuk account for only 20-25% of outstanding sukuk issued worldwide, that is, US$10-15bn so far. There are more sukuk listed in Dubai than anywhere else, but the secondary market is virtually non-existent. Second is London, where the secondary market for sukuk totalled less than US$5bn at 21 March 2007. Among listed sukuk, Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services rates close to US$6bn or roughly 50% of sukuk outstanding that is listed globally. New sukuk issuance is expected to accelerate, and could reach US$20-25bn in the next five years, according to the most reasonable forecasts.

We believe that the global Islamic financial industry will benefit from the UK’s development as an attractive marketplace for Sharia-compliant financing and investment instruments – on both the wholesale and retail side. We estimate that up to 300,000 retail customers in the UK would be ready customers for Sharia-compliant banking services. The establishment of these services in the UK would extend the reach of the Islamic financial model – so far still concentrated in a few countries in the Middle East and Muslim parts of Asia. As for wholesale banking, London has the capacity to become a hub for Sharia-compliant financial flows that seek recycling in Europe. For example, Islamic investment banks such as the Bahrain-based Arcapita Bank B.S.C. and Gulf Finance House, both have offices in London where vast amounts of liquidity from the Gulf meet attractive Sharia-compliant asset classes packaged in private equity, real estate, and infrastructure funds domiciled in the more mature and stable European economies.

The UK intends to become a key player in market intermediation for sukuk. Competition from western financial centres is low, as limited appetite for Islamic finance is coming from New York, more interested in facilitating the trading of Sharia-compliant stocks, especially through the Dow Jones Islamic Index and, more recently, through the newly created family of Standard & Poor’s Sharia indices. London, on the contrary, has a wider approach to Islamic finance, encompassing a broader range of financial instruments and asset classes. For example, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) has recently licensed the European Islamic Investment Bank, a wholesale financial institution created expressly to recycle the massive amounts of institutional and private liquidity in the Gulf into Sharia-compliant asset classes originated in mature, stable, and transparent western markets.

The FSA has taken on an Islamic retail strategy in keeping with its mission that aims for inclusion. This principle aims at combating financial exclusion, that is, the incapacity or unwillingness of households to access banking services because of distance, poverty or religion.

Some UK citizens do not actively deal with banks simply because banking in the UK is based on interest, called ‘riba’ in Arabic, considered unlawful according to Sharia, or Islamic law. To prevent Muslim customers being excluded from the banking market because of their beliefs, the FSA has given its green light to established conventional banks to offer Sharia-compliant services. Both HSBC, through its Amanah brand, and Lloyds TSB already offer Islamic banking services.

The FSA has also recently licensed a fully-fledged Islamic financial institution, the Islamic Bank of Britain, to serve the UK retail market with Sharia-compliant products. For Sharia-compliant services to become more comprehensive in the UK, the country needs to offer takaful (or Islamic mutual insurance). Licensing a takaful company or allowing conventional insurers to offer takaful products could be the next step in the UK’s strategy to further enhance its position as a leading Islamic financial centre.

The UK itself might be interested in issuing sukuk notes. Such issuance would be of high interest for investors who adhere to or favour Islamic finance. If the country did so, its issuance would be the second to carry an AAA rating, after sukuk issued by the Islamic Development Bank in 2005 for US$1bn. In addition, the UK would be the third sovereign outside the Middle East to issue Sharia-compliant paper, after Malaysia in 2002 through a US$600m structure called Malaysia Global Sukuk Inc. Japan has also expressed its intention to tap liquidity in the Gulf through the issuance of Sharia-compliant notes. The German State of Saxony-Anhalt has also issued sukuk, through a vehicle called Stichting Sachsen-Anhalt Trust for €100m in 2004.

http://www.gtnews.com/article/6846.cfm

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Capita to support Sharia-compliant insurance

Capita to support Sharia-compliant insurance
February 29, 2008

” Sharia policies will comply with strict Islamic beliefs, which are in conflict with conventional insurance products.” by Angela Jameson

Outsourcing giant Capita, best known for running London’s congestion charge, is providing backoffice functions for a new insurance business tailored to comply with Islamic beliefs.

The initiative, due to launch in April, will see Capita initially sell car and home insurance by working with British Islamic Insurance Holdings. Life insurance, investments, savings and ethical financial products are to be launched later this year.

Capita, also known for collecting the BBC licence fee, will sell the policies as well as process claims and run the company’s back office. The deal should be worth £87 million to Capita over eight years.

Conventional UK insurance products are in conflict with Islamic beliefs as the Koran prohibits “riba”, loosely translated as interest but interpreted by many progressive Muslims as usury or extortionate interest. Insurance also contains elements of uncertainty and gambling that make it unsuitable for devout Muslims.

Bradley Brandon-Cross, chief executive of British Islamic Insurance Holdings, said: “The Muslim faith states that, because of various product features, conventional UK insurance options are in conflict with Islam and this creates a dilemma for British Muslims. We are planning to create a British insurer that operates in a way that removes this dilemma and creates an exciting new sector in the British insurance market.”

The insurance product will comply with “Takaful” principles. Takaful is an Islamic insurance concept which has been practised in various forms for more than 1400 years. It originates from the Arabic word Kafalah, which means guaranteeing each other or joint guarantee. The Takaful system is a form of mutual insurance based on co-operation and responsibility. The principles of Takaful are that policyholders co-operate among themselves for their common good; each pays a subscription, which eliminates uncertainty and losses are divided and liabilities spread across a community pool. No individual should derive advantage at the expense.

Capita has been operating in the financial services market since 2000, first in the general insurance market and latterly in the life and pensions arena. The insurance sector has provided some of its biggest contract wins in the past year, when it began a £722 million contract with Prudential to administer 7 million mature life and pensions policies. The contract win has seen 1,750 Prudential UK staff transfer to Capita and a further 1,250 staff in Bombay have also joined Capita.

Since the turn of the year it has been taken on to run back office in Norwich of Marsh, the US-based insurance broker, in deal which is expected to be worth £200 million over 10 years.

Capita said yesterday that pre-tax profits had risen in the year to December 31 by 19 per cent to £238.4 million on turnover up 19 per cent to £2.07 billion. The company has all of its 2008 revenue of £2.3 billion in the bag and said that it has very good visibility on 2009 and 2010 earnings.

Paul Pindar, chief executive, said that any economic downturn was likely to be good for Capita as other companies looked to outsource their back offices.

Increasingly, Capita is also running other companies’ front office and sales operations. For instance, it runs customer contact centres for DSG, formerly Dixons, and eircom, the Irish telecoms operator.

Capita has said that it will increase its dividend by 33 per cent, in line with a five-year average of 32 per cent increases. It has also proposed to return 25p a share through a special dividend.

Source: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/support_services/article3458486.ece

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