February 2010

Islamic finance: Build a market that is truly different


If Islamic finance is to be more than just a marketing fad, radically new products must be developed.


Sheikh Muhammad Taqi Usmani, a prominent Shariah scholar, said in 2007 that the majority of so-called sukuk instruments violated Islamic principles. Over the past two to three years this has made a lot of people’s jobs much more difficult. It has compromised the growth of the market for these nominally Islamic bonds.

Bankers and lawyers have had to pay closer attention to standards of Shariah compliance in the structuring of Islamic bonds. The result has been that some add-ons that were previously common have not been applied to new structures. The less-contentious ijarah – the leaseback style of sukuk – has come to the fore.

But the...


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