Thursday, June 7, 2012

New Islamic funding facility may lure Gulf banks

SYDNEY: Bank Negara is introducing an Islamic overnight funding facility which could encourage commercial banks from the Gulf to trade more in the country’s syariah-compliant money market.

Source from (The Star Online): http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/6/7/business/11430276&sec=business
Published: Jun 07, 2012

The collateralised murabahah facility, announced last week, “will add diversity to the existing liquidity management tools and further promotes greater liquidity in the Islamic financial market,” the central bank said.

The new facility would allow Islamic banks to obtain funds from the central bank by pledging high investment grade sukuk as collateral, a Malaysian-based Islamic banker told Reuters by telephone.

Currently, Islamic banks can obtain funds from Bank Negara through a deferred-payment sale agreement, but this structure is not considered permissible by some syariah scholars outside Malaysia so banks from the Gulf have been reluctant to use it.


Currently, Islamic banks can obtain funds from Bank Negara 
through a deferred-payment sale agreement, but this structure 
is not considered permissible by some syariah scholars outside 
Malaysia.

Because it involves murabahah, a common cost-plus financing structure in Islamic finance, as well as collateral, the new facility was likely to be more acceptable to banks from the Gulf, the banker said. It might also be more cost-effective, he added.

Last June, the United Arab Emirates central bank introduced a similar facility to provide liquidity to banks in its own money market: a collateralised murabahah facility in which banks can use Islamic certificates of deposit as collateral.

Al Rajhi Bank, Kuwait Finance House, Bank Alkhair and Elaf Bank are among the Middle Eastern institutions already active in the Malaysian market.

Besides stimulating Malaysia’s Islamic money market activity, the new facility could encourage banks’ investment in sukuk by increasing demand for the use of sukuk as collateral.

The facility was in line with increasing allocations of funds into sukuk by Islamic banks, said Srinivasan Gopalakrishnan, assistant vice-president at Bahrain-based Al Salam Bank. — Reuters

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