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Risk aversion will force flight to Islamic investing
Rising risk aversion will force a flight to conservative Islamic investing, with Asia's $20 billion sharia fund market likely to be led by the Middle East, Brunei, Kazakhstan and Indonesia, a fund house said on Friday.
Kuala Lumpur : Rising risk aversion will force a flight to conservative Islamic investing, with Asia's $20 billion sharia fund market likely to be led by the Middle East, Brunei, Kazakhstan and Indonesia, a fund house said on Friday.
Once a niche market serving devout Muslims, Islamic finance has become popular with investors as the world financial crisis prompted some to rethink the merits of conventional banking.
Sharia bonds and stocks have met with approval as financial market participants trade high returns for greater security. But regulators and bankers warn that Islamic finance will take a hit as the global economy tips into a severe downturn.
"The whole sentiment towards risk has actually shifted," Deborah Ho, dir-ector of Sharia fund house Asian Islamic Investment Management, said in an interview.
"The world environment has changed so much that it is back to simplicity, back to transparency and no bells and whistles. The natural effect of Islamic products is that you, by nature, cannot do anything too funky anyway."
Islamic investing has to conform with the Sharia, which dictates that venture partners share profits and losses and investments should be ethical and avoid excessive risk.
Asian Islamic, with a 10 million ringgit ($2.8 million) capital base, is 51 percent-owned by Singapore's DBS Asset Management with the remainder owned by investment bank Hwang-DBS Malaysia Bhd. DBS Asset Management is a unit of DBS.
The Asian sharia fund management market, which has tripled since 2002, would keep rising due to demand from Muslims and the Middle Eastern petrodollars despite a recent sharp drop in energy prices, Asian Islamic chief executive Nor Azamin Salleh said.
But growth would slow as the market matures, he said without giving estimates. Saudi Arabia accounts for about 70 per cent of the Asian Islamic fund market while Malay-sia contributes about a quarter, Nor Azamin said.
Asian Islamic plans to launch a $200 million Islamic bond fund and a $100-$200 million equity fund, and expects to manage $300 million in its first year of operation, Nor Azamin had earlier told reporters.
"The market is quite volatile at the moment," he said. "But we believe that there are a lot investors in the Middle East ... who are looking for safe investments. At the moment the attitude in the Middle East is just wait and see what's happening."
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