Thursday June 7, 11:58 PM
Gamble or risk control? Islamic hedging row rages
MANAMA, June 7 (Reuters) - Demand for hedge funds and for
Islamic finance is booming, which makes a hedge fund that
complies with Islamic law the holy grail for fund managers who
want to tap huge liquidity in the Gulf.
But most Islamic finance industry players say the two sides
are incompatible and that common hedge fund strategies break
Islamic law.
Others say that Islamic finance, in order to prosper, needs
to develop tools to enable investors to hedge against risk, but
that does not necessarily mean hedge funds.
"It's absolutely imperative that the Islamic finance
industry has hedging tools," said Afaq Khan, head of Islamic
banking at Standard Chartered .
"You have to segregate the two. Hedge funds are work in
progress. Islamic derivatives for hedging purposes are
absolutely allowed as a risk management tool," he added.
Standard Chartered does not offer Islamic hedge funds but is
one of a number of lenders offering Islamic hedging products in
a bid to meet growing demand from the world's 1.2 billion
Muslims for financial services that comply with their beliefs.
Many common hedging practices are seen as speculative bets
on currency and stock movements. Hedge fund strategies such as
short selling are considered haram, or forbidden, by Islamic
law.
Lending on interest, the trading of debt and gambling are
all haram. Practices deemed acceptable by Islamic law, known as
sharia, are halal.
Short-selling involves borrowing shares and selling them in
the hope of making a profit by buying them back at a cheaper
price. If the price of the shares goes up, the investor loses
money.
Critics of hedging strategies say such speculative
transactions contravene Islam's ban on gambling.
HEDGING NECESSARY
Delegates chuckled after a speaker scheduled to talk about
hedge funds that comply with Islamic law told a conference in
Bahrain he had nothing to say because such funds did not exist.
"There are some who claim to have Islamic hedge funds in the
market. Yes there are three or four, but no one has invested in
them, so to me they don't exist," said Antoine Massad, chief
executive of Man Investments Middle East, part of Man Group Plc
.
"Hedge funds use leverage, derivatives etc - all of that is
haram. It's not only not halal; it's haram," he added.
Others argue that hedge fund strategies have great potential
for Islamic finance, which is hamstrung by a shortage of
instruments to manage risk, especially long-term risk.
Many hedging strategies have their origins in risk
reduction, which is in the spirit of Islam's prohibition on
gambling, they say, pointing to examples of farmers acting to
reduce their exposure to fluctuations in commodity prices.
The Islamic finance industry's ability to provide fixed-rate
mortgages, underwrite life insurance or finance long-term
infrastructure projects is hampered by its inability to manage
the risk of long-term exposure, hedging advocates say.
"This (hedging) will give you the ability to manage your
risk properly. You cannot leave your investments exposed,"
Bahrain Central Bank Governor Rasheed al-Maraj told reporters at
the Islamic finance conference last week.
ISLAMIC VEIL
Standard Chartered, Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas
are among the banks that already offer or are
developing Islamic hedging instruments.
Deutsche Global Markets Director Harris Irfan said hedge
funds that claim to be Islamic may not appeal to investors,
because they try to mimic traditional hedge fund practices.
Deutsche tries to match hedge fund performance, rather than
practice, he said. Hedge funds are typically designed to deliver
so-called alpha returns that exceed those of the broader market.
"As long as you stay within the boundaries of sharia, you
have structures and instruments which follow sharia principles,
then there's no reason why you can't have a sharia-compliant
hedge fund," Irfan said.
Funds try to replicate hedging strategies in ways that will
secure a fatwa, or decree from scholars declaring them
sharia-compliant.
On the bankerme.com Web side, Islamic finance consultant
Michael Gassner describes deal structures that hedge funds
combine in a complicated series of steps to win Islamic
approval.
But Ahmed Abbas, of Bahrain's Liquidity Management Centre,
criticized such mechanisms as false to the spirit of sharia. "I
don't care, if you take 20 Islamic steps in order to short sell,
you cannot sell what you don't own.
"Islamic banking is not about drawing an Islamic veil over
something un-Islamic."
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