Monday June 25, 12:11 AM
Islamic finance poised to seize Gulf projects market
DUBAI, June 24 (Reuters) - Islamic finance could soon wrest
control of the $50 billion Gulf Arab project finance market,
aided by government inducements and investors looking for
alternatives to conventional funding, industry officials said.
Conventional financing now dominates the Gulf Arab market
which accounted for almost $1 in every $3 raised for project
financing last year, according to HSBC Holding .
But banks such as HSBC and Deutsche Bank are
expanding their Islamic finance operations and Gulf Arab
investors are setting up new Islamic banks to cope with the
expected surge in demand for Islamic project finance.
"There is some political pressure from governments and
companies want to demonstrate they are acting in an Islamically
acceptable way," Dominic Harvey, head of Middle East banking and
projects at law firm Norton Rose said at a conference sponsored
by the Middle East Economic Digest.
"Because it's a relatively new concept there is still a huge
mismatch between demand and supply."
The size of the regional project finance market, already the
largest in the world, could top $1 trillion in the next 10
years, driven by spending on infrastructure largely in Saudi
Arabia and Abu Dhabi, the largest member of United Arab Emirates
federation, Harvey said.
"Spending will be on oil and gas related projects,
construction and general transport infrastructure," he said.
"Some experts predict the market will grow 10-fold in the next
10 years and this could be conservative."
Funding that complies with Islamic principles, which can
come from conventional banks such as HSBC, accounts for about 10
percent of the project finance market. Islam bans interest,
which it equates with usury.
Funding from Islamic institutions likely accounts for less
than 5 percent of the market, Harvey said.
Local Islamic lenders had previously been focused on retail
banking and were reluctant to lend long-term funds, leaving the
project finance market to conventional finance.
"Some local Islamic banks don't see (project financing) as
attractive given the long tenors and low returns but they will
need to meet the demands of their clients and do as governments
require," said Hissam Kamal Hassan, director of Islamic finance
at HSBC in Saudi Arabia.
Over the next 10 years, the majority of financing for
projects could comply with Islamic law, he said.
Saudi Arabia is setting up an Islamic bank, called Inmaa, in
part to cope with demands for infrastructure spending along
Islamic principles.
"Most people behind projects are not saying we won't do
non-Islamic, but they are saying that where possible, we should
do Islamic," Hassan said.
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