Banks with Islamic services seen rising 50% globally by 2009

 
DUBAI: The number of banks offering Islamic products will increase by 50% around the world by 2009 because of high public demand, the head of a newly-licensed Shariah-compliant investment bank in Bahrain said yesterday.
“Some might say Islamic banking is a fashion, but it will continue to grow as people feel more comfortable with it,” Mark Hanson, chief executive of Global Banking Corp, said on the sidelines of a financial conference in Dubai.
“Over the next two years, we will see an increase of 50% in banks providing Islamic services globally and Islamic loans are part of that.”
In Saudi Arabia, for example, there is more pressure from shareholders to see Shariah-compliant products, he added.
Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank, will list Islamic-structured products on the Dubai International Financial Exchange (DIFX), said Armen Papazian, senior vice president of innovation and development at the stock exchange.
The value of Islamic loans is growing by 40% a year and the rate is likely to fasten, Hanson said.
The Gulf Arab Islamic bond market is likely to recover from the global credit squeeze by April as companies get used to higher borrowing costs after a summer of turmoil that largely killed off sales, according to a Reuters poll issued last month.
Demand among the world’s 1.2bn Muslims for financial services that comply with their faith is surging as Gulf Arab nations reap a windfall from oil prices that have surged almost five-fold in the past six years.
The Islamic finance industry, worth about $500bn in assets, has been growing at about 10% a year for the last decade, according to ratings company Standard & Poor’s.
 
  Back to main
   
 
Copy Rights Reserved 2006-2007 alhudacibe.com