Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Global Financial Crisis: Lessons from Islamic Finance and Implications for Local Business Prof. Habib Ahmed Durham University.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Global Financial Crisis: Lessons from Islamic Finance and Implications for Local Business Prof. Habib Ahmed Durham University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Global Financial Crisis: Lessons from Islamic Finance and Implications for Local Business Prof. Habib Ahmed Durham University

2 Agenda  Background Islamic Principles and Law Related to Finance  Financial Crisis—Build Up  Lessons from Islamic Finance  Implications for Local Business  Conclusion

3 Islamic Commercial Law: Basic Approach  In economic transactions (muamalat), all activities are permitted expect what is explicitly prohibited by Islamic law (principle of permissibility)  New transactions can be accommodated through ijtihad as long as they do not contain the prohibited  The prohibitions in transactions include: Riba Gharar

4 Riba  Riba (literal meaning ‘increase’) is prohibited “...they say: trading is only like riba, whereas God has permitted trading and forbidden riba…” (Quran 2:275)  Different types of riba  Implications of riba: Interest is forbidden Selling debt is not allowed

5 Gharar  Gharar–Excessive risk, hazard, or ambiguity  Gharar can exist in the object or terms of the contract  Implications of gharar: Existence of the object (& ability to deliver) The future sale Derivative instruments (options, swaps, forwards, etc.)

6 Agenda  Background Islamic Principles and Law Related to Finance  Financial Crisis—Build Up  Lessons from Islamic Finance  Implications for Local Business  Conclusion

7 Making of the Crisis (1) 1. Driven by excessive profit-motives, banks/financial institutions engaged in sub- prime lending (with adjustable interest rates) 2. Loans packaged as Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS)/Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO) 55% of the $10.2 trillion loans securitized (end 2006) 12-15% of securitized loans were sub-prime 3. Rating Agencies gave positive ratings to these securities (to get more business and collect fees)

8 Making of the Crisis (2) 4. Investors (banks, hedge and pension funds, municipalities, schools, etc.) acquired these securities 5. Investors/speculators bought Credit Default Swaps (CDS) to hedge credit risks on MBS/CDO Notional amounts of OTC Derivatives in 2007 $596 trillion, CDS $58 trillion (US GDP $13.8 trillion) 6. Issuers of CDS (Investment banks & Insurance companies) took on the risk of default

9 From Defaults to Economic Meltdown  Interest rates began to rise (1% to 5.25% between 2004- 2006)  Adjustable rate subprime loans started to default  Holders of MBS/CDO incurred losses  Prices of CDOs fell  Issuers of CDS had to pay-off the losses caused by default  Losses caused depletion of capital of FIs  Scramble to get funds  Money market froze (as lenders did not know the risks involved)  Lack of financing caused housing market to crumple— further decreasing housing (CDO) prices and increasing market risks  Credit risks, market risks, and liquidity risks produced systemic risks  Vicious cycle of deleveraging and economic downturn

10 Agenda  Background Islamic Principles and Law Related to Finance  Financial Crisis—Build Up  Lessons from Islamic Finance  Implications for Local Business  Conclusion

11 Islamic Financial Principles and Crisis  Islamic principles: Prohibition of selling of debt (CDOs) Prohibition on derivatives (CDSs) Prohibition on short-selling—limiting betting on downside risks Using risk-sharing instruments—more monitoring If Islamic principles were followed, the crisis would not have taken place the way it did

12 Crisis and Islamic Finance: Ethical and Legal Dimensions Conventional 1. Banks/financial institutions engaged in sub-prime lending 2. Loans packaged as MBS/CDO 3. Rating Agencies gave positive ratings to these securities 4. Investors/speculators bought securities 5. Credit Default Swaps (CDS) to hedge/speculate on credit risks Islamic 1. [Risk–sharing modes preferred] [Excessive greed discouraged] 2. Selling of debt prohibited 3. [Dishonesty discouraged] 4. - 5. Derivatives prohibited [Speculation discouraged]

13 Islamic Financial Sector and Crisis  Islamic financial sector has performed relatively better under the crisis ‘While conventional banks worldwide are nursing losses of more than $400 billion from the credit crisis, Islamic banks are virtually unscathed ’ (IHT, August 19, 2008) ‘In a dire year for mutual funds, the Amana Trust Income Fund, the main Muslim investment fund, has trumped those from all other faiths in the US by losing only 25.8% of its value for the year – half the average 44% loss for the US stock funds’ (FT, Dec. 26, 2008) ‘Non-Muslims turn to Islamic Bank as a safe option’ (Birmingham Post, Oct. 3, 2008) ‘Shares of most Islamic Banks in GCC markets record spectacular rise’ (Arab News May 14, 2009)

14 Agenda  Background Islamic Principles and Law Related to Finance  Financial Crisis—Build Up  Lessons from Islamic Finance  Implications for Local Business  Conclusion

15 Implications for Local Business  The rationale of Islamic finance in UK— social inclusion by providing financial access to Muslim community  Main beneficiaries are expected to be Muslims who did not deal with conventional finance  Birmingham has a large Muslim community that can be served by Islamic finance

16 Implications for Local Business  Islamic finance is not for Muslims only  Malaysia—Non-Muslims form a large customer base for Islamic finance Kuwait Finance House’s Malaysia—40 percent depositors and 60 percent borrowers are non- Muslims  Other than ethical dimension, Islamic finance can offer economic value that can benefit all  Islamic finance can supplement and enrich the financial system

17 Implications for Local Business  Time of crisis—people looking for stability and financing  IF should offer something unique Protection Stability Risk Sharing Economic value Social inclusion  If the range of Islamic financial products can be expanded—can attract more customers

18 Challenges and Constraints  Instead of developing products in line with the principles and values of Islamic law, Islamic finance appears to be mimicking conventional  Image—information about Islamic products and value proposition  Birmingham-moving from a manufacturing to a service based economy Retail, tourism, hospitality, transportation, etc.  IF have to come up with solutions to provide financing to the service sector

19 Conclusion  After the crisis, conventional economics is looking for ideas to fix the system  Principles of IF has much to offer  IF has features that can provide stability and resilience during crisis  Image—IF need to focus on the economic value proposition  Need to come up with new products that serves the needs without compromising on the principles

20 Thank you! habib.ahmed@durham.ac.uk


Download ppt "Global Financial Crisis: Lessons from Islamic Finance and Implications for Local Business Prof. Habib Ahmed Durham University."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google