Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

Australian budget opens door to Islamic finance

May 9 The Australian government has proposed removing tax barriers to asset-backed financing arrangements as part of its federal budget, a move likely aimed at facilitating interest-free transactions used in Islamic finance.
Islamic finance is gradually catching on in Australia, with National Australia Bank Ltd helping fund a A$160 million ($114 million) Brisbane property purchase in February, after its maiden Islamic finance deal in August.
Under its 2016/17 spending plan, the government would seek to ensure the tax treatment of asset backed financing is similar to other arrangements which are based on interest bearing loans.
The measure would become effective only in 2018 and apply to transactions supported by assets, including deferred payment arrangements and hire purchase arrangements.
The two most common Islamic finance contracts are murabaha, where a client buys a commodity on a deferred-payment basis, and ijara, an installment-based leasing arrangement.
Islamic finance follows religious principles such as bans on interest and gambling but the asset-based nature of such contracts means they can incur double or triple tax charges because they require multiple transfers of titles of underlying assets.

The proposal comes almost five years after the Australian Tax Office first presented a paper on Islamic finance to the government for its review. 

(Reuters / 09 May 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Friday, 28 August 2015

Australia's NAB seals maiden Islamic financing deal

Aug 27 National Australia Bank Ltd has closed its first onshore Islamic financing deal, a A$19.9 million ($14.2 million) arrangement to fund a real estate purchase by Sydney-based asset manager Crescent Wealth.
The funding platform designed by NAB, the country's No.4 lender by market value, could help open Australia to Islamic investors from the Gulf and Southeast Asia that seek to adhere to religious principles such as bans on interest and gambling.
Crescent Wealth used the four-year financing for a A$30.75 million commercial property acquisition in South Melbourne, with plans to build a portfolio of commercial assets across the east coast, said Talal Yassine, managing director of Crescent Wealth.
"It marks a significant moment for the industry in Australia as the funding was supported by an Australian retail bank."
Until know, such deals had to be purely funded by equity, but the sharia-compliant structure would help to significantly remove transaction risk, in particular for foreign investors, said Yassine.
"We plan to secure a second asset by year end and again, will be leveraging the existing structure we have with NAB."
Crescent Wealth, established in 2011, currently has over A$100 million in assets under management across five Islamic funds which include cash, real estate and domestic and international equities.
In April, the firm set up an office in Malaysia and is now considering applying for a boutique fund management license.
TAXES
Islamic financing has struggled to gain traction in Australia due in part to tax issues which can penalise the asset-based nature of such transactions.
Structures such as sukuk, or Islamic bonds, can attract double or even triple tax charges because they require multiple transfers of title of the underlying asset.
The Australian Board of Taxation presented an Islamic finance paper to the government in June 2011 aiming to address such issues, but Canberra has yet to give a response or release the final review.
In the meantime, Britain, Luxembourg, South Africa and Hong Kong have all passed tax amendments to facilitate such transactions. All have issued sukuk over the past year.

The NAB used a structure known as wakala, where one party acts as an agent for another to manage a pool of assets. Wakala is widely used overseas, with Hong Kong using the format for its second issuance of sukuk in May, a $1 billion deal.
(Reuters / 27 August 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Friday, 13 February 2015

Solar Sukuk Marks Australia’s Debut Choosing Labuan Haven

Australia is set to become the newest entrant to the Islamic debt market this year as a solar-power joint venture seeks to sell a debut sukuk in Malaysia’s offshore tax haven of Labuan.

SGI-Mitabu, run by The Solar Guys International and Mitabu Australia Pty, has revived a plan to offer A$150 million ($117 million) of the securities in the third quarter to finance the building of a plant in Indonesia, M. Rusydi, Mitabu’s director, said by phone from Brisbane on Feb. 10. The company is coming to Malaysia because Australia still hasn’t approved laws allowing for the sale of sukuk since first proposing a plan in 2010.
The offering may serve as a model for Australian companies to tap the $1.7 trillion Islamic banking industry, according to Kuala Lumpur-based consultancy Amanah Capital Group Ltd. Malaysia, the world’s biggest Shariah-compliant debt market, has attracted sukuk issuers from Japan, which also lacks legislation that avoids double taxation on capital gains and income streams. Labuan, an island off the coast of Borneo, was established as a financial hub in 1990.
“Such financial transactions benefit the Australian economy by opening up more sources of funding,” Suhaimi Zainul-Abidin, treasurer of the Gulf Asia Shari’ah Compliant Investments Association, said in a Feb. 10 e-mail from Singapore. “But, it may be premature to expect a sudden spurt in the number of Australian companies issuing sukuk.”

Tax Incentives

SGI-Mitabu’s debt sale was first announced in December 2012 with a target issuance date of June 2013. The offering was delayed while the Indonesian government approved the location of the new plant as an economic zone, said Rusydi.
Labuan, which is also an offshore oil and gas hub off the coast of eastern Sabah state, doesn’t charge stamp duties on revenue streams from sukuk’s underlying assets or on capital gains. The island offers an income tax rate of 3 percent and has attracted 10,352 companies since its inception, according to the Labuan International Business and Financial Centre’s website.
About 2.2 percent of Australia’s 23 million population are Muslim, according to U.S. government data. A bill to give equal tax treatment to Islamic bonds was presented to parliament in 2010 and the National Taxation Board submitted a study in July 2011. There’s been no major development since.
Shariah-compliant finance presents an avenue for Australia to open its capital market, boost competition and encourage social inclusion, Bernie Ripoll, a former parliamentary secretary to the Treasurer, said in an April 2013 speech.

Lacking Prominence

The lack of progress could be partly due to the changes in the Australian government, said Reynah Tang, a tax partner with law firm Johnson Winter & Slattery in Melbourne.
“Back at the time the original proposals were happening, the thinking was that Islamic finance would become a more regular feature of our capital markets,” Tang said by phone on Feb. 11. “It hasn’t been very prominent in more recent years.”
While Australia is stalling, other nations are seeing opportunities in Islamic finance. The U.K. became the first non-Muslim country to sell sukuk in 2014, followed by debuts by Luxembourg, Hong Kong and South Africa. Investors bid for 10 times the 200 million pounds ($305 million) offered by the U.K.
Global sales of Shariah-compliant notes, which pay returns on assets to comply with Islam’s ban on interest, climbed 7 percent to $46.3 billion in 2014 from a year earlier and reached a record $46.8 billion in 2012, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Issuance totals $1.7 billion so far this year.

Malaysia’s Attraction

Malaysia has attracted sukuk sales from Japanese companies such as Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (Malaysia) Bhd. and Nomura Holdings Inc., while Toyota Motor Corp. issued Islamic debt via its local unit. Export-Import Bank of Korea set up a combined Islamic and conventional bond program in the Southeast Asian nation in 2008 but never sold a sukuk portion.
National Australia Bank Ltd., the nation’s fourth-biggest lender, has been exploring the possibility of selling Shariah-compliant notes since at least 2011. Citilink Finance Australia Ltd. was also planning a sale that year, although neither has ever materialized.
Some institutions are already offering Islamic services in Australia. MCCA Ltd. and Islamic Co-operative Finance Australia Ltd. both provide Shariah-compliant property and car financing. Kuwait Finance House KSC offers Islamic treasury products and investment services, and Sydney-based Crescent Funds Management (Aust) Pty Ltd. supplies property and stock funds.
“SGI-Mitabu’s sukuk issuance is a very good catalyst for Australia’s Islamic financial market,” Abas A. Jalil, Kuala Lumpur-based chief executive officer at Amanah Capital, said in an e-mail interview Wednesday. “Once the Australian market becomes more familiar with Islamic finance, the process of amending the laws relating to sukuk taxation will be expedited.
(Bloomberg Business / 12 February 2015)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Sunday, 27 October 2013

Australia has chance to ride high on an Islamic finance wave

For the past couple of years, the Australian government – prodded by the financial sector – has been pondering the regulatory and taxation changes that would be necessary to create an Asia-Pacific Islamic financing powerhouse.

However, with the change of government last month and continuing concern over the effects of easing Chinese growth on Australia’s commodities-led economy, there is a danger that Islamic finance has been consigned to a back burner.

Australia’s stable political and social environment – and its highly advanced financial market – have long created interest among Islamic finance professionals in building the country as a hub to serve not only the domestic Muslim population but also the large and less financially sophisticated markets nearby, such as Indonesia and Malaysia.
Some in the Arabian Gulf region say Australia could be very conducive to Islamic financial products.

“Islamic financing advocates the ‘real’ economy and commodity financing,” says Hatim El Tahir, the director of the Islamic finance group at Deloitte, another consulting firm, in Bahrain. “Australia has a rich real economy,” he adds, citing its agriculture, livestock and minerals and metals as “good assets for Islamic finance”.

There have been encouraging developments in the local market: in December, Sydney-based Crescent Wealth, the country’s first dedicated Islamic investment firm, launched Australia’s first Islamic superannuation fund. 

Superannuation, known as “super”, is the country’s compulsory employee retirement fund.

“Sizeable superannuation or pension funds represent a large opportunity,” says Almir Colan, director of the Australian centre for Islamic finance and a consultant lecturer at La Trobe University in Melbourne.

“We are now seeing intense competition by fund managers to provide Sharia compliant alternatives.”

More recently, say observers, a number of institutional players have been investing, principally in property. “We believe current penetration is less than 1 per cent of its potential and hence we are excited about growth opportunities,” says Talal Yassine, Crescent Wealth’s managing director.

Mr Yassine estimates the current super savings of the Australian Islamic community at about A$11 billion (Dh38.87bn), a figure expected to double by 2020. “This is supported by the 40 per cent growth in the Islamic population in Australia since 2006,” he adds.

One relatively popular Islamic product in Australia is diminishing musharaka for home financing, says Matthew Stutsel, the national head of state tax at the accounting firm KPMG in Sydney. Some fund managers offer investments in Sharia-compliant investments, mostly equity funds.

Experts say Australia is well positioned for the development of several other Islamic financing instruments, including murabaha asset sales and purchases, ijarah leasing and mudaraba profit-sharing partnerships. One potential windfall could be the use of sukuk for large-scale projects.

“There is potentially a huge role for Islamic finance to play in helping to fund Australia’s infrastructure requirements,” says Alex Regan, a partner at the Corrs Chambers Westgarth law firm in Melbourne.

However, while such terminology is familiar in the Middle East, some asset managers warn exotic terms – like all financial jargon – can be off-putting to mainstream investors if Islamic finance seeks to move beyond Australia’s 400,000-strong Muslim community.

“In my view, Islamic finance and investment products need to be relaunched as ethical or responsible, without the unusual labels such as sukuk and musharaka,” says Glenn Woolley, the managing director of Intrinsic Investment Management, a Melbourne fund manager.

Mr Woolley, whose company caters to both Islamic and non-Islamic investors, says it is too early to identify any trends in Australia-based Islamic financing.

“There is interest in debt and equity funding as sources of capital,” he notes, however. “Equity portfolio management is growing.”

One major hurdle is taxation law. “Islamic finance’s very low penetration ... is largely due to the Australian tax legislation,” says Mr Regan. One such obstacle is the stamp duties applied to property transfers, a particular issue when Islamic finance requires multiple transfers of assets.





(The National / 26 Oct 2013)

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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Friday, 11 October 2013

Hockey should put Islamic finance on his Inquiry’s agenda

A topic which warrants inclusion in Joe Hockey’s planned Financial System Inquiry — but probably won’t make it in — is the regulatory and institutional impediments to Islamic finance.
The 2% of the Australian population who want these Sharia-compliant products face significant problems in accessing them.
Islamic finance is different from regular banking for a number of reasons, one of which is a prohibition on interest. Others include acceptable insurance arrangements and restrictions (which look much like socially responsible investment criteria) on acceptable investments.
I don’t see a point to these religious-based constraints –- but in a free society, governments should not be putting unnecessary impediments in the way of those who want to adhere to them.
And it should be a concern that some regulation, like compulsory superannuation, and institutional indifference, force individuals into financial products not compatible with their beliefs.
Among the various problems which exist, two stand out. The first is the question of designing Islamic financial products enabling families to buy homes. Because interest is prohibited, a conventional mortgage loan is not acceptable.
Islamic finance works around these prohibitions with some simple financial engineering. The financial institution buys the house an individual wishes to own, and leases it to the individual on agreed terms in a long term contract.
At the end of the contract the ownership of the house is transferred to the individual.
The main problem with implementing that in Australia is double stamp duty, once on the initial purchase by the financial institution and second when the house is transferred to the owner at the end of the lease.
Under conventional mortgage finance, stamp duty is only levied once when the house is initially purchased.
The Victorian government has removed this impediment, by allowing house purchase under Islamic financing arrangements to only incur one lot of stamp duty, but other State governments have been unwilling to take that step.
Islamic financing of small business enterprises faces similar problems, a compounded by tax and legal issues.
And the government should turn its attention to superannuation. All employees, regardless of their religious faith (or lack thereof) have compulsory contributions paid by their employers into a super fund of their choice.
And there are significant tax advantages for voluntary contributions as well.
But what does the typical institutional super fund’s portfolio allocation look like? Even allowing for a member’s choice between different investment options, the only portfolios generally available will still have a significant fixed interest component.
This is based on the widely held view of trustees that prudent asset allocation involves a significant share of investments paying interest. That doesn’t sit well for fund member wanting only Sharia-compliant investments.
It is possible — in principle — to construct portfolios which don’t have an interest component but which have some “fixed-interest like” investments. Established infrastructure assets are one example. Lease income is another, such as that which might flow from Islamic financing of home ownership as discussed above.
But more relevant is whether conventional institutional norms about what are acceptable portfolio allocations for super, and institutional inertia, should prevent or inhibit Sharia-compliant super options being offered to individuals forced to invest in super.
Self managed super is always an option — but that’s only cost-effective for individuals with substantial super savings.
While it does look as though some institutional super offering of Sharia-compliant super is now emerging, the impediments and lack of interest have apparently been substantial.
Will Islamic finance get an airing in the proposed Financial System Inquiry? Probably yes, but in the context of what is needed to make investment in Australia attractive to wealthy international Islamic investment houses – because that caters to the interests of, and potentially benefits, the financial community.
That may be worthy of attention, but there’s more value in focusing on whether impediments to providing suitable savings and funding vehicles affecting this group of individuals and businesses can be reduced.
(The Conversation / 07 Oct 2013)

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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 19 August 2013

Australia:Embrace halal growth

HALAL foods will constitute one-third of the world's marketplace in 10 years, Agribusiness Gippsland director Brian Norwood says.
Mr Norwood, who is also a halal consultant, discussed the topic at a forum in Warragul last week. 
He said exporters need to secure accreditation now to share in the demand. 
“While Australia’s Muslim population numbers are around 500,000, there are much greater Muslim populations to Australia’s north,” Mr Norwood said. 
He was addressing a forum attended by 30 people and organised by Agribusiness Gippsland and Export Gippsland.
Adam Moore, who runs Traralgon-based company, Baby Royale, which supplies Malaysia with organic baby food, also spoke at the forum. 
Mr Moore explained the process of accreditation, saying it was easier than gaining organic certification. 
He said there were many advantages in doing business with Malaysia. 
“There’s a lot of commonality that makes it easy for us,” he said. 
Mr Moore listed some of the positives which included a lack of tariffs due to the recent Free Trade Agreement, the use of English on packaging and a government keen to lift Malaysia to first-world status, such as Singapore, in 10 years.
He suggested companies intending to export foods to do customer surveys to establish what the marketplace was seeking. 
He also stressed the advantages in joining State Government export trade missions.
Agribusiness Gippsland and Baby Royale, were participants in the recent State Government trade mission to south-east Asia.
The next mission in October, will be visiting China. 
(Weekly Times Now / 19 Aug 2013)

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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Sunday, 31 March 2013

Sukuk (Islamic bonds) find favour in Australia



SHAUN DRUMMOND: INSURANCE AUSTRALIA GROUP BECAME MALAYSIA’S BIGGEST GENERAL INSURER WHEN ITS JOINT VENTURE BUSINESS AMG INSURANCE BOUGHT KURNIA INSURANS IN SEPTEMBER 2012. CHIEF EXECUTIVE MIKE WILKINS IS KEEN TO TAP INTO THE RAPID RISE IN TAKAFUL, OR ISLAMIC INSURANCE, WHICH ADHERES TO PRINCIPLES OF CO-OPERATION AS PRESCRIBED BY ISLAMIC LAW.

Wilkins’s interest in takaful extends beyond viewing Asia as an important growth market for IAG: he assisted with the preparation of Australia as a Financial Centre, a report released in late 2009, which recommended Australia pull down tax barriers in order to encourage Islamic finance. The federal government is yet to respond to a subsequent Board of Taxation review.
Wilkins stresses it is early days for IAG’s plans in Malaysia given the government is not issuing new takaful licences. But the growth is hard to ignore. “The takaful sector is likely to grow by about 20 per cent a year there,” he says.
Indonesia is also a target market for IAG and, being the largest Muslim state in the world, is another obvious market for takaful. “Given our interest in south-east Asia, and specifically Malaysia and Indonesia, our shareholders would at least expect us to explore the possibilities,” Wilkins says.
Under Islamic law, in order to fund its takaful liabilities, IAG would need to invest the cash flows received from policyholders into sharia-compliant products such as sukuk, or Islamic bonds.

RISE OF MALAYSIAN MARKET

Outside the Middle East, Malaysia has become the chief market to raise and trade Islamic finance instruments, and the vast majority of sukuk issuance now occurs there. At present, there is a low supply of issuers, compared to demand from investors, which is contributing to low yields.
Sukuk issuance dropped off during the global financial crisis but the instrument’s prohibition against interest payments appears to have shielded investors from the full force of the fallout. This resilience, along with high demand from Middle Eastern states seeking to park their piles of cash into sharia-compliant investments, has led to a rapid revival in the asset class.
Investor demand estimates vary. Ernst & Young forecasts sukuk demand is expected to triple from the present level to around $US900 billion by 2017. Thomson-Reuters is more conservative but still says demand will almost double from $US240 billion in 2012 to $US421 billion by 2016. Both agree that demand will continue to outstrip supply.
Thomson-Reuters says sukuk issuance, which reached $US121 billion in 2012, will more than double to $US292 billion by 2016.
So it’s a good time to issue. At present, issuance is dominated by sovereign funds and Islamic banks. Despite numerous Western countries amending their regulations in recent years to remove tax barriers to Islamic finance, offers by Western companies have been sporadic and mostly to fund operations in Islamic countries.
German insurer FWU Group raised $US55 million – the largest amount so far by a European company – in its first sukuk in Dubai in December. Several years ago, UK supermarket giant Tesco issued an Islamic bond to fund its Malaysian operations.

GOOD FIT FOR DEVELOPMENT

Sukuk favours cash flows generated by physical assets and contain various structures designed to provide steady income. These include returns based on a share of profits the asset generates, and often a transfer of ownership to a special purpose vehicle between investors and issuer which then leases the asset to the issuer.
The use of physical assets means it is often viewed as a good fit for infrastructure or property funding, suiting developing countries. The Malaysian government, for instance, has so far raised 1.5 billion ringgit ($458 million) in 2012 and 2013 to fund its biggest construction project, the Sungai Buloh-Kajang mass rapid transit network, with more than 400 million ringgit raised for the first time via a sukuk to retail investors.
Some believe sukuk investors could provide another source of funds for Australia’s high capital intensive industries and fill part of its looming infrastructure funding shortfalls.
National Australia Bank has been preparing to issue sukuk for some time with Malaysian investment bank CIMB for funding diversification purposes. It is understood Australian tax barriers are standing in the way. Non-bank lender FirstMac wants to securitise via sukuk sharia compliant mortgages it has sold in Australia for the past decade.
But where big financial institutions are tentatively exploring its potential, one small Australian company has dived in. In July 2013, a joint venture between Brisbane-based solar producers The Solar Guys and Mitabu Australia plans to raise $100 million in the first Australian dollar-denominated sukuk to build the first of five 50 MW solar power plants in Indonesia. The first one will be based in a “special economic zone” in the province of East Kalimantan on the island of Borneo. SGI-Mitabu plans to raise $500 million in total to finance all of the plants.
Mitabu director Rusdyi Mitabu is leading the financing, but the idea to use a sukuk initially came from the Kuala Lumpur branch of investment bank Kuwait Finance House. AM Bank (IAG’s joint venture partner in AmG Insurance) will lead the second $100 million tranche to build the next 50MW plant in either Bali or West Kalimantan.

SOLAR GUYS WARM TO IDEA OF SUKUK

SGI-Mitabu is raising the funds via the Malaysian International Business and Finance Centre on the island of Labuan, off the northern coast of Borneo. This was set up to attract capital by minimising Malaysian taxes for offshore issuers raising money for non-Malaysian based ventures. Another attraction of Labuan for Mitabu is the ability to raise the funds in Australian dollars, avoiding swap costs.
While some of the costs of the project will need to be paid in Indonesian rupees and to offshore manufacturers, the strong Australian dollar makes it a good currency to buy assets made overseas, such as solar panels. The panels will be bought from Japanese firm Kyocera.
Sukuk investors are also keen on Aussie dollars. “There is very strong appetite from the market for Australian dollar investments,” Mitabu says. “They would like to diversify away from US dollars.”
Sukuk yields have also recently hit record lows due to investor demand. Mitabu says he is looking to price at an equivalent return to investors of around 8 per cent. That may sound pricey to big companies. But he says on conventional bond markets, given the joint venture’s lack of credit rating, the fact it is relatively unknown and the risk allocated to Indonesia, they were looking at around 12 per cent.
The Solar Guys founder and commercial director, Dane Muldoon, says another reason to finance with the sukuk was good PR given the Indonesian government is keen to promote Islamic finance. He says solar power also suits Islamic investment principles. “Solar power is a good fit [for sukuk] in terms of the environment, in terms of the community,” he says. It is also an infrastructure asset that will have a steady stream of income selling electricity.
“Sukuk investors want to own an income-producing asset that has a consistent income per annum.” Solar power plants also don’t need to be finished before they can start generating an income, so he says benefits should flow to investors within about three months.
SGI-Mitabu is being courted by several other investment banks to do the final three raisings, including Malaysian bank RHB and Goldman Sachs.

MANY STRUCTURES, HIGHER COSTS

As in the traditional bond universe, there are numerous structures. Most now are asset-based, according to the global head of Islamic finance at Allen & Overy, Anzal Mohammed. This means that even though returns from the physical asset are the basis for the sukuk, there is also a guaranteed payment with recourse to the issuer in the event of default, just as in a conventional bond.
Mitabu’s sukuk is of the more traditional asset-backed variety, which means the issuer and the investor, in effect, share a proportion of the profits generated by the asset according to their level of investment. The asset is transferred to a special-purpose vehicle, and the issuer leases it from the SPV, with payments made in the form of rent, thereby avoiding interest.
Because they are like conventional bonds, some asset-based structures defaulted during the GFC due to the debt-like guarantees on returns. In asset-backed structures, investors share more of the risk with the issuer with recourse only allowed to the asset. If it doesn’t earn profits, neither does the investor.
The legal and structuring costs for sukuk are around 20 per cent higher, according to Mohammed. Part of the reason for this is the need to pay an Islamic scholar to rule on whether the sukuk complies with Islamic finance rules. SGI-Mitabu used scholars from the International Research Centre For Islamic Finance at Lorong University in Kuala Lumpur. They have ruled investors cannot trade their certificates until the power plant is constructed as the sukuk will be too much like debt up until that point.
While the pricing SGI-Mitabu could get, and the project being based outside Australia in an Islamic country, meant a sukuk suited its purposes, other Australian companies seeking to tap the sukuk market still face barriers. For larger companies, the pricing differences between sukuk and conventional financing may not be great enough to take a risk in a new market. Then there are the tax barriers.

TAX BARRIERS CAN BE SURMOUNTED IF NOT REMOVED

At present, because sukuk is based on several transfers of assets into and out of an SPV, it falls foul of federal capital gains tax and state stamp duty, as well as income tax laws relating to infrastructure funding. This would generally increase the cost of issuance well above a conventional bond.
Countries such as the UK, Germany, Turkey and Japan have removed similar tax barriers to Islamic finance. Australia’s Board of Taxation recommended amendments to tax laws to remove the double taxation in July 2011, but the federal government has not responded.
Some advisers, however, say potential issuers don’t need to wait for tax reform. Almir Colan, head of the Australian Centre for Islamic Finance, says the tax issues are surmountable now, with separate rulings available from the Tax Office for structures. He also points out Victoria has amended its stamp duty rules to remove barriers to Islamic finance.
Corrs Chambers Westgarth special counsel Rhys Jewell says sukuk has a role to play in financing infrastructure in Australia. But he says sukuk for Australian projects is likely to mainly be a source of diversification and funding competition. “It may be one of the pieces to the puzzle when trying to finance a project especially if there are only a few players that might be able to finance them,” he says. “It may increase the competitive tension between the financiers to help reduce the cost of finance.”
Anzal Mohammad believes Western companies are waiting for a big issuer, a global bank for instance, to test the Islamic market for them.

(Financial Review / 27 March 2013)


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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 31 December 2012

Solar guys shine light on Islamic debt structures


Solar panel and heating installer The Solar Guys have been marketing its first Islamic bond – or sukuk – raising, due in the first half of 2013, to fund a 250MW solar power plant in Indonesia. Commercial director Dane Muldoon is not alone in Australia in being a novice in Islamic finance, let alone Islamic financing in an Asian market. He is sometimes caught off guard by how quickly things are moving for the family-owned Brisbane operation founded by his father and the connections of his joint venture partner at Mitabu Australia.
Rusydi Mitabu (known as Dody), director of Mitabu Australia, is the mastermind of the financing structure. The Solar Guys and Mitabu have formed a joint venture – SGI-Mitabu - to raise $500 million to build and finance the power plant.
“Just as an example,” Muldoon says. “I was saying to him, ‘you have told me we have this land allocation that’s been given to us by one of these [Indonesian] provinces. I asked him ‘where is this field, I want to know more about this field’. He says ‘you know I don’t know’. So he pulls out his mobile phone and rings the secretary of the governor of the province and says, where is that field again?”
Muldoon says Mitabu has a deep knowledge of Islamic finance structures. An Islamic scholar or sometimes a whole board of them are indispensable advisers for any company trying to tap Islamic finance. Mitabu also has the all important relationships with financiers and the right levels of government in Indonesia.
At a seemingly random meeting in Sydney he also discovered Mitabu was talking to microfinancers, which funnel private funds into development projects that might suit this project as it could bring electricity to some regions in Indonesia for the first time.
To avoid the Australian tax issues that have stymied Australian companies tapping Islamic finance they are raising the money via the Malaysian island of Labuan, which has been set up as tax-free to attract foreign capital.
“We like it because it is being treated as an offshore location for tax purposes and any corporate can raise sukuk in any currency so we won’t have a problem with a currency swap,” says Mitabu.
When raising capital offshore, companies typically face exchange rate risk, especially with recent volatility in the Australian dollar, unless they can raise the money in Australian dollars. Only a few companies can do this in selected markets.
The tax barriers in Australia to sukuk include state-based stamp duty and federal capital gains tax due to the transfer of assets into an out of special purpose vehicles under some sukuk structures to avoid the payment of interest, which is banned under Shariah law.
In SGI-Mitabu’s raising, investors will share ownership and profits with the joint venture in the form of rent instead of receiving interest. As in a normal debt raising, the venture uses Commonwealth government bond rates to price the issue as what they receive is in Australian dollars. Mitabu says pricing is the equivalent of somewhere between a 6 per cent and 7.5 per cent interest rate.
Initially SGI-Mitabu is raising about $100 million to fund the first 50 megawatts (MW). They are building it 50MW at a time because it is important to quickly build an income-producing asset, as investors don’t get a return until the asset they own begins making money.
“We expect to complete the first phase of the project in 10 months [of receiving finance],” says Mitabu. “You can start the project on 50MW. So you might produce 2MW in the first month and start paying the investor.”
Muldoon believes they are only just scratching the surface of the potential for their company in Indonesia. Demand for energy there is rising fast in tandem with a target of 25 per cent renewable energy by 2025 from 5 per cent now.
“250 MW – we could be doing that per annum for the next decade without a great deal of stress,” he says. “We’re talking to some provincial governments about undertaking our projects in their region and they are saying our own projected demand is hundreds of times higher [than this].”
Until recently solar was not a priority for the Indonesian government with abundant geothermal and hydro resources. But a big drop in solar panel prices globally is changing that.
“You have a big population base and a very high rate of industry growth, and simultaneously 25 per cent or so of their population don’t have electricity yet,” adds Muldoon.
“When you match those conditions with a couple of other facts, including that Indonesia is an archipelago of 14,000 islands that is not a good fit for a centralised power network, there is a real opportunity.


(Financial Review / 31 Dec 2012)

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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 5 November 2012

CIMB Australia plans to leverage on sukuk market deals



SYDNEY: CIMB Group Bhd, Malaysia’s second largest lender, hopes to use its expertise in Islamic finance to distinguish itself from the competition when it formally opens its Australian operations this week, company executives said.
That may include bringing Australian companies to the Malaysian sukuk market as issuers for the first time.
“We are very keen to do an Islamic finance transaction as soon as possible, but we also have to be realistic, working on a 12-month time frame,” Michael Forde, head of capital markets at CIMB Australia, said in an interview late last week.
Malaysia’s liquid sukuk market has already attracted interest from international issuers including those from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kazakhstan and Hong Kong. This spurred sukuk issuance to RM153.9bil in the first half of this year, according to Securities Commission data.
“It is an excellent source of new liquidity for issuers from this part of the world, and we want to utilise the competitive advantage we have to bring these Australian issuers to this market,” Forde said.
By 2020, the Malaysian Government aims for the amount of outstanding sukuk to hit RM1.3 trillion.
“Much of this growth is projected to be driven broadly by further internationalisation of the Islamic capital market,” Nik Ramlah Mahmood, deputy chief executive of Malaysia’s Securities Commission, said in a speech in April.
CIMB Group, with assets of RM316bil as of June, includes CIMB Islamic, which is one of the world’s largest arrangers of sukuk.
CIMB expected to officially launch its Australian investment banking franchise on Nov 5, upon completing all regulatory procedures, with over 100 staff in its Sydney and Melbourne offices combined, a company spokesman said.
In April, CIMB acquired most Asian operations of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) for RM432mil, including its Australian cash equities, equity capital markets and mergers & acquisition businesses.
The bank said it was able to retain most RBS senior staff. This could help CIMB when it contacts Australian companies to try to interest them in sukuk structures, which unlike many conventional bonds were directly based on income from real assets.
“Australian firms will be very new entrants to this market it will require educating institutions who invest in this market. It is not as straight-forward from an Australian point of view, because you are buying and selling assets, instead of direct borrowing,” Forde said.

(The Star Online / 05 Nov 2012)


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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Saturday, 20 October 2012

Crescent Wealth opens $150 billion market to Australian investors


Australian Islamic wealth manager, Crescent Wealth (established in 2010), announced in a press release last week that it has partnered with the Bank of London and The Middle East (BLME), a large European Islamic Bank, giving Australian retail investors exposure to the growing US$150 billion global Islamic bonds market for the first time.
Sharia’a-compliant bonds or ‘Sukuk’ generate ethical returns backed by real assets. The release said that the portfolio will be managed by BLME which is a global provider of Sharia’a-compliant, fixed income products. Crescent Wealth founder and Managing Director, Talal Yassine said that the partnership is significant because it is evidence that, “Australia is being taken seriously as a viable growth market for Islamic funds management.”
He added that the partnership “rounds out” Crescent Wealth’s product suite with a fixed income option added to their existing Australian and global equities, property and cash offerings; and that it also opens the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) market to Australian investors.
Nigel Denison, the Head of Wealth Management at BLME, said that BLME has seen increased demand from international investors for Sukuk bonds which have “good credit performance” and  have been “resilient to the global economic downturn.”
Islamic banking is one of the fastest growing financial sectors today with global Islamic banking assets exceeding US$1 trillion, and growth estimates upwards of US$2 trillion projected by 2017. Sukuk bonds have exceeded pre-financial crisis levels and are expected to grow exponentially over the coming years.
Yassine, said that his firm was “tapping the significant potential” for Islamic funds in Australia, which is expected to grow by as much as $22 billion(AUD) by 2020. He added that the number of Australians who “identify as Muslim” has grown “by 40% since 2006, up to 487,000 in 2011″, and explained that the Muslim population represents “a natural investor base” for Islamic financial products which along with the “genuine appetite in the broader community for a low risk, low-leverage investment profile” made Crescent Wealth a “compelling proposition”.
(Muslim Village.Com / 20 Oct 2012)


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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 15 October 2012

Solar Guys tap Islamic finance for 50MW Indonesia project


Queensland solar company The Solar Guys has tapped into the huge Islamic finance market to fund a 50MW solar PV project in Indonesia, the first in a series of projects under an agreement struck with the Indonesian government.
The Solar Guys are proposing to build 250MW of solar PV under a plan it has dubbed the “One Solar Watt Per Person” campaign. The target of 250MW translates into 250 million watts, which roughly equates to Indonesia’s population.
Dane Muldoon, the director of The Solar Guys international said the company will act as a EPC contractor to build the $120 million project – system design, procurement, installation supervision, project management and assistance with the ongoing operation over its life.
Mitabu Australia is handling the finance and the most significant part of the project may be the use of Islamic finance, or Sukuk, which is a form of long-term bond often used for infrastructure projects that are judged to be in the community’s best interest. Most of the investment is coming via the Middle East and Malaysia.
The companies say solar PV offers the lowest levelised cost of energy in many south-east asian countries, particularly when the cost of fossil fuels and associated infrastructure is taken into account.
Muldoon said each project had been guaranteed a power purchase agreement and would either displace dirty and expensive fossil fuel power generation (Indonesia faces high diesel costs which is why it also offers generous tariffs for geothermal installations) or bring reliable power to remote communities for the first time.”
Muldoon says the One Solar Watt per Person target was produced after meetings with Indonesia officials at an energy conference in Jakarta in July. Indonesia needs 25,000MW of new power sources in coming years, and vice president Boediono recently said he wants all of it to come from renewable energy. One quarter of its population current has no access to electricity.
“Ideally we’d like to do the same across Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, and (other South-East Asian countries),” Muldoon told RenewEconomy. “The One Solar Watt idea could end up being a very significant and beneficial program across Asia. It’s a simple yet big idea.”
Mitabu director Dr M Rusydi said the Sukuk financing mechanism treated the solar plant like an infrastructure project such as a toll road or water pipeline. “Many financiers view solar power as just a ‘green’ product,” he said in a statement. “We see solar power as being the fastest way to deliver the crucial clean energy infrastructure needed in countries like Indonesia.
(New Economy / 14 Oct 2012)

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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 14 May 2012

Australia's NSW revives Islamic finance push

May 13 (Reuters) - The government of the Australian state of New South Wales, home to the country's financial capital Sydney, will send a group to Dubai this week to discuss ways to develop the Islamic finance industry, officials said.

The delegation, led by New South Wales premier Barry O'Farrell and including financial services professionals, will explore regulatory and legal issues at a roundtable discussion with the Dubai Export Development Corp on Tuesday.

"The event will discuss business opportunities in New South Wales, with particular attention given to Islamic finance," an Australian government official, who declined to be named under briefing rules, told Reuters. The delegation will also visit Abu Dhabi and Lebanon.

With proximity to southeast Asia, where Islamic finance is growing rapidly,Australia could play a role in the industry, officials believe. But efforts to pass the necessary legislation at a federal level have been slow, so the state government wants to get involved.

"The state government is very interested and trying to be proactive in getting Middle East and local players together to work out a deal," said Salim Farrar, senior lecturer at the University of Sydney Law School.

Passing legislation governing Islamic finance will require a series of politically charged debates, Farrar said.

But support is building in the business community, said Talal Yassine, managing director at Sydney-based Crescent Wealth. "Clearly there is going to be a push to get Islamic finance up in Australia."


TAX

Australia faces a challenge shared by other jurisdictions new to Islamic finance: taxation. Certain Islamic finance structures, particularly sukuk or Islamic bonds, can attract double or even triple tax duties because they require multiple transfers of title of the underlying asset.

Obtaining tax amendments to alleviate this appears difficult to push through the minority government of Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

"At the federal level developments are going nowhere fast," said Matthew Stutsel, national head of taxation for consultants KPMG in Sydney.

The Australian Board of Taxation released a discussion paper in October 2010 which prompted consultation meetings and submissions. The final review was delivered to the government's assistant treasurer last June. But no further action has been taken, and the public release of the report "is a matter for the Government to decide", a Board of Taxation statement said.

The government's attention has been focused on mining and carbon tax initiatives, and an attempt to deliver a budget surplus; extending tax breaks in other areas might not sit well with voters. Elections are due in 2013.

But while federal-level discussions have been difficult, New South Wales is interested in Islamic finance partly because of the need to fund state projects such as upgrading railway networks and refinancing public utilities. Islamic investors operate large pools of investment funds in southeast Asia and the Gulf.

Attracting investment into infrastructure and other sectors is an important part of the state government's efforts to position Sydney as a leading international financial centre, the Australian official said.

Stutsel said work was being done within the state government on infrastructure proposals. "The issue is largely going to be withholding tax on sukuk, where we would be looking to leverage a tax law change," he said.

Tax incentives might, for example, be offered for Islamic investors in public-private partnerships. Typically, 10 to 15 percent of New South Wales infrastructure has been delivered using PPP, according to a government report. Granting special tax treatment for such projects cold avoid the need for a full tax amendment.


( Reuters / 13 May 2012)


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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur:
www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia:
www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com