Showing posts with label Kazakhstan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kazakhstan. Show all posts

Friday, 20 June 2014

Kazakhstan eyes ‘unified’ Islamic banking law next year

Kazakhstan will start drafting a new Islamic banking law that could help the industry develop in the former Soviet state, after a five-year-old set of rules failed to stimulate activity.
Fresh legislation would allow Islamic finance to develop better under the secular regulatory regime of the predominantly Muslim country, said Yerlan Baidaulet, the Kazakhstan member of the board of executive directors at the Saudi Arabia-based Islamic Development Bank.
"A new unified law being developed would aim to avoid any complicated Arabic terms. Instead it will focus on a certain set of financial instruments, on a clear tax regime, the actual structures and mechanisms the industry has to offer."
Drafting could take between four and six months and the proposed legislation may be presented to the government by the middle of next year, said Baidaulet, who also advises the Kazakh Ministry of Industry and New Technologies. The drafting is being funded by a grant from the IDB.
Kazakhstan was the first former Soviet country to introduce Islamic finance rules in 2009, but the industry remains embryonic with total assets of less than $200 million at the end of 2013, a report by rating agency Standard & Poor's said.
The new law is to include provisions to facilitate conversion of conventional banks to sharia-compliant ones, a key element in a country with only one full-fledged Islamic bank, Abu Dhabi-based Al Hilal Bank, which opened its doors in 2010.
In May last year, the private investment arm of the IDB said it planned to invest up to 35 percent of the subscribed and paid-up capital of Zaman Bank to convert it into the country's second Islamic bank, but there is no time frame for those plans.
The rigidity of the existing law means conventional banks would have to shut down and then reapply for licenses to convert their operations, a process that could take up to three years, said Baidaulet.
"The existing law is just a declarative act. Why should we compromise on a dead law that of course is not effective?"
Currently, Islamic banks are categorized on a par with other commercial banks, known as Tier 2 banks, but the current law does not extend to them all the tax privileges that conventional banks have, he added.
"We are not asking for offshore tax or any tax exemptions, we just want to equalize legally all rights and privileges among all other Tier 2 banks to compete on the same and fair basis.
(Al-Arabiya News Asia / 19 June 2014)
---
Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

It is early days for Islamic finance in Kazakhstan

Baku, Azerbaijan, June 9


By Elena Kosolapova- Trend: It's still very early days for Islamic finance in Kazakhstan, and there are some important roadblocks to remove to enable its gradual growth, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said in a credit FAQ "Islamic Finance Slowly Unfolds in Kazakhstan" published on June 9.

"We think product offering is insufficient, market demand is still to be estimated, and the industry needs regulatory fine-tuning," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Mohamed Damak.

With total assets of less than $200 million at year-end 2013, by the estimate, Kazakhstan's Islamic finance is still embryonic. One Islamic bank is active, and the agency understands that a few other Sharia compliant finance companies have established very small operations as Islamic finance players.

"We think that the potential of Islamic finance will closely hinge on banks' ability to offer competitive products compared with conventional finance products," S&P said.

In S&P's view, there is room for some improvement to the current regulatory environment that would remove growth impediments. For instance, regulation does not authorize conventional banks to create Islamic windows, which has left them behind in the race to create Islamic product offerings.

"Islamic finance could help Kazakhstan to access a new class of investors looking for Sharia compliant products and contribute to widening banking penetration," added Mr. Damak. "The country has a substantial investment pipeline and could use sukuk to attract external financing."

If this growth materializes, Kazakhstan might over time become a regional Islamic finance hub, S&P said.

For Islamic finance to develop in a given market, the agency sees the following as key success factors: securing the political and business community's willingness and support; establishing a central Sharia supervisory body; pricing competitively; introducing liquidity management instruments, and educating human resources on Islamic finance specificities.



(Trend / 09 June 2014)
---
Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Sunday, 20 April 2014

Kazakhstan and Bahrain to promote Islamic banking in Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan and Bahrain will be working to promote Islamic banking in Kazakhstan, Tengrinews.kz reports, citing President Nazarbayev’s official website.
“The two sides have expressed their intention to promote Islamic banking in Kazakhstan. We are interested in Bahrain’s practices in this realm as the country is a major center of Islamic finances”, President Nazarbayev said following his talks with King of Bahrain Sheikh Hamad bin Isa bin Salman Al-Khalifa in Astana April 14.
The two sides condemned terrorism and extremism in all its manifestations, called to strengthen measures to counteract transnational and organized crime, illicit turnover of narcotic drugs and weapons, as well as to counteract other types of crimes posing threats to the global peace and stability.
Kazakhstan and Bahrain have agreed to place a priority emphasis on cooperation in investments, trade, agriculture, banking, and to further ties in education, culture and science. They have agreed to encourage interaction between universities and culture entities and facilitate exchange of students.

(Tengkri News / 15 April 2014)
---
Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Sunday, 19 January 2014

More Islamic investments to Kazakhstan

During the High Level Group Regional Forum in Almaty, Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD), a member of Islamic Development Bank Group (IDB), announced its intention to invest into four new EXPO-2017-oriented projects in Kazakhstan in 2014, Tengrinews reports.

ICD, Baiterek Holding and LGK Holdings signed a memorandum to create the Central Asian Fund of Renewable Energy with the initial capital of $50 million. The memorandum also involves a plan of development of six renewable energy source projects in Kazakhstan in 2014 and 2015. At the initial stage, the Fund will only finance projects in Kazakhstan.

ICD is going to cooperate with the Investment Fund of Kazakhstan in development of float-glass production in Kyzylorda in southern Kazakhstan. The $200 million worth project will start its operation in 2016. ICD considers the glass manufacturing project to be of strategic importance for the upcoming EXPO-2017, because this is going to be the first project of this sort in Central Asia. 

According to Mitkhat Korkmaz, a representative of the Aluminum Extrusion Plant that is being built by Aluminum Kazakhstan LLP, ICD will provide $10 million for procurement of manufacturing lines and raw materials during the first year of its operations. “The total cost of the project is $22 million and it will create 150 new jobs. The plant will start its work in August, 2014. It will be producing 600 tons of aluminum extrusion per month. It two years we plan to take the production to 1000 tons a month,” Korkmaz said. ENRC will be supplying aluminum from Pavlodar Oblast for the plant. 

ICD has achieved an agreement with OLZHA Holding to cooperate in construction of a grain terminal and elevator in Aktau, in western Kazakhstan. The terminal with have the capacity of 1 million tons per year. It will be focused on exporting grain to the Middle East and North Africa. The construction is expected to begin this summer.

ICD, affiliated with Islamic Development Bank Group, supports economic development of its member countries by providing finances to private sector projects in accordance with the principles of the Islamic law. ICD aims to invest into projects that are specifically designed to create new employment opportunities and increase exports. 


(Tengri News / 17 Jan 2014)
---
Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Friday, 1 November 2013

Kazakhstan reboots Islamic finance ambitions

This month, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev sacked central bank chief Grigori Marchenko and replaced him with Deputy Prime Minister Kairat Kelimbetov.
The move could herald a new start for Islamic finance, Yerlan Baidaulet, the Kazakhstan member of the board of executive directors at the Jeddah-based IDB, said on the sidelines of the World Islamic Economic Forum in London.
"Almost five years after introducing Islamic banking, the situation hasn't changed. The predecessor tried to stop everything," said Baidaulet.
Close to 70 percent of Kazakhstan's population of 17 million is Muslim. But even though the government has said it wants to make the country a centre for Islamic finance, progress has been slow, partly because the government also declares itself to be secular and officials do not want to appear overtly religious.
Currently, Abu Dhabi-based Al Hilal Bank is the sole Islamic bank in Kazakhstan, having opened its doors in March 2010; it has not so far tapped the retail market.
But a grant from the IDB, a multilateral lending institution, is now set to kick-start the drafting of a new Islamic banking law, superseding a law passed in 2008 which lacks sufficient detail to be effective, Baidaulet said.
"The Islamic banking law is but a package of different amendments. It's just phrasing but there is no depth, no structure, no mechanism. We hope to bring new legislation, a standalone law."
In March, the Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD), the private sector arm of the IDB, took a stake in Zaman Bank in order to convert it into an Islamic lender, a process which could be completed as soon as next year, Baidaulet added. "Hopefully next year this bank will start."
Also, the country will soon have a sovereign credit rating from the Bahrain-based Islamic International Rating Agency, another unit of the IDB, said Baidaulet.
In July last year, the Development Bank of Kazakhstan issued a 240 million ringgit ($75.5 million) Islamic bond in Malaysia, but no other Kazakh issuers have followed.
The ICD is in the process of launching an Islamic leasing company in Kazakhstan this year, with capital of $36 million. Meanwhile a Kazakh renewable energy fund managed by the ICD, currently in the closing stages of capital raising, aims to have up to $70 million in capital, Baidaulet said.

An Islamic mortgage company is seeking to attract foreign investors, with $50 million of capital already contributed by the ICD and a local partner. And in March, the ICD offered $20 million of Islamic financing for real estate development projects in Kazakhstan and earmarked $40 million for financing small and medium-sized businesses in the country.
(Reuters / 31 Oct 2013)
---
Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

Monday, 29 October 2012

IDB eyes investment in Kazakhstan, Central Asia energy, farming


ASTANA, Oct 1 (Reuters) - The Islamic Development Bank is looking to resource-rich Kazakhstan and Central Asia as a fertile ground for investment, with the launch of a $50 million renewable energy fund on Monday and plans to finance agricultural projects, an official said.
The Saudi Arabia-based multilateral bank's private sector arm, the Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD), said it was considering financing farming projects in Kazakhstan from its $600 million agribusiness fund.
"There are Gulf countries which have the capital but lack the agricultural resources, while there are countries in Central Asia, Africa, which have the resources but not the capital. This fund will try to bridge the gap," ICD Chief Executive Khaled Al-Aboodi said on the sidelines of a conference.
"We are looking at Kazakhstan," he said.
Kazakhstan's resource-driven economy, at $185 billion the largest in Central Asia, presents opportunities for Islamic banking.
Seventy percent of its 17 million population is Muslim, and investors in Kazakhstan have been looking for alternative sources of finance since the financial crisis laid bare Kazakh banks' exposure to bloated real estate markets and foreign borrowing.
President Nursultan Nazarbayev, a 72-year-old former steelworker who has led Kazakhstan since Soviet times, has given his support to the development of an Islamic finance industry in the country.
Al-Aboodi said the ICD's agribusiness fund was considering grain, meat and dairy projects in Kazakhstan, one of the world's top 10 wheat exporters, for sharia-compliant investment.
Its Central Asia-specific renewable energy fund is lining up potential solar and wind projects, he said, adding that the fund had commitments from government and institutional investors for more than half of the $50 million it plans to raise.
Kazakhstan's open steppe has huge potential for renewable energy, although investment to date has been minimal in a country that also holds around 3 percent of global crude oil reserves and is the world's largest uranium miner.
"This sector (renewable energy) is not receiving enough attention. Everyone is focusing on oil and gas," said Al-Aboodi.
LEASING COMPANY
Oil-rich Kazakhstan has shelved plans for a sovereign Islamic bond issue, but the issuance of a debut sukuk bond this year by the state-run Development Bank of Kazakhstan was a major breakthrough for Islamic finance in the country.
The ICD also said it had agreed with a group of international and local investors to establish the first ijara, or Islamic leasing, company in Kazakhstan, with initial paid-up capital of around $35 million. The company is due to launch in early 2013.
One of the potential investors is Al Hilal Bank, the Abu Dhabi-based lender that became the pioneer for Islamic banking in Kazakhstan when it opened its doors in March 2010. Al Hilal is still the only Islamic bank operating in Kazakhstan so far.
"We hope to be a joint shareholder in the leasing company," Al Hilal Chief Executive Prasad Abraham said. "We have a portfolio in excess of $120 million. Al Hilal has become profitable, proving that the Islamic banking model can work."
Abraham said, however, that the presence of a second or third Islamic bank would be important to the growth of sharia-compliant banking in Kazakhstan.
Al Hilal represents less than 1 percent of Kazakhstan's total banking assets. Entry rules for new players - Islamic or conventional - are strict, with a minimum capital requirement of 10 billion tenge, or around $67 million. Kazakh law does not permit conventional banks to run Islamic sections.
"One is a very lonely number. Contrary to what people often ask me, we wouldn't consider another Islamic bank coming in as a challenge; we would consider it complementary," Abraham said. 
(Reuters / 29 Oct 2012)


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

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Islamic Development Bank to invest $1 billion to Kazakhstan in 2012-2014


Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) will invest $ 1 billion into the Kazakhstan’s economy in 2012-2014. Respective partnership strategy was signed October 2, 2012 in Astana, KazTag Agency reports.

“The new strategy enables to (…) channel sizeable investments into transport, power industry infrastructure, agriculture, science, regional cooperation projects”, the country’s Minister of Industry and New Technology Asset Issekeshev said before the signing ceremony.

According to the ministry’s press-release, as of the beginning of October the Bank invested into the Kazakh economy a total of $987 million. Cooperation with the Bank dates back to November 30, 1995.

“Further cooperation with the Bank is of great interest to Kazakhstan. Kazakhstan was the first CIS nation to develop a partnership program with the Bank (…) the current industrial programs in Kazakhstan offer wide opportunities for bilateral cooperation”, President Nazarbayev said following his talks with the Bank’s President Ahmad Mohamed Ali Al-Madani.

“The partnership program will strengthen cooperation between Kazakhstan and the Bank and deepen interaction of Kazakhstan and Organization of Islamic Cooperation member states, notably in power industry and construction of motor and rail ways”, Ahmad Mohamed Ali Al-Madani said in his turn.

The Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) is a multilateral development financing institution located in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. It was founded in 1973 by the Finance Ministers at the first Organisation of the Islamic Conference (now called the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation).

The bank officially began its activities on 20 October 1975, inspired by King Faisal. There are 56 shareholding member states.


Use of the Tengrinews English materials must be accompanied by a hyperlink to en.Tengrinews.kz

(Tengri News / 03 Oct 2012)


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

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

IDB eyes investment in Kazakhstan, Central Asia energy, farming


The Saudi Arabia-based multilateral bank's private sector arm, the Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD), said it was considering financing farming projects in Kazakhstan from its $600 million agribusiness fund.
"There are Gulf countries which have the capital but lack the agricultural resources, while there are countries in Central Asia, Africa, which have the resources but not the capital. This fund will try to bridge the gap," ICD Chief Executive Khaled Al-Aboodi said on the sidelines of a conference.
"We are looking at Kazakhstan," he said.
Kazakhstan's resource-driven economy, at $185 billion the largest in Central Asia, presents opportunities for Islamic banking.
Seventy percent of its 17 million population is Muslim, and investors in Kazakhstan have been looking for alternative sources of finance since the financial crisis laid bare Kazakh banks' exposure to bloated real estate markets and foreign borrowing.
President Nursultan Nazarbayev, a 72-year-old former steelworker who has led Kazakhstan since Soviet times, has given his support to the development of an Islamic finance industry in the country.
Al-Aboodi said the ICD's agribusiness fund was considering grain, meat and dairy projects in Kazakhstan, one of the world's top 10 wheat exporters, for sharia-compliant investment.
Its Central Asia-specific renewable energy fund is lining up potential solar and wind projects, he said, adding that the fund had commitments from government and institutional investors for more than half of the $50 million it plans to raise.
Kazakhstan's open steppe has huge potential for renewable energy, although investment to date has been minimal in a country that also holds around 3 percent of global crude oil reserves and is the world's largest uranium miner.
"This sector (renewable energy) is not receiving enough attention. Everyone is focusing on oil and gas," said Al-Aboodi.
LEASING COMPANY
Oil-rich Kazakhstan has shelved plans for a sovereign Islamic bond issue, but the issuance of a debut sukuk bond this year by the state-run Development Bank of Kazakhstan was a major breakthrough for Islamic finance in the country.
The ICD also said it had agreed with a group of international and local investors to establish the first ijara, or Islamic leasing, company in Kazakhstan, with initial paid-up capital of around $35 million. The company is due to launch in early 2013.
One of the potential investors is Al Hilal Bank, the Abu Dhabi-based lender that became the pioneer for Islamic banking in Kazakhstan when it opened its doors in March 2010. Al Hilal is still the only Islamic bank operating in Kazakhstan so far.
"We hope to be a joint shareholder in the leasing company," Al Hilal Chief Executive Prasad Abraham said. "We have a portfolio in excess of $120 million. Al Hilal has become profitable, proving that the Islamic banking model can work."
Abraham said, however, that the presence of a second or third Islamic bank would be important to the growth of sharia-compliant banking in Kazakhstan.
Al Hilal represents less than 1 percent of Kazakhstan's total banking assets. Entry rules for new players - Islamic or conventional - are strict, with a minimum capital requirement of 10 billion tenge, or around $67 million. Kazakh law does not permit conventional banks to run Islamic sections.
"One is a very lonely number. Contrary to what people often ask me, we wouldn't consider another Islamic bank coming in as a challenge; we would consider it complementary," Abraham said.
(Reuters / 01 Oct 2012)

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

Friday, 24 August 2012

Fitch assigns Development Bank of Kazakhstan's Islamic finance programme


Aug 22 - Fitch Ratings has assigned the Development Bank of Kazakhstan's (DBK) Islamic Medium Term Note Programme, which has a total value of up to 1.5bn Malaysian Ringgits (RM) (about USD479m), a final rating of 'BBB-'. The agency has also assigned a 'BBB-' rating to the debut five-year RM240m issue of sukuk (Islamic bonds) under the programme.
The final ratings follow the receipt of documents conforming to information previously received by Fitch and completion of the first series of sukuk issuance under the programme. The programme's final rating is the same as the expected rating assigned in June (see 'Fitch Rates Development Bank of Kazakhstan's RM1.5bn Islamic Medium Term Note Programme 'BBB-(exp)', dated 22 June 2012 at www.fitchratings.com).
The RM240m sukuk issue's rating reflects the programme's rating. The notes are due on 3 August 2017 and carry a 'profit payment' at a rate of 5.5% payable semi-annually.
DBK is wholly owned by the government of Kazakhstan ('BBB'/Positive) through the National Welfare Fund Samruk Kazyna. The bank's primary role is to foster development of the country's non-extracting sectors.
(Reuters / 22 August 2012)

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

Friday, 27 July 2012

Kazakh sukuk debut opens to door to Islamic finance


The 240 million five-year Malaysian ringgit ($75.5 million) issue on July 18, which generates an annual payment of 5.5 per cent, has set the benchmark for Islamic bond issuers in the former Soviet republic, the Development Bank of Kazakhstan said.
The issue is part of the bank’s 1.5 billion ringgit Islamic note programme under the sharia principle of murabaha, approved this year by the Malaysian central bank and the Sharia Advisory Council of the Securities Commission of Malaysia.
“The next sukuk issue will depend on market conditions and the bank’s borrowing requirements,” the state-owned Development Bank’s press office said in a written response to questions.
“The number of issues will depend on the size (of each issue),” it said, adding that it could issue a further 1.26 billion ringgit under its existing programme.
Two decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, majority Muslim Kazakhstan is making a bid to become a regional centre of Islamic finance, which is based on religious principles such as bans on interest and pure monetary speculation.
About 70 per cent of Kazakhstan’s 16.7 million population is Muslim. Since the global financial crisis, investors are more receptive to alternative forms of banking and keen to tap pools of Islamic investment money in the Gulf and southeast Asia.
Malaysian investors took up 62 per cent of the Development Bank’s debut issue. The bank said the highly developed Islamic finance market in Malaysia was the ideal model for Kazakh issuers.
In the first 11 months of 2011, Malaysia accounted for 71.2 per cent of total global sukuk issuance, it said.
“Not only is this sukuk issue the first in the history of Islamic finance in Kazakhstan. It is the first in the countries of the CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States),” the Kazakh bank said.
Halyk Finance (Kazakhstan), AmInvestmentBank and Kuwait Finance House acted as joint lead managers of the issue, with HSBC and RBS as coordinating joint lead managers.
‘ICEBREAKER’
Yerlan Baidaulet, adviser to Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Industry and New Technologies, said he was working on potential sukuk issues with other institutions in the country.
“We could have two or three deals. For sure, there will be one more sukuk from Kazakhstan (this year),” he said.
“The window has been opened. (The Development Bank) is playing the role of icebreaker.”
President Nursultan Nazarbayev, in power since Soviet times, has said he wants Kazakhstan’s commercial capital, Almaty, to be a hub for Islamic banking in the former Soviet Union, which includes other majority Muslim states and Russian republics.
A sovereign sukuk issue mooted in 2010 did not materialise. Finance Minister Bolat Zhamishev told Reuters in June that Kazakhstan had no pressing need to borrow abroad. Its National Fund to collect windfall oil revenues contains $51.4 billion.
Nevertheless, the Development Bank said its issue would serve as a model for other quasi-sovereign companies and banks to tap Islamic finance markets.
“We are convinced that this deal will open the way for other issuers in the region looking to diversify their funding on Islamic markets,” Zhaslan Madiyev, deputy chairman of the bank’s management board, said in a statement accompanying the issue.
Baidaulet, who is also executive director for the CIS and Eastern Europe at the Islamic Development Bank, a Saudi Arabia-based multilateral lender, said interest in sukuk reflected a desire among investors to work closely with the real economy.
“The way we are promoting Islamic finance in Kazakhstan is different,” he said.
“It’s not just a religious matter. It’s about the needs of the economy.”
(Dawn Business.Com / 27 July 2012)


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

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Islamic finance treads fine political line in Kazakhstan


(Reuters) - In Kazakhstan, a farmer and an imam approach the Islamic Development Bank for a loan. The farmer, an Orthodox Christian, needs tractors to plough his fields. The imam wants to repair the roof of his mosque. Which one gets the loan?
Yerlan Baidaulet, a banker who is one of Kazakhstan's foremost proponents of Islamic finance, received both requests. He sent the imam away with a donation from his own pocket on the grounds that Islamic banking permits charity or grants, not loans, to religious institutions.
The farmer, an ethnic Russian, got the loan he needed. Long since repaid, it was the springboard to the growth of a major farming enterprise in the grain belt surrounding Kazakhstan's futuristic capital, Astana.
"Islamic finance isn't only for Muslims," said Baidaulet, executive director for the Commonwealth of Independent States and Eastern Europe at the IDB, a Saudi Arabia-based multilateral lender. "Even dollar bills are printed with the words: 'In God We Trust'."
Two decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union freed Kazakhstan from Marxist ideology, the country of 17 million people is making a bid to become a regional centre of Islamic finance, which is based on religious principles including bans on interest and pure monetary speculation.
Strongman President Nursultan Nazarbayev, in power since Soviet times, has declared he wants Almaty to become a hub for Islamic banking in the former Soviet Union, which includes other majority Muslim states and Russian republics such as Tatarstan.
While that reflects growing demand among a generation of practicing Muslims who grew up after the Soviet Union's collapse, it could also bring direct economic benefits to Kazakhstan by linking the country to big pools of Islamic investment money in the Gulf and southeast Asia.
On the face of it, the country is ideal for Islamic finance. About 70 percent of its population is nominally Muslim and, in the wake of the global financial crisis, people are more receptive to alternative forms of banking.
But Islamic finance also challenges taboos on overtly religious practices in a society which is run along secular lines. In order to keep the peace in a multi-ethnic state, the government declares itself to be uncompromisingly secular.
Three thousand copies of 'The Handbook on Islamic Banking' by Mervyn Lewis and M. Kabir Hassan, translated into Russian for the local market, have not sold well.
"Some bookstores - the kind of stores that sell economic textbooks - have told us: 'It's a religious book. We won't sell it'," said Baidaulet, who also advises the Kazakh Ministry of Industry and New Technologies.
PIONEER
Abu Dhabi-based Al Hilal Bank became the pioneer for Islamic banking in Kazakhstan by opening its doors there in March 2010. It employs nearly 50 people in the country and its investments to date are worth $90 million, said Prasad Abraham, the bank's local chief executive, adding that it had set a target of $200 million by the end of 2012.
So far, Al Hilal's business has been in the corporate sector and with state-owned companies such as postal firm KazPost, with which the bank signed a wakala or agency agreement worth 1.5 billion tenge ($10 million) in March.
Legislation was passed in 2009 that would in principle allow the government to issue a sovereign sukuk or Islamic bond, which would be a big step in creating a sharia-compliant debt market.
Zaratkazy Nurpiissov, chairman of the management board of Fattah Finance, the country's first brokerage to offer sharia-compliant services, said there was demand for Islamic consumer finance to buy cars and household goods.
Fattah Finance's Hajj fund, in which pilgrims set aside cash to visit Mecca, has accumulated $150,000 in its first year. Nurpiissov said such numbers were the tip of the iceberg.
"I would say there are more than 1 million people who wish to use Islamic finance services," he said. "That number is growing every year."
Proponents of Islamic finance cite Kazakhstan's painful recent experience with conventional finance to make their case; a crisis in 2007-2008 was triggered by banks' exposure to bloated real estate markets and reliance on foreign funding. Islamic finance claims to be less risky because transactions are supposed to be based on income from real assets.
"Why did so many real estate companies go bust?" said Nurpiissov. "Because they borrowed money to buy land next to their existing construction projects without having any cash flow. Then the price of that land fell. Islamic finance would only lend money to build that one block of apartments."
OBSTACLES
The industry has run up against some major obstacles, however. Crucially, the debut sovereign sukuk issue has not yet materialized.
With over $50 billion stowed in its National Fund, which collects windfall oil revenues, Kazakhstan has no pressing need to borrow abroad. Not only the sukuk was pulled; a $500 million sovereign eurobond planned for 2010 was also shelved.
"It's not a question of sukuk per se. It's simply that we have no need to borrow money on the external market to finance a budget deficit," Finance Minister Bolat Zhamishev told Reuters.
"If it becomes timely to fix a benchmark for our corporate sector, we will think about sukuk issuance. But it wouldn't be effective were it just a one-off."
That view is shared by Ana Lucia Coronel, head of the International Monetary Fund mission that visited Kazakhstan in April and May this year.
"This is not the right time for Kazakhstan to go ahead," she said in an interview in Astana in May. "The sukuk market cannot develop unless the traditional government bond market is sufficiently developed, so it will take a little time."
With a sovereign sukuk off the table for now, the state-owned Development Bank of Kazakhstan is to take the lead in Islamic bond issuance. In March, the bank said it planned a sukuk program worth up to $500 million, but it did not say when issues might take place.
At present, Al Hilal remains the only Islamic commercial bank in Kazakhstan. Rules for entry into the sector are strict; the minimum capital requirement to establish any new bank, whether Islamic or conventional, is 10 billion tenge. Kazakh law does not permit conventional banks to run "Islamic windows", sections that would operate on religious principles.
"A second or a third bank would bring opportunities for transactions between Islamic banks that I'm not in a position to engage in at the moment," said Abraham at Al Hilal.
According to Baidaulet, taxation is "the biggest trouble for Islamic finance in Kazakhstan". Deals based on the murabaha model, the most widely used Islamic financing structure, require bonds to be backed by assets that change hands more than once. In Kazakhstan, each sale of such commodities is subject to 11 percent value-added tax.
A 41-point government road map for Islamic finance, released in March, extends to the year 2020. It envisages the issue of Islamic securities for some industrial projects. Taxation rules would be amended and several Islamic banks created by 2014.
Implementing the road map, however, may yet require a shift in mindset within the government. While debating the sovereign sukuk issue, some members of parliament expressed horror at the prospect, however unlikely, of state-owned assets falling into foreign hands in the event of a default.
A tough new law on religion passed last year, which includes a ban on prayer rooms in state institutions, hasn't helped. The law has been interpreted as a means to curb religious radicalism after a series of Islamist-inspired attacks unprecedented in Kazakhstan. While there is no suggestion that Islamic finance is linked with militant activity, few in government wish to appear overtly religious.
"People, especially civil servants, are now trying to distance themselves from the word Islamic," said Baidaulet, co-chairman of the working group for the road map.
Abraham at Al Hilal said, "Islamic banking is not asking for special favors. We're just asking: make us equal to the conventional banks.
(Reuters / 02 July 2012)

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

Saturday, 2 June 2012

Islamic finance development in Kazakhstan discussed

Kazakh Minister of Industry and New Technologies Asset Issekeshev met with Vice President of Islamic Development Bank Birama Sidibe on Friday, the Ministry's press service said.
The sides discussed further steps to implement the initiatives of President Nursultan Nazarbayev. In particular, they talked about establishing OIC food security fund, fund for development of small and medium businesses, Fund on investments in renewable energy, as well as the development of Islamic finance in Kazakhstan and regional cooperation and integration in Central Asia.
The sides noted the importance of signing of the Country Partnership Strategy between Kazakhstan and the IDB Group (to the amount of USD 1.2 billion), which would be an effective tool to enhance the bank's activities in Kazakhstan, aimed at diversifying the economy in terms of supporting SMEs, developing transport and energy infrastructure, agriculture, Islamic financial sector and regional integration.
As Issekeshev noted, Kazakhstan, during its presidency over OIC, has received strong support for its initiatives from the structural institutions of the Organization, particularly from the Islamic Development Bank.
(Gazate.Kz / 01 May 2012)


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