Shariah Capital sees more Islamic hedge funds taking off |
Date: Thursday, March 11, 2010
Author: Reuters
More sharia hedge funds
are likely to be launched, specialising in healthcare, telecoms
and technology stocks, a U.S. financial firm said, as the
industry debates how far Islam sanctions such investments. Few Islamic hedge funds have successfully gotten off the
ground as asset managers struggle to reconcile the religion's
ban on excessive speculation with common hedge fund techniques
such as short selling. But with growing demand from new markets, the $1 trillion
Islamic finance industry is dabbling in areas that were
previously strictly off limits, such as hedge funds and
derivatives trading. U.S.-based Shariah Capital, which has a long-short Islamic
commodities hedge fund, said a growing number of fund managers
would offer sharia-compliant funds as the religion's rules do
not constrain profitability. "In the future, sharia investors will have the opportunity
to enlist high quality managers, operating within sharia
guidelines, to generate returns competitive with conventional
investors," Sheikh Yusuf Talal DeLorenzo, the firm's chief
shariah officer, said in an email reply to questions from
Reuters. Transportation and manufacturing are other possible
industries that can accommodate Islamic hedge funds, he said. Just over $250 million is invested in Shariah Capital's
fund, and institutional investors from Saudi Arabia, the Gulf
and Malaysia are in talks to participate, DeLorenzo said. Shariah Capital's hedge fund trades in commodities stocks,
such as gold, energy, mining and natural resources firms. Under the fund, investors buy instead of borrowing
securities using the "arbun" method to short the market to
comply with the sharia's rule that one must own an asset to
sell it. With arbun a purchaser makes a deposit, which forms part of
the purchase price, to buy assets at a later date. If the sale
does not proceed, the seller keeps the deposit and gets back
the assets. Shariah Capital's Commodity Fund gained 41 percent last
year compared with the Lipper Global Hedge/Long/Short equity
which had a one-year return of 31 percent as of Feb 28. Muddassir Siddiqui, a sharia scholar and Dubai-based
lawyer, disagreed that the use of arbun rendered short selling
sharia compliant. "The payment of arbun does not transfer title to the buyer.
The principle of the sharia is that you are not allowed to sell
something that you don't own," said "The use of these techniques is sometimes very superficial
and synthetic and do not conform to the rules of the sharia." IIFM, an Islamic finance industry body, with the backing of
a derivatives association and banks such as Credit Agricole
(CAGR.PA) and Standard Chartered (STAN.L), launched a template
over-the-counter Islamic derivative contract this month. Globally, regulators are tightening supervision of hedge
funds in the aftermath of the worst financial crisis in
decades. Recent data indicate that investors still favour hedge
funds although the pace of inflows slowed dramatically since
late last year. The industry is now estimated to manage $2.038 trillion,
$900 billion below the peak it set in the second quarter of
2008 before the financial crisis hit, Channel Capital Group
said.