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Study: Islamic finance growth seen 10-20 % in 3 years

Reuters via SharingRisk / By Cecilia Valente, Edited by David Cowell


Shortage of expertise main market worry

Most executives involved in Islamic finance expect the industry to grow by between 10 and 20 percent over the next three years, a survey published by accountancy firm BDO showed.

The study, based on responses from 173 financial services executives active in the sector, found that 53 percent expected 10 and 20 percent growth while another 22 percent felt the industry could grow by 20-30 percent or more.

Some 23 percent felt it would experience growth of 0-10 percent, or no growth at all.

The Islamic finance industry is estimated to be worth about USD 1 trillion and is dominated by the issuance of Islamic bonds, or sukuk. Growth, however, has been held back by a shortage of expertise and poor harmonisation of the criteria applied to products, the survey respondents said.

Islamic products must be endorsed by scholars able to interpret sharia law and understand the technicalities of financial products.

The industry has struggled to agree on a set of common principles as it is governed by a patchwork of national regulators, standard-setting industry bodies and individual scholars ruling on products and contracts.

Due to different interpretations of the sharia or Islamic law in different regions, a financial product accepted by one set of scholars could be rejected by others. These discrepancies make cross-border distribution difficult.

AAOIFI, a Bahrain-based body responsible for accounting, auditing and governance standards in Islamic finance, is setting up a committee which will try to establish common guidelines in the industry.


“We feel that these differences are damaging our credibility severely within the Muslim (world) and outside,” said Mohamad Nedal Alchaar, AAOIFI secretary general, who attended the presentation of the survey results.

The committee will include representatives of scholars, lawyers, auditors, regulators and bankers who from next year will sieve through financial products and gauge their compliance with Islamic principles.

AAOIFI’s standards are adopted in some Middle Eastern markets, including the Dubai International Financial Centre.

The committee will seek to convince providers to alter products it deems inappropriate but will be prepared to go public with its concerns if no progress is made.

The BDO survey respondents picked out Islamic retail loans as the product with most revenue potential, while Islamic insurance, or takaful, was the next most popular. Sukuk were only fourth on the list, behind Islamic mortgages.

Related in Al Haqq Society Blog

Islamic Finance and Investment

Filed under: Islamic Finance , , , ,

10 common mistakes that startup and small companies make

FastCompany / By David Lavenda

Young companies have small margins for error. Mistakes made early on can sink a company before its gets off the ground.

Below is a list of 10 common mistakes made by young, small companies. In the list below, I use the generic term “product” to refer to either a product or a service.

01. Drinking your own Kool-Aid.
Overestimating the Enthusiasm for Your Product/Service – thinking your product is more special than your customers perceive.

02. Not validating market demand.
Thinking that your product is a “winner” before making sure you get a solid base of people who agree.

03. Starting to work with customers too late.
Only engaging with customers when the product is ready for sale.

04. Underestimating the difficulty in penetrating the market.
Not expending enough effort to reach customers and to get them to try the product.

05. Overestimating the product’s uniqueness.
Related to “drinking your own Kool-Aid” this refers to not taking competition into account, where competition can be another product or service, or whatever customers are using today.

06. Underestimating the effort needed to build the product.
Promising to get to market before you can actually finish the product.

07. Hiring the wrong kind of people.
Hiring “big-company types” who are used to having a support staff to help them do their work.

08. Not focusing.
Being tempted by side projects and spreading yourself too thin to focus on developing your company’s main value proposition.

09. Not pricing correctly.
Under or over-pricing the product may inhibit adoption.

10. Not having a long-term vision that scales.
Having a “one-trick pony” that does not lead to future sales.

In the entrepreneurial spirit of “under-promise and over-deliver,” here are two more mistakes young companies make:

11. Never finishing the product.
The “never time to do it right, but there is always time to do it over” syndrome. Constantly redo-ing the product but never finishing it.

12. Not offering employees enough fun.
Sadly, a common quality of many startups.

Disclaimer: As the veteran of six startup companies (two that were successfully sold), these are mistakes I have seen time and again.

Filed under: Articles, Muslim startup ,

Islamic venture capital’s guidelines and future

Ameinfo / By Paul McNamara (Yasaar Media)

Anyone serious about setting up an Islamic venture capital fund, or securing venture capital funding, in a Shariah-compliant manner should acquire a copy of the Securities Commission Malaysia document on Guidelines and Best Practices on Islamic Venture Capital published in May 2008. Essentially these form a set of guidelines and best practices to promote the adoption of appropriate standards for the development of the emerging Islamic venture capital industry.

In Downloads

Guidelines and best practices on Islamic venture capital
The role of venture capital in contemporary Islamic finance
Islamic venture capital – A critical examination

During her keynote address at the Islamic Venture Capital & Private Equity Conference 2008 launching these guidelines YBhg Dato Dr Nik Ramlah Nik Mahmood, managing director, Securities Commission Malaysia said, ‘Venture capital brings profound impact to the economy. It bridges the financing gap where direct bank lending or financing through the debt or equity market is difficult to obtain.

‘The unique nature of the venture capital model, which is based on active management, leads to improved corporate governance and an overall alignment of stakeholder interests with that of the management. This then creates significant value above and beyond the use of financial engineering. New companies and industries spawned by venture capitalists for example Apple Computer, Federal Express, Google, IBM have irreversibly changed the way we live and work today’.

Search for ‘mega brands’

The clear intention was to promote an Islamic venture capital industry whose aim was not simply to nurture small businesses but rather to be the catalyst behind the next wave of ‘mega brands’ too, in the mould of Apple and Google.

Such thinking is certainly ambitious, but judging by the way the balance of global financial and economic power is currently shifting away from the traditional centres of London and New York it may contain an element of realism.

Dato Mahmood then went on to say: ‘With the rapid expansion and innovation of Islamic capital market products such as Sukuk, Islamic unit trust funds, Islamic REITs, Islamic ETF and Shariah-compliant listed securities, it is now timely for us to encourage and facilitate the growth of Islamic venture capital as another available asset class in Malaysia’s broad range of Islamic products. The development of Islamic venture capital will offer the opportunity for Islamic investors to diversify their portfolios.

‘Also, the fact that venture capital does not have perfect correlation with other asset classes such as listed securities allows more opportunity for investors to enhance their portfolio returns’.

Naturally Dato Mahmood was focused principally on Malaysia but the general concept remains the same for the industry wherever it is based. The speech by Dato Mahmood was by way of a precursor to the publishing of the Guidelines whose two core requirements for Shariah compliant venture capital were identified as being:

The appointment of a Shariah adviser who provides continuous guidance in ensuring that amongst others, the proposed investment contract and instrument structures are Shariah compliant (our emphasis).

The core activities of the investee company must be Shariah compliant.

Dato was clear that these guidelines were absolutely necessary for Malaysia if it was to stand a chance of attracting funds from the GCC, highly enriched with a vastly inflated oil price at the time. Wealth, and therefore venture capital interest, was blossoming in the Middle East and Malaysia did not want to lose out as a recipient of some of these funds.

A new industry

Shortly after this announcement, in July 2008, the first Islamic venture capital Musharaka Fund was introduced by Malaysia Venture Capital Management with the fund managed by Musharaka Venture Management. Malaysia Venture Capital Management is the venture capital subsidiary of the Ministry of Finance in Malaysia. Apparently the fund drew interest from Swiss and Middle Eastern investors.

Malaysia Venture Capital Management allocated USD 8.3 m for the fund while unnamed investors invested USD 1.83 m. Malaysia Venture Capital Management will continue its efforts to attract participation from local and regional investors and hopes to increase the fund size in 2009. The Musharaka Fund aims to invest in at least four technology-based companies.

As its name suggests the Gulf Venture Capital Association (GVCA) is a body whose remit is to encourage the growth and prosperity of the venture capital industry in the GCC and the greater Middle East. While its remit is not solely confined to Islamic venture capital there are clear areas where the GVCA and Islamic venture capital intersect.

The original intention of the GVCA was never simply to be a body which promoted venture capital, however, but was seen as a counterpart to the Arabian Knowledge Economy Association (AKEA) whose remit was to increase entrepreneurial skills and awareness amongst young up-and-coming businessmen and women in the Arab world. Indeed the president of AKEA, Abdullah Al-Subyani, is also president of the GVCA.

The reality of the industry, however, is that the association focuses most of its attention on private equity and not on venture capital.

The annual report produced by the GVCA from 2007 only makes passing reference to venture capital and even then only as a virtual footnote which reads, ‘Venture capital funds raised money in 2005 and 2006, but lost their appeal in 2007. Venture capital funds still have to ascertain their viability in the Mena region in terms of availability of quality deal flow and realization of successful exits’.

The 2008 report from the GVCA said, ‘Venture capital funds remain largely unattractive in the Mena region, with only three venture capital funds raised in 2008. The venture capital model has remained unproven in the region, despite many attempts by individuals and governments to adapt the western model to the Middle East’.

Perhaps what the industry needs more than anything else is a catalogue of success stories that will pique the interest of wealthy investors with a penchant for backing small business. The success story that Abraaj Capital, a Dubai-based conventional private equity house, had with its investment in Aramex bred dozens of imitators across the GCC.

A similar success story in the Islamic venture capital field could prove to be just the fillip that the industry needs to spawn dozens of funds from the private sector looking for the next big Shariah compliant thing.

It seems a safe bet that successful Islamic venture capital investing in the future will be the speciality of Islamic investment banks rather than specially focused Islamic venture capital firms.

The rationale here is that, as we have already observed, the quantum of individual venture capital investments tends to be small and therefore may not be lucrative enough in the short term to finance all but the most boutique of firms.

Bahrain’s Venture Capital Bank (VCBank) is an example of a specialist Islamic investment bank launched with the aim of capitalising on this niche, although VCBank’s remit is wider than simply venture investing.

Established in October 2005 the bank also looks at private equity and real estate, while also trying to secure financial advisory mandates. In the current climate its business plan seems to be succeeding and for the year ended 31 December 2008 the bank achieved net profit of USD 47 m, which showed 47 % growth compared to 2007 and a 27 % return on equity. The bank is also increasing paid-up capital from USD 165 m to USD 250 m.

VCBank launched its first fund, the USD 250 m Mena Small & Medium Enterprises Fund in December 2006 and has so far invested in Challenger Limited, an oil drilling company in North Africa.

The future of Islamic venture capital

Early signs would suggest that the industry is likely to flourish in Malaysia before anywhere else, in large part because of the initiatives of the government.

What seems beyond doubt is that the industry at present is tiny, certainly smaller than USD 100 m, and probably worth less than half of that. When the global recession is over, Islamic venture investing could easily be one of the fastest growing sectors of the industry, if for no other reason than it is coming off a very low base.

Related in Al Haqq Society Blog

Islamic venture capital

Filed under: Islamic Finance, Muslim startup, Venture capital , , ,

Islamic venture capital

Ameinfo / Paul McNamara (Yasaar Media)

If the Islamic private equity industry has failed to live up to its expectations then Islamic venture capital has followed the same path with even less spectacular results. Indeed discussion of Islamic venture capital is largely theoretical because real life examples are few and far between.

The government of Malaysia has done more than any other body to promote and define the industry and indeed has launched a fund, albeit a small USD 10 m fund, to help show the way.

The private sector has a few examples of Islamic venture capital at work but the reality is that often these are misnamed Islamic private equity efforts, and yet venture capital and Islamic finance are tailor-made for each other.

Rather like its cousin private equity, venture capital is a mode of investing that seems perfect for Islamic finance through the application of various Islamic financing concepts, with the Mudarabah concept being the most common.

Venture capital here is defined as the provision of seed capital for a new venture in the process of being established, rather than the provision of capital to a small business to facilitate its growth.

As with its conventional counterpart, Islamic venture capital appeals most to investors who understand a sector or an industry intimately and are prepared to risk a portion of their capital on the strength of a business plan, the management team of the proposed business, and their own ability to pick a winner.


Some basic principles explained:

The principle of Mudarabah in venture investing

Mudarabah financing involves a contract under which the investor, or rabal-maal, brings financing to the table and the entrepreneur, the mudarib, brings expertise, effort, and in the case of Islamic venture capital, a business plan.

Collectively the parties share the proportionate profit from the results of the enterprise as per their pre-arranged agreement. The entrepreneur cannot be placed at risk of losing money since he has contributed only expertise. If the business venture fails, then the most the entrepreneur could lose is the investment he has already made in the business and the time and effort he had put into the venture.

In other words no one can come after the entrepreneur for cash compensation. In a similar way, no one should expect the venture investor to have any say in the management of the company or any responsibility for it, since his part of the deal is to providing financing only.

The principle of Musharakah in venture investing

In the context of Islamic venture capital Musharakah financing is a partnership formed between parties to finance a business venture where the parties contribute capital either in the form of cash or in kind. Profits are distributed based on a pre-agreed ratio. Losses are shared on the basis of capital contribution to the venture.

The principle of Wakalah in venture investing

In Wakalah financing a contract from one party gives the power and rights to another party to act on his behalf, based on the agreed terms and conditions.

Other similarities between Islamic venture capital and conventional venture capital include the fact that deal sizes are small when compared to private equity transactions, since the startup capital that is required for a burgeoning small businesses tends not to include monies for grandiose marketing and advertising plans but tends to be much more conservative in its outlook.

Venture capital in the context of Islamic finance

The sector of Islamic venture capital had been largely ignored in the GCC until recently because of the lack of an ‘entrepreneur class’ which is essential for the development of a healthy venture capital environment: young, bright people with great business ideas and a determination to make a success of ‘their’ business. As the world becomes more of a global marketplace, and as the education and skills level of young people in the region increases, then venture investing along Shariah-compliant lines may become more common.

This is not to say that the greater Middle East and North Africa region has been bereft of venture capital. Countries such as Egypt, Lebanon and even Turkey have long had an entrepreneur class of their own and the VC industry is consequently more developed in these countries. In much of the GCC there have been impediments to foreigners owning their own businesses outright and this naturally led to an absence of such businesses in the marketplace.

As countries like the U.A.E. have introduced ‘free zones’ such as Dubai Internet City, Dubai Media City, Dubai International Financial Centre, Jebel Ali Free Zone, and so on where foreign nationals and corporates can own 100 % of their own business then the market for venture capital has opened up. Naturally the business idea that will attract Islamic venture capital has to operate within the constraints of Shariah and must not dabble in haram areas.

But having a young entrepreneur class is only half of the equation. The other half of the equation is having venture investors with the risk appetite to back the business plans presented to them with hard cash. This is not simply a matter of having the money, it is also about having the tools to analyse the business plan, structuring a deal, and ensuring that the short, medium, and long term investment interests of both the entrepreneur and the investor are the same. This requires a level of education and expertise that had been lacking until relatively recently but has arrived in the region on the back of the tidal wave of oil revenues and increasing globalisation.

The combined effect of this has been that the Islamic venture capital industry was virtually non-existent, except for a few cases where Angel investors in the guise of ultra wealthy merchant families have funded new start-up businesses with their own cash, after ensuring that the business had no likelihood of straying into haram areas of business practice.

The arrival of financial centres such as Dubai International Financial Centre, Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre, Qatar Financial Centre, and Bahrain Financial Harbour has opened up the possibility that expert venture capital talent from more mature financial markets could be transplanted into rapidly emerging Islamic finance markets and bring with it the intellectual wherewithal to do lucrative Islamic venture capital deals.

Related in Al Haqq Society Blog

Islamic venture capital’s guidelines and future

In Downloads

Guidelines and best practices on Islamic venture capital
The role of venture capital in contemporary Islamic finance
Islamic venture capital – A critical examination

Filed under: Islamic Finance, Muslim startup, Venture capital , , , , ,

AFP: Islamic banking bucks financial crisis (Video)

AFP (Youtube)

Islamic banking is on the rise. The banks themselves are setting up across the Middle East, while their precepts are increasingly reflected in financial products around the world, despite the current crisis.

Filed under: Islamic Finance , , , ,

Al Jazeera: Meltdown turns spotlight on Islamic finance (Video)

Al Jazeera (YouTube)

The failure of major investment and commercial banks that helped trigger the global recession has led some experts to look for other ways of doing banking. Al Jazeera’s Owen Fay looks at whether Islamic finance could offer some answers.

Filed under: Islamic Finance , , , ,

Meezan Bank’s Guide to Islamic Banking

Written by Dr. Muhammad Imran Ashraf Usmani, Ph. D. Islamic Finance

Meezan Bank’s Guide to Islamic Banking



Section VI: Application of Islamic Financing
Chapter 24 – Project financing
Chapter 25 – Working with capital financing
 

Related:

Islamic Finance and Investment

Filed under: Islamic Finance, Muslim startup , , , , , ,

Harvard Business School Q & A

Nine questions about the business every business plan should answer:

01. Who is the new venture’s customer?
02. How does the customer make decisions about buying this product or service?
03. To what degree is the product or service a compelling purchase for the customer?
04. How will the product or service be priced?
05. How will the venture reach all the identified customer segments?
06. How much does it cost (in time and resources) to acquire a customer?
07. How much does it cost to produce and deliver the product or service?
08. How much does it cost to support a customer?
09. How easy is it to retain a customer?

Fourteen “personal” questions every business plan should answer:

01. Where are the founders from?
02. Where have they been educated?
03. Where have they worked — and for whom?
04. What have they accomplished — professionally and personally — in the past?
05. What is their reputation within the business community?
06. What experience do they have that is directly relevant to the opportunity they are pursuing?
07. What skills, abilities, and knowledge do they have?
08. How realistic are they about the venture’s chances for success and the tribulations it will face?
09. Who else needs to be on the team?
10. Are they prepared to recruit high-quality people?
11. How will they respond to adversity?
12. Do they have the mettle to make the inevitable hard choices that have to be made?
13. How committed are they to this venture?
14. What are their motivations?

Links

Entrepreneur.com: Business plan samples, writing a business plan

U.S. Small Business Administration: Essential elements of a good business plan for growing companies

Related:

Harvard Business Review
Injazat Technology Fund

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