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Southeast Asia
Tapping Indonesia's Islamic potential
2007-07-08

JAKARTA - Indonesia is taking steps to ramp up its Islamic banking sector, which some financial analysts believe has the potential of creating the largest sharia finance area in the world.
Oh, joy!
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said at the recently completed World Islamic Economic Conference in Kuala Lumpur that his government intends to push through the regulatory change necessary to support the industry's development, which still only accounts for about 2% of total Indonesian banking activity.
I wonder why.
Sharia banking conducts modern business while adhering to Islamic laws regarding financial transactions.
Sorta like NASCAR, but with chariots.
Nonetheless, the industry has grown rapidly in recent years, as banks tap deeper into one of the world's largest Muslim markets, where 87% of the country's 240 million people follow Islam. Worldwide, Islamic finance currently represents less than 10% of the total global Muslim market of 1.5 billion people.
Maybe thatÂ’s because most of them donÂ’t have a pot to piss in.
Some financial analysts believe, based on current market trends, that the global Islamic financial-services industry, including banking assets, could grow from US$1 trillion now to $2.8 trillion by 2010.
We're talkin' about those high-yield ransom, extortion and skimming operations.
US-based international credit-rating agency Standard & Poor's estimates that the global potential for Islamic financial services could be closer to $4 trillion.
Especially when it comes time to service those Global Caliphate Bond Issues™.
Much of that growth could come from Indonesia and its $300 billion dollar economy. In Southeast Asia, Indonesia still trails its smaller regional neighbor Malaysia, where the regulatory environment has already been modified to attract foreign Islamic investments. But financial analysts say there is huge potential in Indonesia to attract not only local money but also petrodollars and sharia-compliant funds from the Middle East, as has happened with Malaysia.
All they neglect to mention are the sort of activities that attract such investment. Untapped C-4 distribution networks, demolition of Christian Church sites, conversion of Infidel assets and a host of other innovative growth opportunities await the eager Muslim investor.
Central to Islamic finance, which offers products and services akin to conventional financial products, is its "zero interest" concept and emphasis on profit-sharing.
Yesiree Bob Omar. The profits, they come out of nowhere. Whisper “Inshallah” and the money, it rains down from the sky. Your capital’s perfectly safe with the “Inshallah” retirement plan.
Based on sharia law, which forbids the collection of interest on loans and debts, including bonds, the system relies on asset-backed, contract-based, profit-sharing.
Cuz everyone knows that profits donÂ’t rely upon interest, markups, points or any of that icky Infidel capitalism.
For instance, so-called murabahah-based finance is concerned with lending for consumer goods such as motor vehicles and housing, but under the current regulatory regime is uncompetitive vis-a-vis conventional Indonesian banks.
Now why would that be?
Sharia banks finance the purchases on behalf of a customer for an agreed fee, but these transactions incur a 10% value-added tax (VAT) because under current taxation laws such a fee is not categorized as interest, which would exempt it from VAT payments.
VAT? Smells like teen spirit vig to me.
Despite the regulatory hurdles, the industry is experiencing a mini-boom.
Really, really poor choice of words.
Indonesia's first Islamic bank, Bank Muamalat, was founded in 1992 and has forecast that its profits will double year on year because of surging demand for its innovative, sharia-based Shar-E product. Last year nearly 664,000 customers applied for its Shar-E products, surging from the 132,669 customers it had in 2005.
ThatÂ’s only because they finally decided to accept goats as collateral.
As of the end of 2006, Bank Muamalat had been joined by 23 other Islamic banks and 456 conventional bank branch offices that provided sharia banking services. According to Bank Indonesia, the central bank, the share of sharia banking assets of total national banking assets was a mere 1.6%, up slightly from the 1.4% recorded at the end of 2005.
Still, when asked, no one acted as if they even understood what the word halawa meant.
Yet Islamic banks reported a 79% year-on-year increase in business volume in 2006, to Rp8.76 trillion ($1.36 billion). The amount of leasing business, known as ijarah, grew by a whopping 164.7%, and sharia mutual funds grew in asset value by 17.6% last year, with a total net asset value of about Rp663.7 million.

By the end of last year, there were about 20 sharia funds, representing about 5% of Indonesia's total number of mutual funds but only 1.3% of the industry's value. At least 17 companies listed on the Jakarta Stock Exchange have issued sharia-compliant bonds, representing 10.5% of the total number of listed companies that have issued debt instruments, with a total issuance value of Rp2.2 trillion.
Lemme know when Wall Street dumps several billion into this farce. Then IÂ’ll be sure to sell all of my stock.
Increasingly, Indonesian banks are not only looking to add Islamic products to their loan portfolios, but are sounding out possible acquisitions to enhance their Islamic banking potential.
Gaza & Qassam LLP, Qom to Tomb Health Care, Tehran Gasoline Futures, they’re all just screaming, “Buy me now!”
For example, Bank Central Asia (BCA), Indonesia's second-largest lender by assets, plans to buy two small banks, and one of the acquired institutions would be transformed into a fully sharia-compliant lender. (BCA is 74% owned by a consortium of Singapore's state-run investment arm Temasek Holdings.)
Just donÂ’t chew gum or betel nut when you visit them.
The only foreign bank currently licensed to conduct Islamic banking in Indonesia is HSBC, which offers Islamic banking services through its HSBC Amanah Syariah unit.
HSBC = Holiness Secured By Crapulence
Last month the unit arranged a $50 million international sharia financing syndication for state-owned Krakatau Steel, Indonesia's biggest steel producer.
Krakatau predicts “explosive” growth.
That followed on two previous deals it arranged for state-owned oil-and-gas company Pertamina to tap the global Islamic finance market, including a $322 million Islamic international syndicated loan in 2004 and a similar $200 million deal in 2006.

Still, the lack of sharia-friendly regulations has, in places, held the industry back. According to Jakarta's governor, Sutiyoso, the lack of clear rules and regulations for sharia finance was behind the decision by a Dubai-based Islamic Bank consortium to shy away from funding Jakarta's multimillion-dollar monorail project.
Nothing that issuing a few death fatwan canÂ’t cure.
The consortium had agreed early this year to invest provided that the central government and the city administration would guarantee to cover half of any potential losses incurred by the project's operations. Sutiyoso managed to get the guarantees in place by April, but the sharia deal nonetheless proved to be incompatible with current Indonesian law.
Not to mention reality, but whoÂ’s counting?
Government planners hope that regulatory change will pave the way for both government enterprises and private corporations to attract Islamic investors worldwide through the issuance of Islamic bonds. Toward that end, three draft laws related to sharia banking, tax and securities transactions are expected to be enacted this year.

And they are looking to Malaysia's recent successful experience, particularly in relation to Malaysian corporations' issuances of foreign-currency-denominated Islamic bonds. Malaysia also gives tax breaks to foreign banks that set up Islamic finance operations, and several Persian Gulf-based Islamic banks have recently been awarded licenses to open branches there. Once Indonesia's new sharia-friendly laws come on line this year, Islamic banking could provide a valuable new source of foreign investment for Indonesia as well.
Goat futures, camel options, sheep securities Â… why, the prospects are only limited by Islamic imagination!
Posted by:Zenster

#15  That would be ALL of it, of course, Zen.

Never one to mince words, eh, Barbara? Quite the endearing trait of yours, although I'm sure more than a few would argue that with me. As Oscar Wilde said:

"It is best to mince one's words very finely as it makes them so much easier to eat afterwards."
Posted by: Zenster   2007-07-08 20:48  

#14  #11: "The question remains as to just how much of that money has been diverted from proper dispersal to Saudi Arabia's poor and needy."

That would be ALL of it, of course, Zen.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2007-07-08 19:07  

#13  Statistically speaking, there's always potential, WolfDog. ;-) Where exactly that probability lies between zero and one requires cleverer calculations than I'm capable of, though.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-07-08 17:40  

#12  At the risk of sounding cynical and intolerant, I thought the words Islam and Potential were an oxymoron.
Posted by: WolfDog   2007-07-08 17:28  

#11  Thank you for the catch, trailing wife. I did indeed mean the hawala network. It is a terrorist financing operation that desperately needs to be shut down in order for America to become more secure and Muslim unfriendly.

Some of the Saudi princes (I forget which) have shown good financial judgment in buying hard assets like properties and investing in major companies like Citibank.

The question remains as to just how much of that money has been diverted from proper dispersal to Saudi Arabia's poor and needy. Disregarding any redistribution of wealth, there also stands the issue of how those enormous investments are not being made in any industrialization or technical universities. Saudi Arabia shortly would cease operating if it were not for foreign expertise in almost every critical sector like petroleum and their military. It is a pattern of corruption endemic to the MME (Muslim Middle East) that impoverishes the entire region to near stone-age levels.

I find it extremely difficult to praise the business acumen of a family who reaps ill-deserved profits and then funnels them into spreading Wahabbist filth and Sunni terrorism throughout the world.

If you can justify to yourself that lying to infidels is kosher sanctioned, then you can bridge the gap between what is a fee and what is interest. And you can play the game of "fool yourself" forever.

Islam is a violent fantasy of sexual domination and appropriating unearned wealth or territory. It simultaneously ignores reality and absolves itself of any wrong in doing so. Delusion and cognitive dissonance are its stock in trade. Non-believers are made to bear the horrific brunt of Islam's abject refusal to be on speaking terms with the truth.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-07-08 13:52  

#10  AP - In places run uncer islamic rule, what you will get is that eventually, the most strict applications are applied. New Fatwas will be issued when convenient for one sector of clerics to gain dominance over another restricting freedoms even more. I would fully expect a rival cleric sevt to eventually equate the fees to interest charged in order for that sect to gain power over its rivals that allow it.
Posted by: Ol Dirty American   2007-07-08 13:19  

#9  If you really researched it, I'm sure that you would find compound interest at the root of what is keeping the doors open at every wahabi mosque.
Posted by: Super Hose   2007-07-08 12:40  

#8  ODA---It's all semantics. If you can justify to yourself that lying to infidels is kosher sanctioned, then you can bridge the gap between what is a fee and what is interest. And you can play the game of "fool yourself" forever.

You see, Delusion is the Solution and you can have a clear conscience when you go to Ablution.
Posted by: Alaska Paul in Kahl-ee-forrn-ya   2007-07-08 12:26  

#7  I can't wait until the clerics start making Fatwas against the fees themselves.
Posted by: Ol Dirty American   2007-07-08 09:54  

#6  Gladys, it's a simple misspelling. Try this instead: hawala. As far as I can understand it (and anything to do with money besides the spend/don't spend decision is beyond my expertise) Hawala is an informal money transfer system undertaken within certain Muslim families scattered around the world. You give your money to Achmed in your village, and your mother back in the old beduin encampment can pick it up from Achmed's cousin Mohammed three tents over... less a handling fee, of course. There are no records, no taxes, and upfront fees instead of the forbidden interest. The hawala families also make loans, although they call it something else, and again they charge upfront fees (that somehow work out to what the interest would've been had they actually charged interest). It's a lovely way to get lots of money to terrorists and criminal gangs without a ripple in the official world.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-07-08 08:18  

#5  On the whole, the Muslim world currently gets failing grades on human rights but there is no reason why they cannot excel in commerce. Some of the Saudi princes (I forget which) have shown good financial judgment in buying hard assets like properties and investing in major companies like Citibank.

Forging stronger business ties with these parts of the world may be an underutilized asset in the War on Terror. Remember, at one time Japan was an enemy but today our economic interdependence helps to cement our alliance.
Posted by: Grumenk Philalzabod0723   2007-07-08 06:51  

#4  I don't quite understand. They call it a fee instead of interest and it is OK? How do you get profit sharing from a loan to buy a car? Zenster I googled halawa and got recipes for sweets and Hawaiian sites, do you mean it's sweet?

Indonesia worries me because it's close to where I live - only PNG stands in the way and half of it has already been taken over by Indonesia. Plus I plan on moving to Bougainville when I retire.
Posted by: Gladys   2007-07-08 05:36  

#3  Indonesia is taking steps to ramp up its Islamic banking sector, which some financial analysts believe has the potential of creating the largest sharia finance area in the world.

Eating is highly overrated, eh?
Posted by: gromgoru   2007-07-08 05:02  

#2  I guess what will happen will depend on how well-connected their home families are in the Chinese government.

Or their ability to bribe those who will stay bribed.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-07-08 04:46  

#1  For a long, long time commerce and finance in pretty much all of southeast Asia has been Chinese turf. These are ethic Chinese many generations removed from the homeland but still tied to their homeland families as if by steel cable. A lot of these families have tended to operate more like Mafia familes than like John-Boy and the Waltons. I'm not sure how keen they will be to losing their business - I guess what will happen will depend on how well-connected their home families are in the Chinese government.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-07-08 03:31  

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