Manama, Dec 18 : Islamic banks are set to expand as they compete increasingly with
conventional lenders in attracting mainstream customers, according to a report
by consultancy Ernst & Young released.
The total of all commercial
banks' Islamic assets is estimated to reach $1.55 trillion this year, $1.8
trillion in 2013 and over $2 trillion mark, the report said. Gulf-based Islamic
banks now have $450 billion in assets, about 30 percent of the
total.
Islamic banks will grow as they focus on customers who expect more
than just sharia-compliance in terms of products and service and have
traditionally relied on conventional banks.
"Success will be defined in
the core markets through the transformation of Islamic banks so they are able to
compete with the much bigger, conventional boys for mainstream customers," Ashar
Nazim, Islamic financial services leader at Ernst & Young,
said.
Islamic finance follows religious guidelines such as a ban on
interest and on pure monetary speculation, with its core markets in the Middle
East and Southeast Asia.
The role of pure Islamic banks will also become
important by comparison with banks that deliver products just through Islamic
windows at their existing branch networks.
"There is no truly fully
fledged Islamic bank (that stretches) across international markets or even
regional," Nazim said.
He identified a group of 20 Islamic banks as
likely candidates to become significant regional institutions. They now account
for 55 percent of total Islamic banking assets after having grown over the past
three years at an average rate of 16.2 percent a year, Nazim said.
"It is
a lopsided industry at this point ... only 13 Islamic banks have $1 billion or
more in equity," Nazim said, adding that the difference between small and large
Islamic banks will widen.
Between 100 to 150 new financial institutions
could be launched in the next five to seven years to cater to markets that are
new to Islamic finance or have low rates of penetration including Egypt, Libya,
Indonesia, Pakistan and Bangladesh, he predicted. Ten of the 25 fastest growing
emerging markets have large Muslim populations.
Even while growing,
Islamic banks have experienced a decline in profitability, and their average
return on equity lags behind that of conventional banks by 20 percent, Nazim
estimated.
Return on equity for both Islamic and conventional banks has
deteriorated since 2008 in the wake of the financial crisis, dropping to 12
percent in 2011 for Islamic banks, compared with 15 percent for conventional
banks, the report showed.
This 3 percent gap is much wider than the 1
percent difference observed in 2008-2010.
The return on assets for
Islamic banks dropped to 1.3 percent in 2011 from 1.7 percent in 2008, while
rising for conventional banks to 1.7 percent in 2011 from 1.5 percent in
2008.
Operating expenses are 50 percent higher for Islamic banks, while
their cost of funds still remain more competitive than for conventional banks,
the report said.
Some banks have started to focus on improving efficiency
and reducing costs, which could boost their profit margins by about 25 percent
within two to three years, Nazim said.
"The severity of this performance
challenge has put many Islamic banks in a difficult place. They have taken the
decision to transform the way their businesses work," Nazim
said.
Ends
SA/EN
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Islamic banks to expand, compete for mainstream clients
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