Sunday, September 28, 2008

US lawmakers publish rescue deal (BBC)

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/7640872.stm

US lawmakers publish rescue deal
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7640872.stm

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McCain and Obama back bail-out package

US politicians have published a $700bn deal to bail out Wall Street and end the global credit crunch.

The measure allows the Treasury to spend up to $700bn (£380bn) buying bad debts from ailing banks in the USA.

In return the government will get a stake in these firms, the pay of bank bosses will be limited and the bail-out will be independenly monitored.

It is the biggest intervention in the markets since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Nancy Pelosi, the Democrat leader of the House of Representatives said the message to Wall Street was that "the party is over".

She said the "bipartisan deal" was "not a bailout of Wall Street", but designed to ensure pensions, savings and jobs would be safe.

The Democrat majority leader of the Senate, Harry Reid, said Americans had "every reason to be concerned and even angry" in the light of the "greed on Wall Street" and "unenforced regulations".

During the past two weeks, the global credit crunch has seen several financial institutions running into liquidity problems, where they cannot free up the money to keep their daily business going.

  • In the United States' largest bank failure, Washington Mutual was taken over by regulators and sold on to JPMorgan Chase
  • Several investment banks got into varying degrees of trouble, with Lehman Brothers collapsing, Merrill Lynch seeking refuge in a takeover by Bank of America and Morgan Stanley securing a large capital injection from a Japanese rival
  • US insurance giant AIG had to be bailed out by the US government, which effectively took an 80% stake in the firm
  • In the UK, meanwhile, mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley is set to be nationalised on Monday morning, with parts of the business sold on to other banks
  • In Germany Hypo Real Estate, a bank specialising in financing property deals, is widely reported to face a serious cash crisis
  • The governments of Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands agreed late on Sunday evening to invest 11.2bn euro in huge financial services group Fortis, effectively nationalising it

No golden parachutes

A vote on the package is expected in the House of Representatives on Monday, with the Senate potentially voting on Wednesday.


When taxpayers are asked to take such an extraordinary step because of the irresponsibility of a relative few, it is not a cause for celebration
Senator Barack Obama

The US administration wanted a deal to be announced before markets open in Asia on Monday morning.

The deal addresses several of the key concerns raised by both Democrat and Republican critics of the original plan proposed by the US administration.

  • The government will get the money in tranches - $250bn straight away, and $100bn at the request of the White House; Congress can veto the release of the remaining $350bn
  • Banks that accept bail-out money will have to hand over shares in return, which allows tax payers to benefit from the banks' recovery
  • Top bankers, meanwhile, will see their pay limited, and "golden parachutes" - huge payments when they leave the firm - will be banned
  • The banking industry will have to help finance the bail-out if the money can not be recovered from the struggling banks themselves
  • An independent Inspector General and a bipartisan oversight board will monitor the deal
  • Banks will be obliged to join an insurance programme to protect them against the losses of mortgage-backed securities

The proposed legislation was now "frozen", said Ms Pelosi, which means critics can not strike out individuals provisions that they do not like.

The text of the deal has now been put on the internet, but immediately after the deal was announced all websites showing the published text crashed because of the huge public interest in its provisions.

However, these provisions may not be enough to placate all the critics of the bail-out, both on the Republican and Democrat side of the political divide.

Already, several key critics of the deal called on their fellow legislators to block it.

IFIC: Islamic funds begin to take hold (CANADA)

IFIC: Islamic funds begin to take hold

http://www.investmentexecutive.com/client/en/News/DetailNews.asp?id=46160&IdSection=147&cat=147&BImageCI=1

The market is surging worldwide and assets are expected to double to US$1.4 trillion in less than two years

Friday, September 26, 2008

By Olivia Glauberzon

The Shariah-based investment industry is flourishing and expected to double in assets in less than two years, said experts in Islamic finance during a presentation at the Investment Funds Institute of Canada’s annual conference in Toronto on Thursday.

Currently with assets of US $700 billion worldwide — and growing at a 22%-a-year pace — Shariah-compliant funds are expected to double to US$1.4 trillion in assets by 2010, said Rehan Saeed, a Shariah liaison with the Mississauga, Ont.-based Islamic Finance Advisory Board.

Shariah, otherwise known as Islamic religious law, governs all Islamic banking and investing practices. To comply with Shariah, stocks and bonds within a portfolio need to be screened for the types of businesses they are associated with.

For instance, investments related to alcohol, tobacco, gambling, banking and pornography are not allowed, said Imtiyaz Ahmed, representative for Shariah capital markets at frontierAlt.

“Think of it as a socially responsible fund,” Ahmed added. “There are a just a few extra controls.”

Besides business screens, Shariah-compliant funds also restrict investments in companies with excessive debt. Ahmed explained that “excessive” is a debt to equity ratio above the 30% range.

However, Shariah regulators recognize it’s not a perfect world. Inevitably, regardless of how hard fund managers try to create products in line with the framework, some companies may have a small income stream coming from interest or from a black-listed activity.

To solve this problem, funds can be “purged of their sins” by donating a company’s income stream from non-Shariah compliant activities to charity, said Habib Meghjee, associate partner at Deloitte & Touche LLP. For example, if a fund invests in a company that earns $10 a share, but has 10% of its revenue coming from interest income, the fund managers would donate $1 a share to charity in order to be 100% Shariah compliant, Meghjee said.

A growing Muslim population demanding more Shariah-compliant funds in Canada has driven the demands for these investments in North America, said Ricky Pinto, also a partner with Deloitte & Touche.

“There’s only a sprinkling of funds in Canada,” said Pinto. “Around the world, people are seeing these opportunities.”

Currently, the $3 million frontierAlt Oasis Canada Fund is the only Shariah-compliant fund in Canada. The fund’s assets under management have tripled from $1 million since launching in November 2006, according to Les Young, vice president of frontierAlt.

And with the Muslim community expected to grow to 4.9% from 3.7% of the Canadian population by 2017, Saeed said, the Shariah-compliant based fund industry is still largely untapped.

Islamic finance began in the 1960s, staring with two funds in Egypt and Malaysia. Today, the industry has grown to include a number of funds and governing bodies around the world. The organizations include the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions, the Islamic Financial Services Board and the International Islamic Rating Agency.


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