Close X
Sunday, December 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Well Positioned To Become Islamic Banking Hub, According To Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2015 12:39 PM
    TORONTO — Islamic banking is being touted as the next big thing for Canada's financial services sector, but experts say it's up to the new federal government to demonstrate that it welcomes Shariah-compliant investments.
     
    "It's absolutely fundamental that the Canadian government signal that, in fact, it is open to Islamic finance," says Walid Hejazi, an associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management.
     
    They could do so either by issuing sukuk — Islamic bonds — or by making a public statement, Hejazi says, noting that the previous government was on record as saying it welcomed such investments.
     
    "If there is a risk that a change in government is going to change its view on that kind of investment, that spooks investors," he said. "So the government must be clear to say . . . 'We're open to Islamic finance, we welcome it,'"
     
    Islamic finance — which bans interest payments and investments in gambling, pornography, weapons, alcohol, tobacco and pork — is a fast-growing niche in the financial services industry.
     
    A study released earlier this month by the Toronto Financial Services Alliance and Thomson Reuters says Canada has a number of advantages — including a growing Muslim population, a stable banking system and a favourable regulatory environment — that make it well positioned to become a North American hub for Islamic banking.
     
    "Islamic finance is one of the fastest growing kinds of finance in the world," said Janet Ecker, president and CEO of the TFSA.
     
    "There are opportunities here which should be explored. Toronto is an international financial centre. ... This is another way to keep our reputation and our capabilities growing."
     
    Hejazi says the Islamic ban on interest doesn't mean consumers borrow money for free — it just requires loans to be structured more like partnerships between financial institutions and borrowers.
     
     
    "The whole idea or the concept is to avoid people becoming buried in debt because, back in the days of the Prophet, ... when people weren't able to pay their debt they were enslaved or exploited," he said.
     
    In the case of commercial loans, that means both the bank and the borrower must have a vested interest in the success of the underlying business.
     
    "If the underlying business does well, they share in the profit," Hejazi says. "If it does poorly, they share in the losses. That's the fundamental difference; this idea of shared risks, and nobody can have a guaranteed return."
     
    The report commissioned by TFSA says there are a number of opportunities for Islamic banking to expand in Canada. Some Muslim Canadians desire Shariah-compliant solutions to their personal finance needs, including mortgages, insurance and investment opportunities.
     
    The Canadian government could also issue sukuk, or Islamic bonds, which are structured in such a way that they generate returns without the use of interest payments, to help fund its planned infrastructure spending, according to the report.
     
    "The new federal government has an opportunity to demonstrate Canada's openness to foreign investment from markets in the Middle East and Southeast Asia by encouraging investments either in a conventional or an Islamic-compliant manner," said Jeffrey Graham, partner and the head of the financial services regulatory group at Borden Ladner Gervais LLP.
     
    "Other governments who have been seeking to do the same thing have issued sovereign sukuks, or Islamic bonds, to help promote their financial sectors."
     
    However, a spokesman for the Department of Finance appeared to throw cold water that idea, saying in an email that "there continues to be very strong demand for regular 'plain vanilla' Government of Canada securities."
     
    Meanwhile, one of the obstacles to the growth of Islamic finance in Canada is the lack of what Hejazi calls "human capital."
     
     
    "We need to have people across the country that understand Islamic finance, which we don't have," said Hejazi, who teaches a course on Islamic finance, now in its fifth year, at Rotman. Last year the course was full, with 40 students on the waiting list.
     
    "I get so many emails from people downtown, from the banks, the accounting firms, consulting firms, saying 'Could I sit in on your class?'" says Hejazi. "There's a lot of interest. People really want to learn more."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Hydro Sets Contract For Controversial Site C Dam At $1.75 Billion

    The contract agreement announced on Monday by BC Hydro will see the Peace River Hydro Partners build the earthen dam, foundation, two diversion tunnels and spillways in the province's northeast.

    BC Hydro Sets Contract For Controversial Site C Dam At $1.75 Billion

    Telus CEO and his family trust invest nearly $10 million in additional stock

    Telus CEO and his family trust invest nearly $10 million in additional stock
    VANCOUVER — Telus Corp.'s president and chief executive officer, Darren Entwistle, recently invested nearly $10 million in the company's stock.

    Telus CEO and his family trust invest nearly $10 million in additional stock

    Three Decades After Expo 86 Heyday, McBarge To Get Refit And Repurpose

    Three Decades After Expo 86 Heyday, McBarge To Get Refit And Repurpose
    The derelict vessel, dubbed McBarge, is being towed from its current location on Burrard Inlet in Burnaby, B.C.

    Three Decades After Expo 86 Heyday, McBarge To Get Refit And Repurpose

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Signals F-35 Won't Be Excluded From Fighter Replacement Competition

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Signals F-35 Won't Be Excluded From Fighter Replacement Competition
    Canada's defence minister has signalled that the F-35 will not be excluded from the forthcoming competition to replace the air force's aging fleet of fighter jets.

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Signals F-35 Won't Be Excluded From Fighter Replacement Competition

    Victoria Police Applaud 101-year-old City Resident For Helping To Alert Others To A Telephone Scam

    Victoria Police Applaud 101-year-old City Resident For Helping To Alert Others To A Telephone Scam
    Officials say the elderly woman notified staff at the James Bay New Horizons Centre about an aggressive phone call from a person claiming to represent the Canada Revenue Agency

    Victoria Police Applaud 101-year-old City Resident For Helping To Alert Others To A Telephone Scam

    Evolving B.C. Tech Startups Threaten To Disrupt 'Dinosaur' Industries

    Evolving B.C. Tech Startups Threaten To Disrupt 'Dinosaur' Industries
    VANCOUVER — One technology startup is using artificial intelligence to save people who book online flights up to 80 per cent.

    Evolving B.C. Tech Startups Threaten To Disrupt 'Dinosaur' Industries