Thursday March 29, 2007
By JAGDEV SINGH SIDHU
KUALA LUMPUR: Bank Negara yesterday introduced an Islamic
instrument that uses crude palm oil (CPO) as its underlying
asset to manage short-term liquidity in the Islamic inter-bank
money market.
The central bank also launched the first global Islamic
derivative master agreement (IDMA), which aims to develop
Islamic hedging products for the Islamic financial market to
mitigate investment risks.
The Commodity Murabahah Programme (CMP) introduced yesterday
is unique to Malaysia and the first-ever commodity-based
transaction that uses CPO as its underlying asset.
“As commodity murabahah is widely used in other Islamic
centres, it is envisaged that this CMP will promote increased
linkages between Malaysia and these centres,” Bank Negara
governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz said.
Bank Negara executed the CMP master agreements with eight
Islamic banking institutions, including three foreign-owned
ones, to promote the use of the instrument for liquidity
management.
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Tan Sri Dato Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz at the forum on
Wednesday.
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The institutions were Al-Rajhi Bank, Kuwait Finance House, Asian
Finance Bank, Bank Islam, Bank Muamalat, CIMB Islamic, RHB
Islamic and EON Islamic.
Speaking at the Global Islamic Finance Forum yesterday, Zeti
said the implementation of the IDMA was expected to improve the
risk management practices, balance sheet management, increase
fund mobilisation efficiency and enhance investment banking
capability of the Islamic banking institutions.
“With the introduction of IDMA, the rights and obligations of
contracting parties are clearly stated, thus creating an
environment that is more transparent,” she said.
As the IDMA also incorporated best practices in market
conduct, Zeti said it served as an important catalyst for future
linkages between financial markets that offer Islamic financial
market instruments.
“Standardisation and uniformity are critical to the further
growth and advancement of the Islamic capital market. With the
IDMA, financial institutions would be able to speed up
derivative transactions. This would create more market liquidity
and greater transparency in market dealings,” she added.
Zeti said Bank Negara wanted to diversify the issuance
concept of the Islamic monetary notes from being based on Bai
Inah and Ijarah into murabahah. Currently, the
outstanding amount of the respective notes is RM8bil.
“This initiative is the continuation from the commonly
murabahah acceptance initiative as the issuance involves the
securitisation of the acceptance facility,” she said.
Zeti said there were several benefits in issuing monetary
notes under such a structure.
“It provides Islamic financial institutions an additional
instrument to manage liquidity risk on a short-term basis. It is
also a financial instrument whose structure has been widely used
for retail banking and syndication products in the Middle East,”
she said.
In her address Islamic Finance: The New Silk Road,
Zeti said the new route also carried flows of direct investment,
portfolio capital, private equity and human capital.