Fitch: Index Move Boosts Sukuk; Frameworks & Standards Still Key
Reuters reported on Friday that JP Morgan would include eight sovereign and corporate sukuk in various bond indexes from 31 October this year, citing a research report that the bank had sent to its clients. If confirmed, index inclusion should raise the profile of sukuk and support inflows from international institutional investors, including index tracking funds. This in turn may encourage issuers to supply index-eligible sukuk (criteria for inclusion include a credit rating and a liquidity assessment, according to Reuters) and support secondary market liquidity.
Nevertheless, we believe the sukuk market's growth rate will be determined by two factors: firstly, product-specific initiatives around regulation and standardisation of sukuk issuance, which have been noteable in some jurisdictions, but have not always been harmonised across jurisdictions; and secondly, the broader attempts to deepen the investor base and improve transparency in the relevant national and regional debt capital markets.
For example, implementation of the Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 in Malaysia has clarified regulatory issues, and the central bank launched Islamic T-bills early this year, adding to a range of liquidity management tools for Islamic banks. Kuwait's Capital Markets Authority announced a broad sukuk framework in November 2015, and the central bank in the UAE has proposed creating a Higher Sharia Authority to provide unified supervision and guidelines on Islamic finance-related matters.
Such initiatives, combined with efforts to improve corporate governance, financial reporting and enforceability in jurisdictions where Islamic finance is most widespread, support our expectation that sukuk issuance will increase gradually over the long-term as more countries create supportive frameworks.
Комментарии