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Desert fortunes
Thursday 10 June 2010 - by Georgie Rawkins
In the first of a series of pieces on Islamic finance, Georgie Rawkins looks at the performance of sukuks during the crisis and what reforms the market needs
Islamic finance was seen by some investors as a haven untouched by the casino-like investment banks of the West amidst the chaos of 2007 but it still faced problems of its own. Trust is explicit in Islamic finance, declared by both the institution and the investor, because, in order to comply with Sharia law, no party can profit from interest whether lending or accepting money. Therefore, the role played by the institution becomes that of an impartial facilitator of financial transactions and each party involved shares equal risk. Unfortunately, the global economic problems have been too great to leave the shareholders and customers of Islamic finance untouched, and once issuers began defaulting, the egalitarian risk-sharing notion decreed by Sharia law became far less attractive. Oil prices fell by 54 per cent in 2008, the largest fall since 1987, and, combined with a real-estate slump in the Middle East, (fuelled by a housing boom that created thousands of dwellings just as demand began to evaporate) investors fled the Islamic debt market.
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Will markets in 2012 have a tougher time than 2011?