Islamic
banks have continued to expand their balance sheets and capital buffers, but
the era of double-digit growth rates could be coming to an end while asset
quality
concerns creep up, an industry oversight body said on Tuesday.
Islamic
finance, which has its core markets in the Middle East and Southeast Asia,
follows religious principles that forbid interest and shun outright
speculation, and as such is seen as an alternative to interest-based banking.
That
proposition is underpinned by claims that Islamic finance can weather, if not
avoid, the kind of financial turmoil that has embroiled conventional banking in
recent years.
Islamic
banks have indeed expanded but uncertainties in the global economy and
political disquiet have taken their toll, the Islamic Financial Services Board
(IFSB) said in its fifth financial stability report.
Although it
was weathered those challenges, the industry has moved away from double-digit
growth rates enjoyed in previous years, the IFSB's Acting Secretary-General
Zahid ur Rehman Khokher said.
"This
slowdown underscores the importance, more than ever, of strengthening the
resilience of the Islamic financial system and addressing internal weaknesses
and vulnerabilities."
An IFSB
survey of 170 Islamic banks and 83 "Islamic windows" in conventional
banks across 17 countries found their combined assets grew by 10.9 percent to
reach $1.4 trillion at the end of September 2016.
Islamic
banks extended $939 billion in financing during that same period, up from $826
billion a year earlier, while their capital adequacy ratios remained above
regulatory requirements.
Despite
this, the asset quality of Islamic banks is deteriorating: Their net
non-performing financing to capital ratio increased sharply to 25.6 percent at
the end of September, up from 16.1 percent a year earlier.
In addition,
the short-term liquidity of Islamic banks continues to be an area of concern,
the IFSB said.
The IFSB
also released findings of a study of stress-testing of Islamic banks conducted
earlier this year.
The study
found important links between four macroeconomic variables - namely interest
rates, unemployment, real estate prices and oil prices - and the non-performing
financing ratios, deposits, financing and assets of Islamic banks.
There are
some bright spots, with the wider Islamic finance industry growing to $1.9
trillion in assets, with strong gains in sectors including Islamic insurance or
takaful.
Takaful
remains a small segment of the industry but contributions have grown by 12
percent, compared to 4 percent for conventional insurers, the IFSB said.
Scale
remains a challenge for takaful firms, although the IFSB said it expected
consolidation efforts to continue in the sector.
"NSA
should be embarrassed – they’ve had a lot of damaging leaks," said James
Lewis, a former U.S. official who is now a cyber expert at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies. Still, he said, "Microsoft needs to
admit that the 20th century is over, it's a much more hostile environment, and
that hobbling the NSA won’t make us any safer."
Under former
President Barack Obama, the U.S. government created an inter-agency review,
known as the Vulnerability Equities Process, to determine whether flaws should
be shared or kept secret.
White House
cyber security coordinator Rob Joyce, who previously worked in the NSA's elite
hacking squad, told a Reuters reporter in April that the Trump administration
was considering how to "optimize" the Vulnerability Equities Process,
but he did not elaborate.
The White
House did not respond to a request for comment about the status of the review
process. A source familiar with the matter said equities meetings still take
place but less frequently than they did under the Obama administration.
In Congress,
Republican Senator Ron Johnson and Democratic Senator Brian Schatz are working
on legislation that would codify the review process.
"We
have reached a turning point where it is not sustainable for governments to
think they can retain vulnerabilities for very long," said Ari Schwartz,
who oversaw technology security issues at the National Security Council during
the Obama administration.
(This story
has been refiled to change paragraph 18 to read "and that hobbling the
NSA" not "and the hobbling NSA")
REUTERS
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