Islamic banks across six core markets of Qatar, Indonesia, Saudi
Arabia, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey held $625
billion at the end of 2013 or 80 percent of the global Islamic
finance market, the report said. The figure was 95 percent when
Bahrain, Pakistan and Kuwait are included. Estimates exclude Iran
which has a distinct model for Islamic finance, which follows
religious guidelines such as a ban on interest and on pure monetary
speculation.
The report estimated the combined Islamic banking assets in the six
core markets will reach $1.8 trillion by 2019, buoyed by growth
which has been 1.9 times faster than that of conventional banks over
the 2009-2013 period.
The six core markets now comprise 82 percent of the global industry,
and this could rise even further, said Ashar Nazim, a partner at
EY's global Islamic banking center.
"As the populous centers of Turkey and Malaysia gain momentum and
Saudi banks continue their transformation to sharia compliance, we
expect the market share to account for between 80 percent to 90
percent of the global market."
Beyond these markets, the industry is expected to make some gains in
Egypt, Pakistan and North African countries such as Tunisia, Algeria
and Morocco, Nazim added.
"However, in the absence of regulatory reforms and strong sovereign
support, the pace of growth is likely to be moderate."
Islamic bank revenues are also underweight on trade finance and
lending to medium-sized businesses, two core areas in fast-growing
emerging markets. According to EY, 10 of the 25 high-value emerging
markets are core Islamic finance markets.
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"This is a once-in-15-year-opportunity to capture the share of this
evolving trade market for younger Islamic banks," Nazim said.
Entry into such markets would allow Islamic banks to build
much-needed scale, but many lack the expertise and risk appetite to
venture abroad, which has in turn affected profitability.
Average return on equity for a sample of the top 20 Islamic banks
was 11.9 percent over a five year period, compared to 14.5 percent
for a sample of 20 conventional banks, the report said.
The top 20 Islamic banks were roughly a quarter the size of their
conventional peers.
(Editing by Eric Meijer)
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