After downturn, Islamic finance eyes profits, fintech:
survey
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[May 02, 2018]
By Bernardo Vizcaino
(Reuters) - Islamic banks and insurers are
focusing on profitability and new financial products as the industry
shifts away from years of containing the adverse impact of low oil
prices, an industry body said on Wednesday.
The findings from surveys by the Bahrain-based General Council for
Islamic Banks and Financial Institutions (CIBAFI) show a strong focus on
fintech and digital transformation with more than 70 percent of the 103
managers surveyed viewing these as highly or extremely important in
strategic decisions.
Islamic banks are launching technology departments and forming joint
ventures with fintech firms, with nearly 45 percent of respondents
planning to increase or launch digital branches in coming years.
"The Islamic financial industry, which has seen little change since
1975, is suddenly undergoing enormous shifts that can be challenging for
Islamic finance institutions to mitigate," CIBAFI said.
Islamic commercial banks are estimated to hold more than $1.3 trillion
in assets globally, a sector considered systemically important in
countries including Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Malaysia.
Technology-related risks have been steadily increasing and are now the
biggest perceived risks, the survey showed.
This means Islamic banks must ramp up product innovation efforts over
the next few years and tackle how new technologies adhere to Islamic
finance principles, CIBAFI said.
This will see an influx of start-ups in the crowdfunding and payment
space and drive legacy banks to transform operations, said one survey
respondent from Bahrain.
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A view shows the construction of the King Abdullah Financial
District, north of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia April 11, 2016.
REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser/File Photo - S1BETDBZTPAB
"Crowdfunding, P2P and payments platforms will be a major focus in the medium
term."
Technologies that interface with customers were seen as the most important, with
over a quarter of respondents indicating current or imminent use of automated
financial advice tools such a robo-advisers.
TAKAFUL
CIBAFI also released its maiden survey of Islamic insurance (takaful) firms,
covering 55 institutions from 24 countries.
The survey showed a mixed view on technology, suggesting concerns were focused
on operational efficiency rather than innovation, CIBAFI said.
Market-related risks and a lack of growth opportunities were cited as major
perceived risks, with distribution channels and new commercial lines as the main
business drivers.
Respondents also cited difficulties in finding suitable investments in Islamic
bonds and sharia-compliant equities, with allocations substantially influenced
by regulatory requirements.
In response, several takaful firms indicated an intention to increase
investments in areas such as real estate, primarily to seek higher yields.
(Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
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