A key Islamic finance body which proposes industry rules to Islamic lenders said on Sunday it plans to monitor Islamic finance products in the absence of a sector watchdog.
The Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) "will screen products and services offered by the industry for sharia compliance", it said in a statement.
The move is aimed to "homogenise the market", Mohamad Nedal Alchaar, secretary general of AAOIFI, told Reuters.
The fledgling Islamic finance industry relies for guidance on a patchwork of standard-setting bodies such as AAOIFI, opinions of Islamic scholars and national regulation.
"Although AAOIFI is not taking on a permanent role of industry watchdog, there exists a current huge gap in the market relating to credible sharia compliance screening of products and services," AAOIFI said.
AAOIFI describes itself as an autonomous corporate body that prepares accounting, auditing, governance, ethics and sharia standards for Islamic financial institutions and the industry.
But it provides product and auditing standards, which are mandatory in seven countries mostly in the Middle East.
Alchaar said AAOIFI would screen products of all Islamic financial institutions, including those which are not members of AAOIFI and in countries where its standards are not mandatory.
"It will be market-wide, regardless of the geographic distribution of products," he said, adding that AAOIFI plans to submit a proposal on its initiative to its board of trustees by the end of the year.
"We are not pretending we are going to be the industry's watchdog, it will be a temporary role because we see the need for screening," he said.
AAOIFI said it would highlight products it sees non-sharia compliant to providers and help them meet necessary requirements.
Alchaar said he expected banks to be open for AAOIFI advising them on products it finds not to be sharia-compliant as bankers were also interested in greater standardisation of products.
Varied interpretations of sharia, or Islamic law, has so far blocked the standardisation of rules across regions dominated by different schools of Islam.
Derivatives and short-selling are two areas that have divided Islamic financial markets.
The lack of standardisation is seen as a growth constraint as bankers need to design products for different markets and investors are reluctant to invest in products unless they are satisfied about it compliance with Islam.
The Islamic finance industry is catering to investors who would like to avoid paying or earning interest, which Islam describes as usury. - Reuters
Link: http://www.tradearabia.com/news/newsdetails.asp?Sn=BANK&artid=165556
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