Islamic Banking
Looking Beyond the Transaction: Pairing Islamic Wealth and Asset Management

The Islamic banking business is poised to move “beyond the transaction” as it wrestles with unprecedented growth. It is fast evolving from a niche within the global banking system to what may become - in the next generation - a track parallel to conventional financial services. Certainly the wealth management business will factor into this transition, as wealth advisors partner with Islamic investors for the benefit of their underlying investment portfolios.
The Islamic banking business is poised to move “beyond the
transaction” as it wrestles with unprecedented growth. It is fast
evolving from a niche within the global banking system to what
may become - in the next generation - a track parallel to
conventional financial services. Certainly the wealth management
business will factor into this transition, as wealth advisors
partner with Islamic investors for the benefit of their
underlying investment portfolios.
The recent momentum in issuance of sukuk (a.k.a. “Islamic bonds”)
- following some suspension in activity related to the sub-prime
crisis - is fully consistent with what you’d expect from a young
industry.
Such bond-like issuance is an early-stage activity, along with
project finance and real estate development, that provides
generous transaction income for many players in the business. I
believe this focus will change as the industry matures and looks
to stabilise its revenue flows with income based on
relationships, such as fee-based wealth and asset management.
The Islamic finance industry has yet to focus on wealth and asset
management, in my view, because wealth management requires better
segmentation of the individual-investor client base, and asset
management demands more forthright product ideas. Neither of
these requisites is broadly in place within the Islamic banking
industry at the moment.
If anything, the need for these disciplines has been masked by
unprecedented growth in savings surpluses in both South East Asia
and the Middle East. This relative lack of attention to date for
wealth and asset management creates opportunities for profitable
business-line growth among both established and newly formed
Shariah-compliant institutions.
This is familiar territory for anyone with broad industry
experience. Yet bringing an Islamic wealth/asset management nexus
to fruition does require Shariah-compliant organisations to think
in terms of “solutions” rather than to simply push product. I
find it ironic that the notion of providing investment funds to
(1) fulfill global diversification parameters and (2) implement
asset allocation decisions currently seems foreign to an Islamic
world that is steeped in traditions of research and debate.
Islamic private banking—the pairing of wealth and asset
management—can readily expand beyond the early localisation we’ve
seen in the Gulf and South East Asia. An effective approach will
include ways to bolster international distribution, launch
globally oriented product, and enhance multilateral
credibility.
Certainly there’s more to Islamic private banking than a retail
network, a small set of me-too funds, and a Shariah label. The
faster the Islamic industry embraces globalisation, the more
apparent the commercial opportunity will become as Islamic
bankers aim to compete with the conventional names on price,
pedigree, and performance.
I do acknowledge that innovation is not always commercially
expedient. Many organisations will find it beneficial to offer
common products to meet market expectations. For context, I’m
reminded of my recent visit to a gift shop in Gujarat, India,
with a placard boasting of its “unique handicraft items.” After
surveying the store, I remarked to the shopkeeper that many of
his products could be purchased all over South Asia. His poised
reply: “Some things simply have a high commercial value in our
merchandise inventory.”
One missing ingredient needed for the development of a true
Islamic private banking industry encompasses preparation of
investment-strategy insights and portfolio analytics. Granted,
high growth has obscured the need for such research. But I
challenge any firm aspiring to make an impact on this sector to
start addressing issues like mean-variance optimisation,
home-market bias, and global allocation strategies in an Islamic
context. I’ve never seen such work broadly disseminated, let
alone debated.
An effective private banking business is research-based and
market-responsive.
Certainly the ability to provide a portfolio planning process
will help to ensure stability and growth within a firm’s client
base. At one conventional firm where I worked in the 1990s, we
had a seven-step process for setting up the portfolios of high
net worth clients, addressing areas such as identifying
investment objectives and time horizon, determining the
appropriate asset mix, and choosing specific vehicles for
implementation. These analyses should not be dismissed as mere
“sales noise.” Ascertaining expectations about changing wealth
circumstances, as well as shifts in the global economy and market
landscape, help to ensure a vibrant client dialogue - and the
fees that come with it.
Building this advisory role does suffer from a “chicken versus
egg” problem. While Islamic wealth management is an increasingly
attractive business, the industry cannot reach high-impact
activity without a broader array of products. Yet the ability to
increase the breadth and depth of the product universe is held
back by weak demand from underdeveloped Islamic wealth
management.
The cultivation - and communication - of a sophisticated
analytical perspective has the potential to drive both
product-development and client-acquisition strategies. But this
requires staff professionals who are forward thinking and
aggressive. Questions that come to mind today range from the
portfolio impact of an oil-induced inflationary spiral; to the
currency impact of a potential dollar rally; to a decoupling (or
re-coupling) of the emerging markets to the US economy. Depending
on where the talent lies within an organisation, firms may opt to
position product-development staff in either the asset management
or the wealth management areas.
I’ll end my thoughts with a call to action for the Islamic
finance industry overall. We need more strategic (or rational)
and less tactical (or emotional) approaches to building a private
banking enterprise. One key step is for Islamic banks to fund
larger research budgets, not as a cost centre, but as a way to
contribute to firm-wide profits. Another might be to create true
marketing departments, with sales as a sub-group rather than
vice-versa. Still another might be to offer an increasingly wide
range of innovative - but not controversial - Islamic investment
products.
The common thread among these suggestions is the imposition of
professional discipline, whether analytically based,
organisationally based, or product-development based. In my view,
such discipline is the route to long-term success in the Islamic
banking industry.