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Business

Gulf Islamic banks ready to step in as HSBC pulls back

Published: 19 Oct 2012 - 04:28 am | Last Updated: 07 Feb 2022 - 12:42 am

SYDNEY: Four days after HSBC Holdings said it would shrink its global Islamic banking operations, National Bank of Abu Dhabi revealed very different plans: It aims to triple the contribution of its Shariah-compliant operations over the next eight years.

The contrast suggests that rather than being a sign of weakness in the Islamic finance sector, HSBC’s decision reflected its own business priorities - and to the extent that the British bank pulls back from the industry, local banks will gain an opportunity to expand.

HSBC announced early this month that except for wholesale banking operations, it would no longer offer Islamic products in Britain, the UAE, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Singapore and Mauritius. 

It said it would focus its Islamic finance business on customers in Malaysia and Saudi Arabia, while keeping a limited presence in Indonesia.  Through its HSBC Amanah arm, headquartered in the UAE, HSBC was a pioneer in the industry and it operated the largest Islamic business of any Western bank, so the news sent ripples through the sector.

Some analysts speculated the decision reflected doubts about the long-term profitability of Islamic banking - perhaps dissatisfaction with costs that can be higher than conventional banking in some areas. Frequent asset transfers can attract repeated taxation, while buying the expertise to structure complex sharia-compliant transactions is expensive.

The details of HSBC’s announcement, however, suggest the bank will not come close to pulling out of Islamic finance, and may even continue growing in some parts of the industry. The bank estimated it would keep about 83 percent of its Islamic business revenue after the move. 

HSBC also stressed it would keep its wholesale Islamic banking operations, which are believed to be more profitable than retail and include its business of arranging issues in the Gulf’s booming sukuk market, where it is a leader.

Faced with financial pressures in struggling European and US markets, and increased regulatory demands as Basel III global banking standards start to take effect, HSBC and other Western banks are being forced to prune their operations in both Islamic and conventional finance.

An HSBC spokesman said the decision on HSBC Amanah followed a global strategic review, announced in May last year, which judged businesses on their compatibility with global strategy and the need to allocate capital efficiently. “In conventional banks, an Islamic window is non-core business, and hence banks may be exiting to refocus on core business,” said John Chang, head of retail banking at Dubai-based Noor Islamic Bank.

In fact, HSBC moved to scale back its Islamic business more slowly than it pruned its conventional operations; it has already divested assets in over 26 countries, including the United States, South Korea and Pakistan. In the case of the Islamic operations, the decision was protracted, said a former HSBC Amanah director.

Internally, the unit was able to argue that it was profitable but its weakness was that it lacked scale compared to HSBC’s huge conventional operations, the director said. “The retail business is profitable, but it is a very tiny business.”

HSBC’s pull-out from Islamic retail banking operations in the UAE, the Arab world’s second biggest economy, is expected to put the biggest dent in its growth. But bankers and analysts said it made sense given regulation and funding trends faced by Western banks.

“The retreat is more in retail banking, where especially in the UAE, international banks are only allowed to operate eight branches, which gives them no competitive edge with domestic banks who on average operate 40-50 plus branches,” Moinuddin Malim, chief executive of Dubai institution Mashreq Al Islami , said.

Before the global financial crisis erupted in 2008, Western banks could expect to enjoy two advantages when competing with local banks in the Gulf: cheaper costs of funding, and better access to overseas financial markets. Both these advantages have now faded, said Sohail Shafiq, vice president at Bank Sarasin-Alpen in Dubai. 

Michael Tomalin, chief executive of National Bank of Abu Dhabi, said his bank would boost its Islamic operations partly by introducing Shariah-compliant services in Egypt, Oman and Malaysia. Dubai-based investment bank Shuaa Capital is seeking to increase its share of Shariah-compliant business through the Islamic window of its credit division.

HSBC did not detail how it would handle clients in the six countries where it will cut Islamic business, or give a monetary value for the size of the business.

The experience of Qatar suggests some of HSBC Amanah’s customers in affected countries may not leave HSBC but instead move to the conventional side of the bank, limiting the windfall for other banks. After Qatar last year banned conventional banks from offering Islamic services, the flow of deposits to Islamic banks was smaller than expected; many depositors stayed loyal to their institutions. By some estimates, 60-70 percent of bank customers base their choice of bank primarily on pricing and service quality rather than religious permissibility. Reuters