Risk Issues of Islamic Financial Institutions - Moody's repo

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                                                                                                   Moody’s Global
  Special Comment                                            Credit Research
                                                   January 2008
 Table of Contents:                                Risk Issues at Islamic
  Summary Opinion                                1
  Section 1: Risk Entanglement Within IFIs’
  Asset Classes is Mitigated by a Naturally
                                                   Financial Institutions
  Strong Collateralisation of Credit Portfolios  4
  Section 2: Balance-Sheet Management
  Constitutes an Area in Which IFIs are
  Investing Human Capital                        5
  Section 3: Specific Non-Financial Risks          Summary Opinion
  Make Strong Corporate Governance
  Frameworks at IFIs Necessary                   9 Risk management is at the heart of banks’ financial intermediation process, and
  Appendix 1: Glossary of Arabic Terms             has assumed utmost importance at a time when complexity and volatility in
  Used in Islamic Finance                       11 financial markets have become both differentiating factors building competitive
  Appendix 2: The Five Core Principles of          advantages and sources of risk entanglement. Basel II and widespread write-
  Islamic Banking and Finance                   13
                                                   downs have highlighted the importance of sufficient capital adequacy and, more
  Appendix 3: Islamic Financial Institutions
  Rated by Moody’s                              14 importantly, set a framework for improving the overall risk management
  Appendix 4: IFSB’s Adjustments to Basel          architecture in banks. In rating financial institutions, Moody’s places great
  II’s Capital Adequacy Ratio                   15 emphasis on risk management frameworks and corporate governance, particularly
  Appendix 5: Moody’s Related Research          16 in fast-growing emerging markets where such factors tend to attract lower scores
                                                   than in more mature economic and business environments.
 Analyst Contacts:                                 Islamic financial institutions (IFIs) are no exception. Similarly to conventional
                                                   financial institutions, they face many challenges in adequately defining, identifying,
  Paris                  33.1.53.30.10.20          measuring, selecting, pricing and mitigating risks across business lines and asset
                                                   classes. The Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) has recently published a

19 Anouar Hassoune

  Vice President/Senior Credit Officer             standard for risk management in Islamic institutions, and this forms the basis for all
                                                   discussions between Moody’s analysts and bank management in this area.
  London                 44.20.7772.5454           Islamic banks’ balance-sheet structures indicate that there is a great diversity of
                                                   classifications on both the asset and liability side. Such variety affects the ease of

13 Adel Satel

  Managing Director                                comparison both between differing Islamic institutions and between Islamic
                                                   institutions and their conventional peers, making it difficult to apply just one
                                                   appropriate risk management approach. Therefore, the IFSB has prudently
                                                   adopted a principles-based approach. The IFSB standard lists 15 guiding
                                                   principles for risk management in IFIs. There is a general requirement followed by
                                                   those covering credit, equity investment, market, liquidity, rate-of-return and
                                                   operational risks. Overall, the main differences between these principles and those
                                                   appropriate for a conventional bank relate to five key areas:


Special Comment Moody’s Global Credit Research

 Risk Issues at Islamic Financial Institutions
                       „    The range of asset classes found in Islamic banks.
                       „    The relatively weak position of investment account holders.
                       „    The importance of the Shari’ah supervisory board and the bank’s ability to provide the board with
                            adequate information as well as abide by its rulings.
                       „    Rate-of-return risk.
                       „    New operational risks.
                       Notwithstanding the IFSB’s endeavour to provide the Islamic banking industry with a set of guidelines towards
                       best-practice risk management, we believe that a number of additional risk issues at IFIs deserve further
                       examination. This view stems from:
                       „    IFIs’ relatively short track record (modern Islamic banking has been in existence for only three decades,
                            and many Sukuk products less than a decade).
                       „    The fact that most Islamic banks are active in the developing world where transparency, corporate
                            governance and risk management at large are still works in progress.
                       „    The shortage of skilled risk management professionals familiar enough with the Shari’ah-compliant
                            banking universe.
                       The purpose of this report is precisely to define what differentiates IFIs in terms of their risk profiles,
                       highlighting the potential implications that such differences may have on the IFIs’ bank financial strength
                       ratings.
                       „    Section 1 tackles the issue of risk entanglement in IFIs’ asset portfolios – i.e. an inability to (easily) identify
                            and segregate differing sources of risk.
                       „    Section 2 explores the challenges IFIs face in terms of balance-sheet management.
                       „    Section 3 focuses on the non-financial risks to which IFIs are exposed in conducting their intermediation
                            business.
                       The main conclusions of this report are as follows:
                       „    In IFIs’ financing and investment contracts, risk categories of different natures are often entangled, a
                            constraint mitigated by the naturally strong asset collateralisation of their portfolios.
                       „    Balance-sheet management – including liquidity, investment, asset-liability management (ALM) and capital
                            management – constitutes a critical field where IFIs face a series of specific challenges that are difficult to
                            cope with.
                       „    Specific non-financial risks make it necessary for IFIs to build on, and adhere to, strong corporate
                            governance frameworks.

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Special Comment Moody’s Global Credit Research

  Risk Issues at Islamic Financial Institutions
                              Moody’s Acknowledges the Importance of the Islamic Financial
                              Industry
                              Islamic finance is a growing subset of the global financial system, and is increasingly becoming a
                              mainstream industry. Notwithstanding a series of specific features that somewhat distinguish IFIs
                              from a number of their conventional peers, the building blocks are very similar for every banking
                              institution. This explains why Moody’s analytical approach to Islamic issuers and issues is often
                              very similar, but not exactly equivalent, to that applied to conventional rated entities and securities. 1
                              Fundamentally, what makes Islamic finance special is that it limits or even sometimes forbids the
                              use of some tools (such as interest-based profits, trading of debts or speculative derivatives),
                              reducing those available to an ethical and moral subset. If fully adhering to the core principles of
                              financial Islam, Sukuk in particular should really be equity based, as should risk-sharing securities.
                              Indeed, venture capital and equity are the most common – and the most halal (lawful) – forms of
                              ethical finance, as all parties share risk and reward.
                              However, for the majority of existing institutional financings (in the form of Sukuk), investors ask for,
                              and indeed receive, debt securities. Equity is expensive, hence the structural engineering of asset-
                              backed, risk-sharing securities. Securitisation is the debt structure that best satisfies the underlying
                              profit-sharing principles of Shari’ah-compliant investment.
                              Moody's believes that knowledge of Islamic finance is key to understanding the drivers behind the
                              business model of Shari’ah-compliant issuers and the structure of the securities they issue. This
                              goes beyond agnostically focusing on the balance sheet or legal structure, deconstructing all the
                              risks to their base components (with sufficient information from reporting documents) and then
                              analysing the credit risk in a “conventional” way, which could also be possible but would probably
                              constitute a weaker approach. However, many self-interested parties propagate their own
                              accounting standards, regulation, opinions, rules and principles. While Islamic finance is always an
                              emotive topic, diversity creates heterogeneity, which we need to be aware of and cope with.
                              Moody’s is committed to behaving with special care in presenting its views and fine-tuning its
                              policies, ensuring due acknowledgement and awareness of the importance of the Islamic financial
                              industry. In serving the widening Islamic investor base, we recognise the particular features of
                              Shari’ah-compliant instruments, but we do not accord such instruments special treatment beyond
                              that of any other “new” complex financial securities we may be asked to rate. In other words, we
                              acknowledge the innovations and complexities attached to Islamic securities, but we also recognise
                              that, in most cases, our rating criteria and methodologies are flexible enough to embrace the subtle
                              specificities of Shari’ah-compliant issuers and issues.

1

  See Moody’s report entitled “A Guide to Rating Islamic Financial Institutions”, April 2006 (97226), and Appendix 5 for Moody’s related research.
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Special Comment Moody’s Global Credit Research

  Risk Issues at Islamic Financial Institutions
                         Section 1: Risk Entanglement Within IFIs’ Asset
                         Classes is Mitigated by a Naturally Strong
                         Collateralisation of Credit Portfolios
                         In IFIs’ financing and investment contracts, it is often challenging to distinguish between risk
                         categories. In other words, it is generally difficult to distinguish between the market and credit risks attached
                         to a financial transaction abiding by the rules of Shari’ah-compliant financing and investment. Islamic financial
                         intermediation is based on a series of contractual agreements, known as murabaha, ijara, mudharaba,
                         musharaka, salam and istisna, among others. 2 From a financial reporting perspective, all contracts are
                         generally included in one broad line item called “Islamic financing and investment”. In some cases where the
                         IFI has adopted IFRS as the set of applicable accounting rules, the banking book is reported separately from
                         the trading book, but in this case also the distinction remains more formal than substantial.
                         In a large number of contracts, risk categories of a different nature are entangled. For example, in an
                         ijara contract, which resembles a financial lease, the IFI buys an asset that is subsequently leased or rented to
                         a customer against periodic rental payments. The IFI remains the owner of the leased asset throughout the
                         duration of the lease contract, leaving the bank exposed to the residual value of the asset at maturity or should
                         the lessee be willing to terminate the ijara relationship prior to maturity. The management of leased assets’
                         residual value is a feature that differs materially from credit risk management and assumes access to robust
                         and reliable market data as to asset-price volatility and behaviour across economic cycles and business
                         conditions, all the more so as IFIs tend to run a portfolio of asset inventories that they buy and then sell or
                         lease.
                         Inventory management is another aspect that separates IFIs, from a risk management perspective, from their
                         conventional peers. Similar issues arise when it comes to diminishing musharaka contracts (co-ownership
                         contracts whereby the customer’s ownership share in a financed asset increases as principal is incrementally
                         repaid to the bank). Should the customer default, the IFI’s share in the financed asset is used as collateral, the
                         value of which might be volatile and naturally subject to scrutiny and management independently from the
                         customer’s perceived creditworthiness. Diminishing musharaka contracts are increasingly used as a financing
                         mechanism for Shari’ah-compliant home purchase, particularly in Dubai.
                         Similarly, in istisna (project finance) contracts, IFIs are deemed to remain the beneficial owners of financed
                         assets until the “borrowing” company pays back the final instalment under the istisna agreement. In the case
                         where the borrower defaults before the istisna’s maturity, the IFI is entitled to dispose of the financed assets,
                         which are generally illiquid because they are specific to the nature of the plant, the industry or the enterprise to
                         which the IFI’s funds were initially allocated. In the case of default, the IFI – more than any conventional bank
                         – becomes a merchant, behaving in the field of commerce rather than in that of pure financial intermediation.
                         This puts additional pressure on IFIs to equip themselves with the correct technical and professional expertise
                         for both credit assessment and the management of underlying asset valuation, trading and liquidity, should
                         loan foreclosure and collateral realisation occur.
                         Underlying all these contracts is the general favouring by Shari’ah of the principles of equity whereby
                         financiers are encouraged to share risk and profits with the “borrower”. This is in marked contrast to the simple
                         and isolated credit risk associated with debt instruments and Sukuk instruments utilising “par value purchase
                         undertakings”.
                         Such constraints attached to the status of IFIs as sellers and buyers of tangible goods – as opposed to
                         conventional banks intermediating between cash inflows and outflows with different maturities – also
                         have risk-mitigating benefits. One rule of the five key principles of modern Islamic finance 3 states that any
                         financial transaction should be backed by a tangible, identifiable underlying asset. This is a powerful way for
                         the IFI to secure, at least in principle, strong access to the collateral backing the transaction. In short, IFIs
                         naturally have a high level of collateralisation on their credit portfolios, and thus are in a position to somewhat
                         reduce their economic, if not regulatory, exposures at default. In addition, IFIs have in principle greater visibility

2

  See the glossary of Arabic terms in Appendix 1.

3

  See Appendix 2 for a complete description of the five core principles underlying Islamic banking and finance.
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                       in terms of the economic allocation of the funds they supply to borrowers. Indeed, contrary to a conventional
                       financial institution where a customer is not obliged to disclose the purpose of its loan, the IFI finances the
                       acquisition of an identifiable asset for which legal ownership belongs, in most cases, to the bank until full
                       repayment is made. Therefore, thanks to this information as to the usage of borrowers’ funds, IFIs should be in
                       a better position to manage their credit portfolios in terms of sector diversification. Sector diversification is all
                       the more important from a capital perspective as Islamic banks usually face concentration risks by name and
                       geography, and are also skewed heavily towards real estate financing and investment, further weighing on the
                       quality of their assets, and thus on their credit ratings. It is indeed a fact of life that most Islamic banks are
                       domestic financial institutions operating in undiversified emerging economies, where systemic risks are higher
                       than average and credit as well as investment portfolios display low levels of granularity.
                       Section 2: Balance-Sheet Management Constitutes an
                       Area in Which IFIs are Investing Human Capital
                       Beyond the challenges posed by risk entanglement in IFIs’ asset classes, partially mitigated by the more
                       robust liens over collateral described in Section 1, Islamic banks are also specifically more exposed to:
                       „     Several asset risks, in particular investment and liquidity risk.
                       „     A number of liability risks, given the unavailability of a wide range of non-Shari’ah funding sources to which
                             conventional banks can easily gain access.
                       „     Transformation risks raising the issue of how specific ALM should be at IFIs.
                       Each of these three issues is discussed in the following paragraphs.
                       Investment allocation and liquidity management continue to vex IFIs’
                       balance-sheet managers.
                       The limited scope of eligible asset classes for IFIs increases concentration in investment portfolios,
                       which tends to be mitigated by a lower appetite for speculative transactions. Financial Islam forbids
                       gharar (uncertainty) and maysir (speculation). Therefore, IFIs are naturally crowded out from the high-
                       risk/high-return leveraged and/or structured investment asset classes. As such instruments tend to be, in one
                       form or another, based either on interest (riba) or derivatives (not commonly allowed by Shari’ah supervisory
                       boards although Islamic “equivalents” are appearing), their technical eligibility is in most cases difficult to
                       justify. IFIs thus limit the scope of their investment strategies to plain vanilla asset classes such as stocks,
                       Sukuk and real estate, notwithstanding their cash reserves in the form of short-term international murabahas
                       for liquidity purposes. IFIs also tend to build portfolios of participations in the capital of a set of financial and
                       industrial companies held for strategic purposes; usually, mudaraba contracts are used, as is the case for
                       Shari’ah-compliant investment and/or private equity firms such as Arcapita Bank (not rated) and Gulf Finance
                       House (not rated) in Bahrain. A limited range of permissible asset allocations leads to concentration risks in
                       IFIs’ investment portfolios, by asset class, lawful sector and also usually by name. The immaturity of
                       securitisation in the region means that this financial technology has not been widely used to remove such
                       excess concentrations from the balance sheet, although 2007 did see the first few transactions of commercial
                       property loans and residential ijarah “mortgages”. In particular, Sukuk are scarce and constitute an illiquid
                       market where investors tend to stick to a buy-and-hold approach rather than move towards more active bond
                       trading. The size of the Sukuk market globally is only about US$100 billion today, less than one-third of which
                       is made up of euro-denominated Sukuk listed on international markets.
                       Liquidity management is far from being an easy task for IFIs. Despite the efforts of the Central Bank of
                       Bahrain (CBB) and others to provide a range of liquid instruments in which Islamic banks can place their
                       surplus cash, there is still a great shortage of liquid instruments, which means IFIs tend to be more illiquid than
                       their conventional peers and have more non-earning assets on their books. Indeed, most instruments used for
                       liquidity management purposes are interest based. Typically, Islamic banks would place their excess cash
                       reserves into short-term interbank murabahas, at a cost compared to conventional banks. Indeed, short-term
                       murabahas resemble money market interbank placements, but as murabaha contracts make it necessary for
                       commodity brokers to be involved, costs for managing liquidity might be high. As a consequence, IFIs are truly

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                       – and often more visibly – subject to the constant trade-off between profitability and liquidity in a binary way.
                       Contrary to conventional banks, which benefit from a continuum of asset classes displaying different
                       characteristics in terms of liquidity and profitability, IFIs at this stage of the development of the Islamic financial
                       industry barely have an alternative: profitable but highly illiquid asset classes (such as credit exposures and
                       Sukuk); or highly liquid short-term murabahas with international investment-grade banks, but at a cost.
                       Fortunately, yields on Islamic assets in many markets are sufficient for the cost of managing liquidity, because
                       “borrowers” are often willing to pay a premium for the Islamic nature of the banking relationship they build with
                       the IFI. In the future, however, as the industry matures, margins might come under pressure and the trade-off
                       between liquidity and profitability might lead to an increase in IFIs’ risk appetite, provided that instruments for
                       liquidity management purposes are not designed for the benefit of IFIs. In Saudi Arabia, the Saudi Arabian
                       Monetary Agency (SAMA) has developed an ad-hoc instrument called mutajara, which behaves like a
                       repurchase agreement (repo). Contractually, it is a term deposit with SAMA or other financial institutions, but
                       75% of this deposit can be “repoed” at SAMA at any point in time for liquidity purposes. In Bahrain, the CBB is
                       also working on developing a Shari’ah-compliant repo scheme. Finally, the Sukuk market is growing fast.
                       Governments and government-related institutions have made it clear on several occasions that their role on
                       the Sukuk market would not be limited to that of a benchmark-setter; issuing sovereign and public-sector
                       Sukuk would also contribute to enhancing the overall liquidity of the market. IFIs need this to weather possible
                       liquidity shortages in light of unforeseen events. For instance, during the financial crisis in Turkey during 2000-
                       2001, IFIs faced severe liquidity problems and one, Ihlas Finance, was closed.
                       A limited range of possible funding sources leads to concentrated liabilities,
                       imbalanced funding mixes and stretched capital management strategies.
                       IFIs’ wholesale liabilities tend to be concentrated. IFIs are generally well entrenched in retail banking,
                       which gives them access to a large, and increasing, pool of relatively cheap deposits, when these are not in
                       the form of Profit-Sharing Investment Accounts (PSIAs). Apart from retail accounts, which are in most cases
                       both granular and stable across business cycles, IFIs also resort to wholesale creditors for funding. So far,
                       Sukuk have not served as the main term funding source: only a handful of IFIs have issued medium-term
                       Sukuk so far, or are expected to do so in the near future, such as Sharjah Islamic Bank (not rated), Abu Dhabi
                       Islamic Bank (A2/P-1, stable) and Albaraka Banking Group (not rated). For asset-backed Sukuk, an Islamic
                       bank needs to originate enough income-generating contracts, the underlying assets of which are owned by the
                       bank (like in ijara and/or musharaka) for the Sukuk to be possible. However, the majority of Sukuk issued so
                       far, particularly in the Gulf region, have been asset based rather than asset backed, with “par value
                       repurchase undertaking” structures whereby the market value of the underlying assets bears little or no
                       relation to the funding amounts raised. Also, as these are not true-sale structures, any non-liquid assets can
                       be used. Therefore, IFIs typically raise short- to long-term funds from bank and non-bank customers, who tend
                       to be price sensitive, relatively unstable (except those from the public sector) and concentrated. Deposit
                       concentration is generally a negative rating factor for IFIs.
                       IFIs’ funding continuums remain imbalanced. Between deposits in their various forms (qardh hasan,
                       PSIAs, murabaha) and Tier 1 capital, IFIs have so far had access to a limited number of alternative funding
                       sources with different features in terms of priority of claims, ratings and thus cost. Only very few subordinated
                       Sukuk have been issued so far. Malayan Banking Berhad (A3/P-1, stable) in Malaysia, for example, issued a
                       junior Sukuk (rated Baa1 on 11 April 2007) eligible as Tier 2 debt under Bank Negara Malaysia’s regulation.
                       Bank securitisation, other Tier 2 instruments, Tier 3 short-term debt to cover the regulatory capital charge of
                       market risk, as well as plain vanilla and innovative hybrid capital notes, are inexistent in the Islamic financial
                       industry. One of the reasons behind such a vacuum in the wide – but often grey – area between deposit and
                       core capital of IFIs lies in the fact that a number of Shari’ah supervisory boards have been uncomfortable so
                       far with the concept of differentiating between priorities of claims of various classes of stakeholders in the case
                       of liquidation.
                       Therefore, IFIs’ capital management strategies tend to be stretched. Allocation of economic capital to
                       business units using risk-adjusted return-on-capital methodologies, for example, is barely applied, except in a
                       handful of well-advanced institutions globally. However, even in the conventional universe, the allocation of
                       economic capital to business units is still limited to a relatively small number of institutions that adopt more
                       sophisticated risk management techniques. Therefore, it is not surprising that advanced approaches for

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Special Comment Moody’s Global Credit Research

 Risk Issues at Islamic Financial Institutions
                       economic capital computation have not so far been widely adopted by IFIs in emerging markets. Capital
                       allocation tends to be inefficient at this stage, although this is not disadvantageous to a large extent as: (i)
                       capitalisation ratios are high, and capital is not scarce in the geographies where IFIs are most active (typically
                       in the Gulf region); (ii) asset yields are wide enough to serve record ROEs; and (iii) actual yields on equity far
                       exceed shareholders’ required rates of return. In the longer run, however, competitive pressure will drive
                       margins down: customers will become more educated about the concepts and principles underlying Islamic
                       banking and finance and will tend to be less willing to accept lower returns on their qardh hasan deposits and
                       switch more naturally to PSIAs, driving IFIs’ funding costs up, and capital could become scarcer given the
                       emergence of new investment opportunities outside the banking sector. All of these elements could easily
                       change the nature of the IFIs’ profitability equation, with lower net returns directed towards more demanding
                       shareholders. A solution to the conundrum would be to let capitalisation ratios dwindle gradually to protect
                       returns to shareholders while building assets more efficiently above targeted hurdle rates. Funding would
                       therefore attract less core equity and more alternative refinancing vehicles such as Sukuk (including
                       subordinated, convertible and exchangeable Sukuk), hybrid instruments, securitisation techniques, various
                       classes of PSIAs and other deposit-like tradable short- to medium-term notes. In such a context, credit ratings
                       will become even more necessary than they are today.
                       How specific should ALM be at IFIs?
                       Controlling margin rates is at the heart of IFIs’ ALM. The management of interest-rate risk is one of the
                       fundamental tasks of conventional banks’ ALM committees. Similarly, IFIs face the same issue of identifying,
                       measuring and controlling the risk exposure stemming from the expected cash inflows and outflows of assets
                       and liabilities according to their economic maturities. Like conventional banks, IFIs have both a portfolio
                       yielding fixed income over the duration of contracts and a portfolio generating floating rates of profit.
                       However, unlike conventional banks, the charge attached to funding costs is supposed to be a function of
                       asset yields, as per the core principle of profit sharing underlying Islamic banking and finance, which is at the
                       heart of PSIAs. Should there be no smoothing of returns to PSIA-holders, those IFIs that resort materially to
                       PSIAs for funding would in theory be less profitable than conventional banks when the interest- or profit-rate
                       cycle is at its peak, because when conventional banks would face a predetermined cost of funds, IFIs would
                       on the contrary be in a position to share more returns with PSIA-holders.
                       The opposite scenario would also be true: when the interest- or profit-rate cycle trends down towards its
                       trough, IFIs would buffer the decline by distributing less profit to PSIA-holders, whereas conventional banks
                       would have to absorb the same cost of funds at a time when net asset yields had shrunk, therefore reducing
                       more substantially their margins.
                       Another difference between Islamic and conventional banks is their respective capacity to use derivatives to
                       hedge their loan books against adverse interest-/profit-rate scenarios. IFIs have a natural preference for short-
                       term exposures or contractual credit terms that would allow for quick repricing schemes, such as ijara or
                       diminishing musharaka, which typically reprice every quarter, behaving like floating profit-rate loans. These
                       mechanisms make it less necessary for Islamic banks to resort to (expensive) profit-rate swaps for hedging
                       purposes. Only less than a handful of IFIs to date have had access to such hedging instruments, so far very
                       scarce, illiquid, based on over-the-counter arrangements and thus still quite costly.
                       In the longer term, IFIs are expected to be increasingly exposed to project finance and mortgage lending, two
                       of the most likely and powerful engines for the future momentum of Gulf banking markets. In both lines of
                       business, an IFI’s capacity to supply long-term fixed-rate financing would be viewed as a key competitive
                       advantage. From a balance-sheet-management perspective, the IFI’s corresponding capacity to manage the
                       derived profit-rate risk would be critical, particularly under Basel II’s Pillar 2, which Islamic banks will have to
                       comply with sooner rather than later. A prerequisite for more efficient balance-sheet management is the
                       gradual establishment of deeper, more liquid, more efficient and more affordable derivatives and securitisation
                       markets in compliance with Shari’ah financial laws.
                       What prevails in profit-rate risk is also valid for the management of currency risk. In terms of currency
                       risk, IFIs have a natural tendency to prefer a straightforward back-to-back approach to foreign-exchange risk
                       mitigation, which is not in most cases the most price-efficient way to handle this risk category. Shari’ah-
                       compliant financial derivatives already exist, but are widely developed. Incentives are limited, however, as

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                       most Islamic banks are active in the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), where local currencies are pegged
                       either to the U.S. dollar or to a basket of international currencies, reducing tremendously their volatility. In the
                       longer run, GCC economies might converge towards a single regional currency, the anchor of which might not
                       be the U.S. dollar or the euro, but potentially a wider mix of internationally recognised currencies. This would in
                       turn allow for some discrepancy between the reporting currency of GCC-based IFIs and the various cash flows
                       they generate from multiples geographies. This will become even more obvious as IFIs such as Kuwait
                       Finance House (KFH; Aa3/P-1, stable), Al Rajhi Bank (A1/P-1, stable) and Qatar Islamic Bank (not rated) are
                       expanding abroad in a more ordered and ambitious manner, sometimes in other emerging markets including
                       the relatively volatile economies of Pakistan, Turkey, Sudan and even Yemen. These jurisdictions are
                       increasingly the key to the future growth of IFIs as they have far larger Muslim populations and are
                       comparatively underbanked.
                       Can IFIs avoid combining shareholders’ and PSIA-holders’ funds, as the theory would suggest? The
                       liabilities of Islamic banks may – in common with assets – have very different profiles and need careful
                       management. The biggest issue remains the position of PSIAs. Juristically, PSIAs are a form of limited term
                       equity rather than debt claims on the bank, and therefore losses relating to the assets they fund should not
                       affect the bank’s own capital. However, Islamic banks are not immune from runs or panic withdrawals, and
                       PSIA-holders typically have the right to withdraw their funds at short notice, foregoing their share of the profit
                       for the most recent period and also their share of any losses that might have arisen.
                       Unrestricted PSIA funds will generally be combined with those of the bank’s shareholders who may have quite
                       different risk appetites, as PSIA-holders are generally looking for a safe investment, similar to deposit account
                       holders in conventional banks. In practice, the treatment of the fund-combining issue is handled differently.
                       Shamil Bank of Bahrain (not rated) has so far applied a strict distinction, for management account and return
                       computation purposes, between assets financed by shareholders’ funds and what the bank calls “unrestricted
                       investment accounts”. Conversely, KFH does not explicitly segregate classes of liabilities and prefers a more
                       flexible and convenient way of computing a total gross return on assets, and then applying both a musharaka
                       and mudaraba fee to isolate returns to PSIA-holders.
                       Notwithstanding such practical differences among IFIs in both combining funding sources and
                       computing returns, “displaced commercial risk” is always at stake, giving birth to various mechanisms
                       of smoothing returns. As demonstrated below, the practice of smoothing investment returns through “profit
                       equalisation reserves”, “investment risk reserves” and active management of mudarib fees is a very common
                       feature of IFIs to avoid random, business- and confidence-driven liquidity crises. “Displaced commercial risk”
                       (DCR) is indeed a term reflecting the risk of liquidity suddenly drying up as a consequence of massive
                       withdrawals should the IFI’s assets yield returns for PSIA-holders lower than expected, or worse, negative
                       rates of profits. As a matter of fact, a negative return on PSIAs would not constitute a breach of contractual
                       obligations, as PSIAs are supposed to absorb losses other than those triggered by misconduct or negligence,
                       and therefore would not be considered a default. Nevertheless, default might be subsequently triggered by the
                       very tight liquidity conditions the IFI would face in the case of massive runs on deposits. While this is in
                       keeping with the risk-sharing principles encouraged by Islam, it remains to be seen how such account holders
                       would react to losses on their accounts.
                       Some banking regulators have taken the view that this practice of smoothing returns results in a modification
                       of the legal attributes of the PSIA such that Islamic banks have a “constructive obligation” to continue
                       smoothing returns. This means that the practice of smoothing becomes obligatory, and unrestricted PSIA-
                       holders effectively have the same rights as conventional depositors.
                       Managing DCR efficiently is a subtle, dynamic exercise. Traditionally, there are four lines of defence
                       against DCR. Investment risk reserves (IRRs) and the bank’s mudarib fee tend to absorb expected losses;
                       profit equalisation reserves (PERs) are used to cover unexpected losses of manageable magnitude; and,
                       ultimately, shareholders’ funds stand against unexpected losses with a higher net impact.
                       IRRs are built from periodic provisions for expected, statistical losses. IRRs come as a deduction from the
                       asset portfolio, in the same way that loan-loss reserves are deducted from conventional banks’ loan books.
                       IRRs are gradually built from the periodic provision charge equivalent to the expected losses attached to IFIs’
                       investment portfolios, transiting through the IFI’s income statement. Should actual losses be in line with IRRs,

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                        there is limited likelihood that DCR would materialise into a bank run and thus into a liquidity crisis. Indeed,
                        returns to PSIA-holders would not be negatively affected. IRRs are generally deducted from income
                        distributable to PSIA-holders after the PERs are accounted for, and after the mudarib fee is captured by the
                        IFI.
                        Reducing mudarib fees to protect returns to PSIA-holders remains a management decision. PSIAs are the
                        combination of a musharaka contract (whereby PSIA-holders and shareholders bring funds to the banking
                        venture) and a mudaraba contract (whereby the IFI’s managers allocate PSIA-holders’ funds to various asset
                        classes on their behalf). Therefore, the IFI is eligible, under the mudaraba contract, for a mudarib
                        (management) fee, which typically constitutes 20-40% of asset yields net of PERs. In case asset yields
                        deteriorate beyond levels absorbable by IRRs, the IFI’s management team, in line with the board’s formal
                        approval, could reduce management fees ex post, which it can do contractually (although unilateral increases
                        of mudarib fees are strictly forbidden). This is viewed as a gift of the bank to PSIA-holders to earn their loyalty
                        across the cycle. Typically, mudarib fee reductions tend to apply when unexpected losses (beyond expected
                        losses handled by IRRs) are manageable one-offs. When exceeding a certain threshold, losses would be
                        covered by PERs.
                        PERs, a grey area in the capital continuum, collectively belong to PSIA-holders for smoothing their returns.
                        PERs are accounted for before any computation of the mudarib fee or IRRs. PERs are extracted from gross
                        asset yields. Their purpose is to provide an excess return to PSIA-holders in periods where assets have
                        performed worse than expected, and therefore when yields on PSIAs might be lower for a given IFI than for its
                        Islamic and conventional peers. PERs collectively belong to present and future PSIA-holders, although past
                        PSIA-holders (who might not be current or future customers of the IFI) may have contributed to building them.
                        This is in line with the principle according to which the various stakeholders of an IFI are subject to collective
                        solidarity. PERs being a future claim of PSIA-holders on the bank, they are not part of capital in accounting
                        terms, and thus are not subject to distribution to shareholders. From a regulatory perspective, however, the
                        treatment suggested by the IFSB is very subtle, just like the treatment of PSIAs for the computation of capital
                        adequacy ratios of IFIs under Basel II. 4 The key principle underlying the IFSB’s approach is that PERs (and
                        PSIAs overall) have a loss-absorbing feature, the intensity of which would not merit inclusion in eligible capital
                        (the numerator of Basel II’s capital adequacy ratio), but would rather allow for some deductions from computed
                        risk-weighted assets (the denominator of Basel II’s capital adequacy ratio), depending on the
                        conservativeness of the regulator in terms of the degree to which PSIAs and PERs would be deemed capital-
                        like instruments.
                        Shareholders’ funds constitute the ultimate line of defence against DCR. Ultimately, should IRRs, mudarib fee
                        cuts and PERs be insufficient to protect depositors from excessive volatility regarding PSIA returns,
                        shareholders can lawfully use their own capital to compensate for possible losses or PSIA-holders’ opportunity
                        costs. Shareholders’ funds have in the past been used to compensate holders of investment accounts, such
                        as in 1998 for Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC (A1/P-1, stable) and in 1990 for KFH. In both cases, PSIA-holders
                        suffered no losses.
                        Section 3: Specific Non-Financial Risks Make Strong
                        Corporate Governance Frameworks at IFIs Necessary
                        Reputation risk is critical for IFIs. As a matter of image, loan foreclosure and security realisation, described
                        as a relative strength of Islamic banks, are double-edged swords. Taking into account the expected take-off in
                        mortgage lending in the GCC countries, the question of loan foreclosure and collateral seizing may be critical
                        going forward. An IFI can hardly feel comfortable in the case of a Muslim family defaulting on the financial
                        obligation pertaining to its primary residential property. In a number of jurisdictions, such a scenario would
                        immediately trigger legal action leading the (conventional) bank to take full ownership of the collateralised
                        property, at the expense of the borrower, who would be forced to relocate to an alternative, often smaller,
                        home. In the context of the Muslim societies where IFIs are most active, it would be quite damaging for the
                        IFI’s “ethical” reputation to leave a Muslim family homeless for the sake of profit, and then sell the seized
                        property post foreclosure on the secondary market for real estate. Islamic finance presents itself as an ethical

4

  See Appendix 4 for further details on how the IFSB takes into consideration PERs and assets financed by PSIAs in the computation of IFIs’ capital
  adequacy ratios under adjusted Basel II guidelines. Reference is also made to IFSB’s published standard on Islamic banks’ capital adequacy.
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                       alternative to conventional banking. Therefore, should mortgage financing pick up in a number of Islamic
                       jurisdiction, reputation risk management would call for a number of mitigating mechanisms, including mutual
                       insurance (takaful) attached to housing loans, securitisation to separate origination/commercial objectives from
                       risk issues and the capacity of IFIs to run at all times a portfolio of properties in order to manage the credit
                       migration and delinquency scenarios of defaulting families resorting to Shari’ah-compliant mortgage finance.
                       More broadly, reputation risk might stem from the misconception that IFIs, through zakat, might be close to
                       violent militant groups. In order to avoid even the perception of such involvement, IFIs have materially invested
                       in know-your-customers (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) systems in order to enhance their processes
                       and procedures for the early detection and reporting of doubtful and fraudulent transactions, sometimes at a
                       heavy cost. However, such investments are not specific to IFIs, as many other conventional banks in the
                       Middle East have also strengthened their KYC and AML systems in recent years.
                       The competitive dynamics of IFIs could enhance Shari’ah arbitrage, itself a component of Shari’ah-
                       compliant risk. IFIs compete head on with conventional banks, but they also position themselves as
                       contenders within the Islamic financial industry, sometimes internationally, if not globally. Shari’ah is subject to
                       interpretation, particularly in the field of economic and financial transactions (known as the fiqh al-muaamalat).
                       Therefore, from one market to another, from one school of thought (madhab) to another, and even from one
                       Shari’ah scholar to another, the fine line between what is considered lawful at a point in time and what is not
                       considered lawful can be so thin that fatawa may differ substantially. Therefore, Muslim investors and
                       originators might be tempted by Shari’ah arbitrage, which is the risk of resorting to the most liberal
                       interpretation of financial Islam for business purposes. This could be damaging from a macro-industrial
                       perspective, should the whole Islamic financial industry be overly heterogeneous to the point where
                       fragmentation becomes unavoidable and durable. Shari’ah arbitrage might also lead an IFI to crowd itself out
                       of the market because it would not be considered sufficiently Shari’ah compliant by its constituency, the final
                       decision-making body as to Shari’ah compliance that is beyond the reach of any fatwa. Of course, Moody’s
                       does not opine on the Shari’ah compliance of an IFI, its products and services, or of Sukuk. However, Shari’ah
                       compliance risk is a factor in assessing an IFI’s creditworthiness. Shari’ah compliance risk can be interpreted
                       as a subset of the broader category of legal and compliance risk, which itself is a subset of operational risks.
                       Scarcity of talent might impede, for a while, the growth dynamics of Islamic banks. Senior officers of
                       most Islamic banks, when asked to comment on the most critical challenges for their institutions and for the
                       industry as a whole, would inevitably rank the scarcity of qualified human resources as the most striking
                       weakness of the whole industry. There is a clear, identifiable and sometimes quantifiable shortage of skilled
                       managers, officers and clerks in the Shari’ah-compliant financial universe. Not only is the industry growing
                       fast, triggering pressure on existing staff to absorb growing volumes, but a number of new entrants are also
                       entering the arena: markets like Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Malaysia and Singapore, among
                       others, have witnessed the incorporation of a large number of new IFIs announcing authorised capital of
                       unprecedented size. Newcomers must be staffed and newly trained employees are scarce because education,
                       training and experience take time to build exploitable competences. The easiest and most effective way to
                       quickly staff freshly instituted organisations is to acquire them from existing banks, creating visible pressure on
                       the labour market in the entire industry. Risks including management discontinuity, excessive growth of
                       personnel expenses, innovation disincentives and lack of experienced staff might all damage an IFI’s capacity
                       to build competitive advantages, and ultimately its market position, reputation and business model. Of course,
                       this would not be without rating implications.

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                       Appendix 1: Glossary of Arabic Terms Used in Islamic
                       Finance
                       adl: a trusted and honourable person, selected by both parties to a transaction. Somewhat analogous to a
                       trustee.
                       amana/amanah: literally means reliability, trustworthiness, loyalty and honesty, and is an important value
                       of Islamic society in mutual dealings. It also refers to deposits in trust, sometimes on a contractual basis.
                       bai/bay: contract of sale, sale and purchase.
                       bai al-salam: advance payment for goods. While normally the goods need to exist before a sale can be
                       completed, in this case the goods are defined (such as quantity, quality, workmanship) and the date of delivery
                       fixed. Usually applied in the agricultural sector where money is advanced for inputs to receive a share in the
                       crop.
                       fatwa (pl. fatawa): an authoritative legal opinion based on the Shari’ah.
                       fiqh: practical Islamic jurisprudence. Can be regarded as the jurists’ understanding of the Shari’ah.
                       gharar: uncertainty in a contract or sale in which the goods may or may not be available or exist (e.g. the
                       bird in the air or the fish in the water). Also, ambiguity in the consideration or terms of a contract – as such, the
                       contract would not be valid.
                       hadith: the narrative record of the sayings, doings and implicit approval or disapproval of the Prophet.
                       halal: permissible, allowed, lawful. In Islam, there are activities, professions, contracts and transactions that
                       are explicitly prohibited (haram) by the Qur’an or the Sunnah. Barring these, all others are halal. An activity
                       may be economically sound but may not be allowed in Islamic society if it is not permitted by the Shari’ah.
                       Hanifite laws: an Islamic school of law founded by Iman Abu Hanifa. Followers of this school are known as
                       Hanafis.
                       haram: unlawful, forbidden (see halal). Describes activities, professions, contracts and transactions that are
                       explicitly prohibited by the Qur’an or the Sunnah.
                       hawala: bill of exchange, promissory note, cheque or draft. A debtor passes on the responsibility of payment
                       of his debt to a third party who owes the former a debt. Thus, the responsibility of payment is ultimately shifted
                       to a third party. Hawala is used in developing countries as a mechanism for settling international transactions
                       by book transfers.
                       ijarah/ijara: lease, hire or the transfer of ownership of a service for a specified period for an agreed lawful
                       consideration. This is an arrangement under which an Islamic bank leases equipment, a building or other
                       facility to a client for an agreed rental.
                       ijarah wa iqtina/ijarah muntahla bittamleek: a leasing contract used by Islamic financial
                       institutions that includes a promise by the lessor to transfer the ownership of the leased property to the lessee,
                       either at the end of the lease or by stages during the term of the contract.
                       ijtihad: literally effort, exertion, industry, diligence. As a legal term, it means the effort of a qualified Islamic
                       jurist to interpret or reinterpret sources of Islamic law in cases where no clear directives exist.
                       istisna’a/istisna: a contract of sale of specified goods to be manufactured with an obligation on the
                       manufacturer to deliver them on completion. It is a condition in istisna that the seller provides either the raw
                       material or the cost of manufacturing the goods.
                       maisir/maysir: the forbidden act of gambling or playing games of chance with the intention of making an
                       easy or unearned profit.

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                       mudaraba/mudarabah: a form of contract in which one party (the rab-al-maal) brings capital and the
                       other (the mudarib) personal effort. The proportionate share in profit is determined by mutual consent, but the
                       loss, if any, is borne by the owner of the capital, unless the loss has been caused by negligence or violation of
                       the terms of the contract by the mudarib. A mudaraba is typically conducted between an Islamic financial
                       institution or fund as mudarib and investment account holders as providers of funds.
                       mudarib: the managing partner or entrepreneur in a mudaraba contract (see above).
                       murabaha: a contract of sale with an agreed profit mark-up on the cost. There are two types of murabaha
                       sale: in the first type, the Islamic bank purchases the goods and makes them available for sale without any
                       prior promise from a customer to purchase them, and this is termed a normal or spot murabaha; the second
                       type involves a promise from a customer to purchase the item from the bank, and this is called murabaha to
                       the purchase order. In this latter case, there is a pre-agreed selling price that includes the pre-agreed profit
                       mark-up. Normally, it involves the bank granting the customer a murabaha credit facility with deferred payment
                       terms, but this is not an essential element.
                       musharaka/musharakah: an agreement under which the Islamic bank provides funds that are mingled
                       with the funds of the business enterprise and possibly others. All providers of capital are entitled to participate
                       in management, but are not necessarily obliged to do so. The profit is distributed among the partners in a pre-
                       determined manner, but the losses, if any, are borne by the partners in proportion to their capital contribution.
                       It is not permitted to stipulate otherwise.
                       qard al hasana/qard hassan: a virtuous loan in which there is no interest or mark-up. The borrower
                       must return the principal sum in the future without any increase.
                       rab-al-maal: the investor or owner of capital in a mudaraba contract (see above).
                       rahn: a mortgage or pledge.
                       riba: interest. Sometimes equated with usury, but its meaning is broader. The literal meaning is an excess or
                       increase, and its prohibition is meant to distinguish between an unlawful exchange in which there is a clear
                       advantage to one party in contrast to a mutually beneficial and lawful exchange.
                       riba al-fadi riba al-buyu: a sale transaction in which a commodity is exchanged for the same commodity
                       but unequal in amount or quality, or the excess over what is justified by the counter-value in an
                       exchange/business transaction.
                       salam: a contract for the purchase of a commodity for deferred delivery in exchange for immediate payment.
                       Shari’a/Shariah/Shari’ah: in legal terms, the law as extracted from the sources of law (the Qur’an and
                       the Sunnah). However, Shari’ah rules do not always function as rules of law as they incorporate “obligations,
                       duties and moral considerations that serve to foster obedience to the Almighty”.
                       Sukuk: participation securities, coupons, investment certificates.
                       Sunnah: the way of the Prophet Mohammed including his sayings, deeds, approvals and disapprovals as
                       preserved in the hadith literature. It is the second source of revelation after the Qur’an.
                       takaful: a Shari’ah-compliant system of insurance based on the principle of mutual support. The company’s
                       role is limited to managing the operations and investing the contributions.
                       tawarruq: literally monetisation. The term is used to describe a mode of financing, similar to a murabaha
                       transaction, where the commodity sold is not required by the borrower but is bought on deferred terms and
                       then sold to a third party for a lower amount of cash, so becoming “monetised”.
                       ummah: the community or nation. Used to refer to the worldwide community of Muslims.
                       wakala: agency, an agency contract that generally includes in its terms a fee for the agent.
                       zakah/zakat: a tax that is prescribed by Islam on all persons having wealth above an exemption limit at a
                       rate fixed by the Shari’ah. Its objective is to collect a portion of the wealth of the well-to-do and distribute it to
                       the needy. The way it is distributed is set out in the Qur’an. It may be collected by the state, but otherwise it is
                       down to each individual to distribute the zakat.

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                       Appendix 2: The Five Core Principles of Islamic Banking
                       and Finance
                       Islamic banking and finance essentially abides by five core rules, three being banning principles and two being
                       positive obligations:
                       „    The ban on interest (riba). No financial transaction should be based on the payment or receipt of interest.
                            Profit from indebtedness or the trading of debts is seen to be unethical. Instead, the investor and investee
                            should share in the risks and profits generated from a venture, an asset or a project.
                       „    The ban on uncertainty (gharar). Uncertainty in the terms of a financial contract is considered unlawful,
                            but not risk per se. Consequently, speculation (maysir) is forbidden. Therefore, financial derivatives are
                            usually not permissible under Shari’ah-compliant finance despite the possible application for risk mitigation
                            or risk transfer.
                       „    The ban on unlawful (haram) assets. No financial transaction should be directed towards economic
                            sectors considered unlawful as per the Shari’ah, such as the arms dealing, tobacco, or gambling
                            industries, as well as all enterprises for which financial leverage (indebtedness) would be deemed
                            excessive (including conventional banks).
                       „    The profit-and-loss sharing (PLS) obligation. Parties to a financial contract should share in the risks
                            and rewards derived from such financing or investment transaction.
                       „    The asset-backing obligation. Any financial transaction should be based on a tangible, identifiable
                            underlying asset.

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                       Appendix 3: Islamic Financial Institutions Rated by
                       Moody’s
                        Risk Issues at Islamic Financial Institutions
                        Islamic Financial                      Bank Financial       Baseline Credit        Local Currency   Foreign Currency
                        Institution                Country     Strength Rating         Assessment          Deposit Ratings   Deposit Ratings Outlook
                        Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank        UAE             D                    Ba2                   A2/P-1          A2/P-1       Stable
                        Al Rajhi Bank             Saudi Arabia        C                     A3                   A1/P-1          A1/P-1       Stable
                        Asya Katilim Bankasi A.S.   Turkey            D                    Ba2                   Ba1/NP          B1/NP        Stable
                        Bank Al-Jazira            Saudi Arabia        D+                   Baa3                  A3/P-2          A3/P-2       Stable
                        Boubyan Bank                Kuwait            D                    Ba2                  Baa2/P-2        Baa2/P-2      Stable
                        Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC       UAE             D+                   Baa3                  A1/P-1          A1/P-1       Stable
                        Kuwait Finance House        Kuwait            C-                   Baa1                  Aa3/P-1        Aa3/P-1       Stable
                        Tamweel PJSC                  UAE             D                    Ba2                   A3/P-2          A3/P-2       Stable

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                       Appendix 4: IFSB’s Adjustments to Basel II’s Capital
                       Adequacy Ratio
                       In a report, Capital Adequacy Standard For Institutions (Other Than Insurance Institutions) Offering Only
                       Islamic Financial Services, published in December 2005, the IFSB released its adjustments to the Basel II
                       capital accord as it would be applicable to IFIs. The most striking feature of the IFSB’s report is the
                       consideration given to the factors that differentiate IFIs from conventional banks from a regulatory capital
                       perspective – namely the existence of loss-absorbing liabilities in the form of PSIAs. The IFSB does not
                       consider that either PERs/IRRs or PSIAs should be eligible for inclusion in capital. Rather, a portion of credit
                       and market (but not operational) risk-weighted assets (RWAs) – i.e. those financed by restricted and
                       unrestricted PSIAs – as well as those financed by PERs and IRRs, should be deducted from total RWAs as
                       per the following formula:
                                                      Regulatory capital adequacy ratio
                                                                                   =
                                   Eligible capital (no difference with the Basel II definition)
                            ΣRWA – RWARestricted PSIAs – (1 – α)RWAUnrestricted PSIAs – αRWAPER+IRR
                                                          RWA:        risk-weighted assets
                                       Restricted PSIAs:              off-balance sheet assets under management
                                     Unrestricted PSIAs:              on-balance sheet profit-sharing deposit accounts
                                                   PER, IRR:          profit equalization reserves, investment risk reserves
                                                               α: adjustment factor between 0% and 100%, to be determined
                                                                      by the regulator
                                                   Subscript: means « financed by »

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                       Appendix 5: Moody’s Related Research
                       Special Comments:
                       „    Understanding Moody’s Approach to Unsecured Corporate Sukuk, August 2007 (103919)
                       „    Asian Sukuk Poised for Fast Growth: Market Review and Introduction to Moody’s Rating Approach,
                            August 2007 (104446)
                       „    Shari’ah and Sukuk: A Moody’s Primer, May 2006 (103338)
                       „    A Guide to Rating Islamic Financial Institutions, April 2006 (97226)
                       „    Moody's Involvement in Rating Islamic Financial Institutions, April 2006 (97113)
                       „    Regulation and Supervision: Challenges for Islamic Finance in a Riba-Based Global System, January
                            2004 (81128)
                       „    Culture or Accounting: What Are The Real Constraints for Islamic Finance in a Riba-Based Global
                            Economy?, January 2001 (63369)
                       Selected Sukuk Rating Actions:
                       „    Moody's rates Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank's Trust Certificate Issuance Programme, November 2006
                       „    Moody's assigns (P)A1 ratings to DP World's proposed EMTN Programme and Sukuk, June 2007
                       „    Moody's affirms Dubai Islamic Bank's A1 Sukuk Trust Certificates rating, March 2007
                       „    Moody's rates Saad's Sukuk Issuance (P)Baa1, April 2007
                       „    Moody's rates Maybank's Subordinated Sukuk Certificates ("Certificates") Baa1, April 2007
                       „    Moody's rates DIFC Investments' Sukuk Issuance (P) A1, May 2007
                       „    Moody's assigns A1 rating to Emirates Islamic Bank's Sukuk Trust Certificates, May 2007
                       „    Moody's assigns (P)A1 ratings to Jebel Ali's proposed GMTN Programme and Sukuk, November 2007
                       „    Moody's assigns (P)Baa2 rating to NIG's proposed Sukuk, July 2007
                       „    Moody's assigns (P)A2 rating to Qatar Real Estate's proposed Sukuk , July 2007
                       „    Moody's affirms Baa1 ratings for Sarawak Corporate Sukuk Inc certificates, September 2006
                       „    Moody’s upgrades Malaysia Global Sukuk Inc.'s Trust Certificates to A3 from Baa1, December 2004
                       „    Moody's assigns definitive ratings to Floating Rate Secured Sukuk Notes issued by Tamweel Residential
                            ABS CI (1) Ltd, July 2007
                       Selected Islamic Bank Reports:
                       „    Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, Credit Opinion, November 2007
                       „    Al Rajhi Bank, Credit Opinion, September 2007
                       „    Asya Katilim Bankasi A.S., Analysis, September 2007
                       „    Bank Al-Jazira, Credit Opinion, December 2007
                       „    Boubyan Bank, Analysis, December 2007
                       „    Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC, Credit Opinion, November 2007
                       „    Kuwait Finance House, Credit Opinion, May 2007
                       „    Tamweel PJSC, Analysis, November 2007
                       To access any of these reports, click on the entry above. Note that these references are current as of the date of publication
                       of this report and that more recent reports may be available. All research may not be available to all clients.

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  Authors                                                     Editor                                                     Production Associate
  Anouar Hassoune                                             Marion Kerfoot                                             Martina Reptova
  Khalid Howladar
  Alessandra Mongiardino
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17 January 2008 „ Special Comment „ Moody’s Global Credit Research - Risk Issues at Islamic Financial Institutions