Friday, November 6, 2009

Islamic Derivative Contracts Soon?

Reuters reports that the first template for over-the-counter Islamic derivative contract will be launched this year or by early 2010. The contract is expected to pave the way for quicker and cheaper Islamic risk management and more frequent cross-currency transactions.

According to Ijlal Ahmed Alvi, chief executive officer of the International Islamic Financial Market (IIFM), "It's a completely new instrument. We have done the consultative work. Now what we are waiting for is the Sharia meeting... some time in December". The IIFM, an industry body backed by the central banks of several Muslim countries, has been working with the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) on the contract. Once in place, the new Islamic derivatives contract is expected to initially attract at least 150 players.

Scholars are however split on the legitimacy of derivatives; some see them as permissible instruments to hedge risks but others dismiss them as speculative transactions, which Islam forbids.

My contention is that derivative instruments is not the only solution to hedge of risks. There is no need for Shariah based finance to mimic each and every conventional instrument. Isn’t there any indigenous Shariah based risk management tool?

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