The New York Times:The debt crisis in Dubai is about to test one of the fastest-growing areas in banking — Islamic finance — and put the emirate’s own opaque judicial system on trial, according to bankers and experts in finance, The New York Times’s Heather Timmons reports.
Issuance of loans and bonds that comply with Shariah, or Islamic law, has skyrocketed in recent years, as oil-rich Middle East nations ramped up spending and the global credit crunch led debt investors into emerging markets.
But the unique terms of these instruments, which technically make lenders partners with borrowers, have never been tested in a downturn.
“There have been very few major defaults in this market,” said Zaher Barakat, a professor of Islamic finance at Cass Business School in London. There are no consistent rules about who gets paid back first if a company defaults on Shariah-complaint debt, he said...[Read More]
The Beneficent: Majesty and Splendor
1 year ago
No comments:
Post a Comment