Bahrain’s WIBC summit draws top global banking giants

Al Maraj presenting the award to an official of Boubyan Bank.

Leading global financial experts are spearheading a series of discussions gravitating around the theme of “Drivers of Economic Growth & Risks: Policymakers & Regulators” at The World Islamic Banking Conference (WIBC), being held in Bahrain.

The largest and most prestigious gathering of Islamic banking and finance leaders in the world, WIBC is being hosted under the patronage of HRH Prince Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa, The Prime Minister of Bahrain at the ART Rotana Hotel, Amwaj Islands, in line with its steady vision to serve as a compass for the global Islamic finance and banking industry.

Key highlights from the first day of the conference include the Governor’s Address, an exclusive interview trailing the vision for the next 40 years of Islamic Banking, the launch of the ICD-Thomson Reuters IFD Report 2017 and a fintech consortium of Islamic Banks and the WIBC Performance Awards honouring the top performing Islamic banks at the global, regional and country level.

It is being convened by Middle East Global Advisors – a leading financial intelligence platform facilitating the development of knowledge-based economies in the MENASEA markets and in strategic partnership with the Central Bank of Bahrain (CBB).

A true flagbearer for the conference and its ethos year-on-year, Rasheed Mohammed Al Maraj, Governor, CBB, showcased his support for the event by delivering the opening keynote address at the 24th World Islamic Banking Conference, with the vision of furthering the ecosystem for Islamic finance entities to thrive and grow globally.

Recognizing the size and scale of the Islamic Bank market, Al Maraj said: “In line with subdued economic activity in the region, Islamic Bank asset growth has also slowed from the 14-15 per cent historical levels and projected, to grow annually at around 5 per cent for the next couple of years.”

“The number of Islamic Banks however has grown to around 172 with another 83 or so Islamic Windows within conventional banks. According to the IFSB, the industry now employs more than 380,000 people worldwide, which reflects a significant level of economic activity by any measure,” he stated.

A key highlight of the opening day was the keynote address by Alex Tapscott, CEO NextBlock Global, the co-author of Blockchain Revolution & Founding Member, IMF’s High Level Advisory Group on Fintech.

During his exclusive presentation on the blockchain revolution, Tapscott said: “The technology likely to have the greatest impact on Islamic finance has arrived and it’s called the Blockchain. The blockchain is the most important computer science innovation in at least a generation and represents nothing short of the second era of the internet.”

“For 20 years we’ve had the internet of information which has been a really powerful tool for changing how we communicate and how we share information, but it actually hasn’t had as big an impact on commerce or on finance as many people may have hoped, and that’s because the internet is not a valued medium, it’s an information medium,” observed the expert.

Adding further, Tapscott said: “Blockchain on the other hand represents the first native digital medium for value, and therefore represents a new internet of value that promises to change basically every industry in the economy and transform the economic power grid and the old order of human affairs in very profound ways.”

“I personally am delighted to be speaking at the WIBC about the potential of blockchain because we’re at a very important inflection point for the industry. How incumbents react to this new innovation will basically dictate whether or not they will succeed or fail,” he noted.

“Should they choose to embrace it, to seek out new opportunities, and new markets, new products, and services, basically to do tomorrow what was impossible yesterday they will succeed, if they look to take this technology and apply it only to how they do business today, they will not succeed. And if they decide to shun it altogether they will likely fail,” he added.

Tapscott’s keynote address was followed by the exclusive launch of the ICD-Thomson Reuters Islamic Finance Development Report 2017, based on the Islamic Finance Development Indicator which is a unified barometer that assesses the performance of all the parts of the Islamic finance industry, hence arming Industry practitioners with critical insights going forward.

The day ensued with an exclusive one-on-one interview with distinguished Islamic finance veteran – Adnan Ahmed Yousif, the CEO and President of Al Baraka Banking Group, on his vision for the next 40 years of Islamic Banking.

The interview focused on lessons from the past, the analysis of the current state of the industry and the future of Islamic banking.

Expressing his vision for the next 10 years, Yousif said: “Islamic banking assets’ share will increase from 15 to 35 per cent. The primary growth drivers will be regionalisation, digital acceleration and innovative business models for emerging markets.”

“There is ample room for growth as Islamic banking rarely exceeds a third of total market share, even in the GCC countries and Malaysia. Several potential markets with large Muslim populations remain largely untapped, such as India and the Commonwealth of Independent States countries, made up of the former Soviet republics,” he noted.

In addition, overall banking penetration in many of the industry’s core markets is still low, stated Yousif.

“Fully exploiting the Islamic banking niche, which means targeting customer segments that care most deeply about sharia compliance in their financial dealings as well as offering products and services that meet not only general financing but also Muslim-specific customer needs. As competition intensifies, Islamic banks will have to adopt more sophisticated, customer-centric sales approaches,” he added.

Interestingly, the conference also proved to be the ideal Launchpad for ALGO Bahrain – the world’s first Fintech Consortium of Islamic Banks to enable Islamic banks for the paradigm shift in the banking industry as a result of financial technology (Fintech). The consortium aims to launch 15 FinTech platforms by 2022.

Other exclusive launches at the conference include Wahed Invest’s launch of the world’s first halal robot advisor – a unique way of revolutionizing halal investing by using technology.

After successfully launching in the US, Wahed has announced its plans to launch in the Middle East in 2018. The conference also played host to the official book launch of “Islamic Real Estate Investment Trusts” by Hamed Yousef Mashal, a senior investment manager at Kuwait Finance House.

Leading industry experts analyzed the challenges at hand and focused on coming up with effective suggestions with the ultimate aim of developing a convergence roadmap for the Islamic Finance industry at large.

The 24th WIBC also recognized excellence within the Islamic finance and banking industry at a high profile Gala Dinner where 16 WIBC Performance Awards were given away by Al Maraj to the top Islamic financial institutions at the global, regional and country level based on their performance in the WIBC Leaderboard – a groundbreaking performance assessment tool aimed at enabling Islamic financial institutions to benchmark their performance against their peers.

Boubyan Bank bagged the Global, GCC and Kuwait region awards, testament to its strong performance in the financial metrics of the WIBC Leaderboard. Additionally, Boubyan Bank also bagged the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Award.

The other winners of the 24th Annual WIBC Performance Awards include:
BEST PERFORMING ISLAMIC BANKS – REGIONAL AWARDS
•Levant: Safwa Islamic Bank
•South East Asia: Maybank Islamic Berhad
•South Asia: Social Islami Bank
BEST PERFOMING ISLAMIC BANKS – COUNTRY AWARDS
•Bahrain: Al Baraka Bank Bank
•Saudi Arabia: Al Rajhi Bank
•United Arab Emirates: Dubai Islamic Bank
•Egypt: Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt
•Jordan: Safwa Islamic Bank
•Turkey: Türkiye Finans Katilim Bankasi A.S.
•Indonesia: PT Bank Syariah BNI
•Malaysia: Maybank Islamic Berhad
•Bangladesh: Social Islami Bank
•Pakistan: Meezan Bank Limited

Other key highlights from the day included the digital-banking focused panel and Panel discussions focusing on dynamic capital markets, sustainable, equitable and inclusive growth, potential of disruptive technologies and new horizons for Islamic finance.-TradeArabia News Service