New Islamic units of three state banks will accelerate
Turkey’s plans to expand the share of Shariah-compliant assets, said
Osman Akyuz, head of the country’s Islamic banking association.
Akyuz
foresees the country’s interest-free assets increasing by 30 percent to
$60 billion in 2015, up from 1.2 percent growth in the 12 months
through November, the latest reporting period. The association, which
represents Turkey’s four Islamic banks, is also working to introduce new
debt instruments, Akyuz said in answers to written questions. He
declined to elaborate. The AKP government, one of the most overtly religious in the history of Turkey’s secular republic, wants to increase the share of Islamic banking to 15 percent in 2023 from about 5 percent now. The three state banks -- Ziraat Bank, Vakif Bank (VAKBN) and Halkbank -- have pledged to quickly set up units for Shariah-compliant banking, long the preserve of four smaller lenders.
While “the existing players will have to review their policies and strategies,” the competition represents a healthy challenge to the four Islamic lenders, said Akyuz, who was formerly the chief executive officer of Albaraka Turk. (ALBRK)
Progress toward the government’s target was stalled last year by the contraction at Bank Asya (ASYAB), formerly the country’s biggest Islamic bank.
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