KARACHI: State Bank of Pakistan has given the go-ahead signal to Islamic banks which can now offer cheaper refinancing to three priority areas including small and medium enterprises (SMEs), agriculture and renewable energy.
According to the details, Islamic banks have been demanding the central bank for a long time to allow them to open cheaper refinancing windows to capitalize on opportunities and search for avenues to park their excessive liquidity.
Conventional banks have already been providing refinancing to the three major sectors for around three to four years.
“The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has issued three Shariah-Compliant Refinance Schemes that are expected to provide a level-playing field to the Islamic banking industry,” the central bank said in a statement.
“The addition of Shariah-compliant financing facility for renewable energy, financing facility for storage of agricultural produce and refinance facility for modernisation of SMEs will meet a long-awaited demand of the industry, especially for the agriculture and SME sectors,” it said.
“Islamic banks may find an opportunity of financing such projects to the tune of Rs10-20 billion in the ongoing year,” Meezan Bank Head of Product Development and Shariah Compliance Senior Executive Vice President Ahmed Ali Siddiqui said while talking to media. “This will help park part of the excessive liquidity of Islamic banks.”
Siddiqui pointed out that conventional banks had been offering the cheaper financing facility for the last three to four years, adding Islamic banks did not get the opportunity.
He revealed that Islamic banks had been managing excess liquidity of average around Rs400 billion for the last two to three years because of less Islamic investment avenues. Customers had been demanding such financing facility too, he said.
Earlier, Islamic banks were parking excessive liquidity in Sukuk (Islamic bonds). However, the government has not launched new Sukuk for the past around two years.
Two Sukuk worth Rs234 billion have matured since December 2018. Another one of over Rs100 billion will mature on March 30. “With this, the investment of Islamic banks in Sukuk will come down to Rs71 billion compared to over Rs500 billion in the past,” he said.
Siddiqui urged the authorities to float Sukuk and increase government borrowing from Islamic banks in order to provide them a level-playing field.
“The government in July 2018 approved an increase in its borrowing to 30% of total financing from Islamic banks,” he said. “Time has come to implement the plan.”
The central bank added that the export refinance facility and long-term financing facility for the exporters were also available to the Islamic banking industry. The SBP said modaraba-based facilities would provide long-term cheaper liquidity to the end-users.