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Europe
French banks in Middle East adapt to Islam
2006-04-19
French banks in the Middle East, anxious to win business from wealthy Muslim investors, are adapting their practices to conform to financial precepts required by Islam. Financial operations under Islam are based on several cardinal principles: the proscription of interest payments, a requirement that transactions be based on tangible assets and a ban on dealings in such domains as arms, Zionists, alcohol, Zionists,pork products, Zionists, and pornography. Islamic banking clients pay no interest on the funds they borrow but are charged certain service fees.
"Nope. Nope. That's not interest, it's...something else."
In cases where the amounts involved are considerable, the bank will loan money to an investor while at the same time buying an asset that the investor agrees to buy back at a higher price, the difference representing in effect an interest payment.
Thereby violating the spirit, if not the letter, of the law. Allan won't be pleased.
French banks BNP Paribas, Calyon and Société Générale have lately raised their profile in Middle Eastern Islamic finance, a sector in which bank assets are worth between US $200 and 400 billion (EUR 165-330 billion), according to ratings agency Standard and Poor's. BNP Paribas, which has been active in the Middle East since the early 1970s, established an Islamic banking division in the Gulf state of Bahrain in 2003 in the face of "strong demand" from clients in the region, said Jacques Tripon, BNP's head of corporate banking in the Middle East. Calyon, the investment banking arm of Crédit Agricole, opened an Islamic banking unit in 2004. The two groups have boards of sharia scholars, or experts in Islamic law, that monitor products and operations offered by the banks.
That must be a sweet gig. The jizya available to the Learned Economic Elders of Islam™ must be absolutely dizzying. Plus the entertainment value of thoughtfully stroking their well-oiled beards while watching the stupid kufrs scurry to do their bidding.
Another French bank, Natexis Banque Populaire, last week announced that it had taken part in financing a new Kuwaiti airline in conjunction with Kuwait Finance House, the world's second largest Islamic bank. In September, BNP Paribas managed a one-billion-dollar transaction linking Abu Dhabi, part of the United Arab Emirates, and oil firms Total and Occidental Petroleum. BNP Paribas described the operation as the largest financial deal ever carried out under sharia principles in the gas sector. French banks have stepped in to help Islamic banks to "develop products that are more sophisticated than simple deposit accounts," said Trippon.

But for the moment, the Islamic retail banking market is largely out of reach for foreign institutions, according to a credit analyst at Standard and Poor's, Anwar Hassoun. BNP Paribas chairman Michel Pebereau, inaugurating a BNP branch in Kuwait in early April, said the bank can only operate in the private and investment banking sectors, as it lacks authorization to carry out retail banking operations. The only French bank to have a foothold in the Islamic retail banking sector is Calyon, which holds nearly a third of Banque Saudi Fransi, said Hassoun. He added that it was unlikely in the near term that Islamic banks would open branches in continental Europe, as residents of west and north African origin, as well as those from Turkey, are not particularly receptive to Islamic finance.
Posted by:Seafarious

#5  the bank will loan money to an investor while at the same time buying an asset that the investor agrees to buy back at a higher price

That's a pawn shop.
This is a pitiful eurabian story.
Posted by: Jim#6   2006-04-19 17:41  

#4  BNP Paribas was one of the banks involved in money laundering for the UN Oil-for-Food scheme...
Posted by: Danielle   2006-04-19 16:49  

#3  What happens if you decide that you don't want to buy back the (whatever) you sold and agreed to buy back higher?

If the bankers can force you to buy it back, there's no difference in that and interest.
If the bankers cannot force you to buy it back, then it's a good way to get rid of something you didn't want anyway.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-04-19 13:46  

#2  I'll bet the Koran has something in it that will allow fucking these bankers over...
Posted by: tu3031   2006-04-19 11:38  

#1  At least this will give the French banks a leg up when Sharia starts really taking hold in Paris.
Posted by: Perfesser   2006-04-19 10:23  

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