gulfnews.com - Islamic benchmarks have consistently outperformed conventional ones
To some observers of Islamic equity investing, Islamic or Sharia-compliant equity indexes seem to imply investing in publicly-listed companies in Muslim countries.
The end results contradict the assumptions. This also rebuts allegations by many from the anti-Sharia movement that Islamic investing is about investing in companies linked to terrorism or financing terrorism. The largest companies in the S&P Global BMI Sharia include ExxonMobil, IBM, Chevron, Nestle and Microsoft.
Today, there is a large stock count and market capitalisation weighting bias towards the non-Muslim G20 countries in all global Islamic equity indexes. We will look at country exposure of Sharia-compliant companies, the economic sector exposure and selected Muslim country Islamic indexes, and how to increase number of Sharia-compliant companies. (source)
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To some observers of Islamic equity investing, Islamic or  Sharia-compliant equity indexes seem to imply investing in  publicly-listed companies in Muslim countries.                               
The end results contradict the assumptions. This also rebuts  allegations by many from the anti-Sharia movement that Islamic investing  is about investing in companies linked to terrorism or financing  terrorism. The largest companies in the S&P Global BMI Sharia  include ExxonMobil, IBM, Chevron, Nestle and Microsoft.                                           
Today, there is a large stock count and market capitalisation  weighting bias towards the non-Muslim G20 countries in all global  Islamic equity indexes. We will look at country exposure of  Sharia-compliant companies,  the economic sector exposure and selected  Muslim country Islamic indexes, and how to increase number of  Sharia-compliant companies.                               
Conventional bias                                   
The stock exchanges in Muslim countries have a bias towards the  conventional financial sector, such as compromising mainly   banks and  financing companies, and therefore, also over-reliance on debt culture  for corporate financing. Thus, many publicly listed non-financial  companies in Muslim countries fail the debt-financial ratio for Islamic  screening.                               
So where are the Sharia-compliant companies listed? And how does  this contribute to local and regional economic and capital market  development?                                                 
Today, we have Islamic equity indexes from all the six index  providers from Dow Jones Indexes to S&P and Thomson Reuters  IdealRatings. The Islamic indexes are about "doing good by avoiding the  bad." Put differently, it's about negative screening much like Islamic  finance, which is a prohibitive oriented industry way of funding and  financing.                               
The Sharia universe                               
Table A shows the condensed universe of Sharia compliant  companies, stock count and market capitalisation weighting of S&P  Global BMI Sharia and S&P Global BMI as of October 31. Some of the  observations on the S&P Global BMI Sharia index include:                               
- There is an obvious bias towards the developed countries where  five countries, including the United Statesand the UK, account for 1,749  companies (50 per cent of stock count) and 74.34 per cent market  capitalisation weighting. Is it because these developed countries have a  robust equity culture, and hence the companies don't rely exclusively  on banking (debt) financing, but also raise equity capital?                               
Does an equity capital market promote knowledge-based economies,  as banks do not provide entrepreneurial capital? It's well-known and  accepted that Islamic banks finance (exclusively) "old economy"  companies.                               
- Sharia-compliant companies from Muslim countries include  Turkey, Morocco, Malaysia, Indonesia and Egypt that account  for 132  companies (3 per cent of stock count) and less than 1 per cent (0.86 per  cent) market capitalisation weighting. Although there are 57 Muslim  countries with 42 stock exchanges, the small representation is due to  prohibitions against direct investing by all international investing  such as in Saudi Arabia, small free float, that is, small shares of  company available for trading, and illiquidity because stock does not  trade the minimum amount according to the index provider's rule book.                               
- Interesting to note that there is larger market capitalisation  weighting (0.44 per cent and 1.36 per cent) and total market  capitalisation representation (of $60 billion (Dh220.35 billion) and  $187 billion) in the index of Sharia-compliant companies from Israel and  India, respectively, than any of the five Muslim countries. Thus,  Islamic investing is not confined to Muslim countries.                               
Islamic equity indexes, especially at a global level, with a bias  toward developed country compliant companies should then have a high  correlation to conventional counter-part indexes.                               
Performance                               
Graph A shows the performance of the S&P Global BMI Sharia to  S&P Global BMI since 2007 and we observe tracking market movement  and outperformance by the Sharia index.                               
Thus, notwithstanding a smaller universe of Sharia-compliant  companies, 32 per cent of total stock count (3,460) and 42 per cent  of  total market capitalisation ($13.813 trillion), Sharia-compliant indexes  have consistently outperformed in Graph A.  The underperformance of the  S&P Global BMI is attributed to large exposure to the conventional  financial sector, nearly 20 per cent of the index, and its impact by the  credit crisis (sub-prime mortgages in the United States) and European  sovereign debt situation.                               
Alpha strategy                               
There is nothing ‘Islamic' here; it's basically a style of  investing and others have called it an ‘alpha strategy': low debt and  non-financial and social-ethical investing. This may indeed be the need  of the hour in these turbulent times.                               
Next week, we will look into a global Islamic equity index's  economic sector exposure of Sharia-compliant companies. An early hint:  the three of the largest sectors in today's global Islamic index are  generally not present in Muslim countries.                               
The writer is Global Head, Islamic Finance and OIC Countries.  Opinion expressed here is the writer's own and does not reflect that of  his own organisation or that of Gulf News.
Source : http://gulfnews.com/business/markets/sharia-investing-leans-to-west-1.948379  - Dec 11, 2011