Malaysia’s Corston-Smith is planning a US$282.5 million Islamic fund as it sees growing demand for companies with good governance after high profile financial frauds hit investor confidence globally, said a top executive, reports Reuters (Sept 2, 2009).
The report quotes Shireen Muhiudeen, founder and managing director of Corston-Smith Asset Management as saying: "I think the financial crisis clearly has elevated the reason why governance is so important. There’s a great parallel between Islamic finance and corporate governance and transparency."
Syariah, a legal framework that regulates both public and private life, prohibits financial transactions from being purely speculative activity. The Islamic law also bans the charging of interest, equating it with usury, and prohibits investment in businesses that trade in alcohol, pork, arms, pornography or gambling.
THE REPORT GOES ON:
Corston-Smith’s new fund will target international pension groups as potential investors, said Shireen.
“We are speaking to quite a few large pension funds around the world and shortlisted by a few government groups internationally,” she said.
Corston-Smith’s existing portfolio of about RM90 million (US$25.41 million) comprises Southeast Asian companies mainly from the oil and gas, oil palm plantation, retail, resource-based and manufacturing sectors, she said.
Corston-Smith invests in these sectors because it believes they will be the direct beneficiary of Asia’s large population and growing economy.
“If you look at the Asean region, we got a very large population, and a very large population that’s under 30. As a young population, playing on the consumers is important,” said Shireen, who has been in the fund management industry for 22 years.
UK fund manager Hermes owns 30 per cent of Corston-Smith.Any source
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