Reuters
Tunisia’s Amen Bank launched two Islamic mutual funds this week while a leasing company prepares to convert into a full-fledged Islamic lender, welcome steps for the industry which has been waiting for the government to issue a debut Islamic bond.
Islamic finance was neglected before the country’s 2011 “Arab Spring” revolution, with the new Islamist ruling party Ennahada pushing to develop the sector over the past three years.
Its defeat in October parliamentary elections shifted the balance of power to its main secular rival, the Nidaa Tounes party. Presidential candidates for the two parties will face-off in a second round of elections later this month.
A major Islamic sovereign bond proposed by the Ennahada party has yet to be seen, but private-sector efforts have been more successful in developing Islamic finance, which accounts for just 2.5% of the Tunisian financial sector.
Amen Bank, the country’s second-largest private sector bank, launched two Islamic mutual funds this week, managed by Tunis-based United Gulf Financial Services-North Africa, a filing with the capital market regulator said.
In October, El Wifack Leasing said it had received central bank approval to become the country’s third full-fledged Islamic bank, with 150mn dinars ($80mn) in capital, adding the firm would bring international shareholders to the venture.
Currently, there are two fully operational Islamic banks in Tunisia, Zitouna Bank and the Tunisian arm of Bahrain’s Al Baraka Banking Group.
Last week, Bahraini Islamic investment firm Gulf Finance House signed an agreement with a French consortium to start work on the first phase of a $3bn real estate project north of Tunisia’s capital.
Earlier this year the private sector arm of the Islamic Development Bank teamed up with Tunisia’s newly created sovereign wealth fund, Caisse de Depot de Tunisie, to set up a $30mn fund to support local businesses.