Shari ah-compliant Fund Structures. Private Investment Funds Practice Discussion Papers

Similar documents
US Treasury Department Issues Guidance on Energy Grants In Lieu of Tax Credits

Guide to Discrimination Law in the PRC

German Insolvency Law is geared towards liquidation of the debtor insolvency plan procedures are only applied in exceptional cases.

Information Disclosure on the Securities Market

FDIC Adopts Interim Rule on Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program

For many foreign investors acquiring a Banking License is a crucial step on their way into the German market.

Pension Scheme Funding in Germany. Private Investment Funds Practice Discussion Papers

Vietnam s Insurance Market: An Overview January 2014

Financial services regulatory & enforcement update

A Quick Start Guide to EMIR: What you need to do and when

Addressing UBTI Concerns in Capital Call Subscription Credit Facilities

China s New Trademark Law Introduces Key Changes

Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015: Effects on Taxation of Investment in US Real Estate

Well advised. Law Firm of the Year for Pharma and Medical Devices Law

Giving Third Parties Contractual Rights The New Rules

Good faith is there a new implied duty in English contract law?

IRS Issues Revised Guidance on Form W-2 Reporting Requirements for Costs of Employer Group Health Coverage

IRS Provides Guidance on Beginning of Construction for Renewable Energy Projects

Crossing Borders New Guidance on the Transfer of Personal Data outside Hong Kong

White Paper. Moving Beyond.com

Out-of-the-Money: The IRS Designates Basket Options as Listed Transactions and Transactions of Interest

Long-Expected Omnibus HIPAA Rule Implements Significant Privacy and Security Regulations for Entities and Business Associates

TERMINATION PAYMENTS AND INTERNATIONALLY MOBILE EMPLOYEES

German Insolvency Law

Capital Commitment Subscription Facilities and the Proposed Liquidity Coverage Ratio

Enhanced Investor Protection Regarding Unlisted Structured Investment Products

Lehman Bankruptcy Court Addresses Scope of the Bankruptcy Code s Safe Harbor for Liquidation, Termination and Acceleration of Swap Agreements

Major Changes Introduced by the New Companies Ordinance Private and Public Companies 1

Major Changes Introduced by the New Companies Ordinance Companies Limited by Guarantee 1

Perspectives on Cybersecurity and Its Legal Implications

Spring 2015 reforms: the new DC flexibilities

Real Estate and Construction in Thailand

Benefits and Compensation Alert

Sold: The Return of Seller Financing for Commercial Real Estate?*

How To Rate A German Law Firm

German Merger Control

Islamic Finance. Global. Economic Crisis. National Council on. U.S.-Arab Relations. Brings Together Experts to Discuss. and. the

New York State Tax Developments

Transatlantic Management: Establishing and Managing American Israeli Companies

Guide to Investing in Real Estate in the PRC

Beginner s Glossary to Fund Finance

Private Equity Fund Expenses

Insurance in Asia We I W d e I e d n e t n if t y. W y e C. W o e C m o m m it m. W it e A. W c e A h c i h ev e e v. e

Launch of Mutual Recognition of Funds Between Mainland China and Hong Kong

IRS Issues Audit Directive on Worthless Debt Deductions for Banks and Bank Affiliates

DISCLOSEABLE TRANSACTION THE SECONDARY PUBLIC OFFERING OF NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE HOLDINGS LTD. ORDINARY SHARES AND RESUMPTION OF TRADING

The UK Concept of Base Cost Shift

Investment Company Act of 1940 Private Funds

FBAR Reporting Requirements for Foreign Financial Accounts

Even Presumed Damages Must Be Proven

How To Allow Sports Wagering In New Jersey

Private Equity Fund Distribution Waterfalls

Issues in insurance company mergers & acquisitions

Corporate Real Estate. Introduction to Mayer Brown s UK Corporate Real Estate Capabilities

Rare Bird Sightings: Recent Developments Address Distressed Obligation Issues Faced by REMICs

IRS Issues Final FATCA Regulations

Private Equity: A Practitioner s Perspective. Edward J. Mathias

Islamic Stock Market Shariah principles in Finance Basics of Islamic Equity

Loan Trading under LMA Documentation A Guide for Traders and In-house Counsel

SEC Staff Addresses Third-Party Endorsements of Investment Advisers on Social Media Websites

Court Addresses Employee Stock Option Expenses for Transfer Pricing Purposes

Finance Alert. New Rules on Short Selling and Derivative Transactions in Germany. Introduction. Prohibition of Short Selling

Luxembourg Doing deals in the Grand Duchy, an English lawyer's perspective

Betting & Gaming/Tax-Exempt Organizations Alert

Intellectual Property & Data Protection 2015: Legal developments you need to know about

INVESTMENT FUNDS. SEC Proposes First Dodd-Frank Investment Advisers Act Rule to Address Family Offices. What Is a Family Office?

Global Real Estate Outlook

Define your goals, we ll do the rest

NORTHERN VIRGINIA. Hogan & Hartson LLP

JUDGMENT ON THE SPANISH TAX LEASE SYSTEM

Bank Levies in the UK, France and Germany

Corporate Finance Alert

Guide on How to Invest in Real Estate in Hong Kong

Tax Guide 2014/15 South Africa

The marketing of participations in foreign private equity funds from an Austrian tax perspective

An introduction to Islamic Finance in. Nairobi, 8 October Allen & Overy LLP

FINAL REGULATIONS RELATING TO OPTIONS GRANTED UNDER EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLANS

Australian National Electricity Rules Adopt a More 'Cost Reflective' Approach to Network Pricing

Corporate funding monitor 2015

Purchasing Real Estate in Germany

June 22, Gerald S. Sachs, Of Counsel Paul Hastings LLP. (202)

The Affordable Care Act s Employer Mandate: Guidance for Educational Organizations

Recent Developments Regarding Entity Classification for UK Tax Purposes

Equity Capital Markets Team Germany

New York State Department of Financial Services Proposes a BitLicense Regulatory Framework for Virtual Currency Businesses

DEFINITIVE ADVICE PRACTICAL GUIDANCE POWERFUL ADVOCACY LLP

Financial Services Alert

Islamic Finance: Ethics, Concepts, Practice (a summary)

A Brief Legal Guide to Investing in Real Estate in the US

Issues in Islamic Finance and (Re)Takaful business

Norton Rose Group expands across Canada, Latin America and Kazakhstan. Creating one of the world s leading energy and mining practices

1 of 10

Hedge Fund Alert. Authors: J. Matthew Mangan

TopicsinChineseLaw AN O'MELVENY & MYERS LLP RESEARCH REPORT. China's Regulation of "Round Trip Investments" * by Howard Chao and Kaichen Xu **

FSOC Proposes Rules for Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve s Supervision of Nonbank Financial Companies. October 20, 2011

Hong Kong is increasingly seen as a necessary operations

Changes to New York Power of Attorney Law

Federal Reserve Issues Regulations for Savings and Loan Holding Companies

INDEX METHODOLOGY MSCI REIT PREFERRED. Index Construction and Maintenance Methodology for the MSCI REIT Preferred Index.

New York State Labor Law Amendments Affecting Proof in Pay Discrimination Cases and Employer Policies Concerning Wage Disclosure

Transcription:

The universe of closed ended funds has evolved to provide mechanisms for Shari ah-compliant Fund Structures. Dedicated Shari ah-compliant funds have been set up in growing numbers. Shari ah-compliant Fund Structures Private Investment Funds Practice Discussion Papers Islamic finance is a rapidly growing market. Market estimates place the current volume in the region of $500 billion and this figure is expected to grow to $1 trillion within the next five years. Consequently, also the universe of closed ended funds has evolved to provide mechanisms for Shari ah-compliant fund structures. Dedicated Shari ah-compliant funds have been set up in growing numbers and are on the verge of becoming a common sight in the market place. For fund sponsors, however, it is often a difficult question of when it may potentially pay off to incur additional structuring efforts, costs and changes to their investment policy in order to address potential Shari ah investors.

Clearly, the area of Shari ah-compliant structuring of funds is generally complex and demanding in many details. This paper and the suggested structure for a Shari ah-compliant side pocket focuses on addressing two major issues that seem to be common with any real estate fund: Dr. Benedikt Weiser, LL.M. Partner, Frankfurt T: +49 69 79 41 1637 bweiser@mayerbrown.com (i) Leverage The prohibition on payment of interest under Shari ah law results in a general prohibition of leverage by straight debt financing in the acquisition structure of real estate funds (see prohibition of interest payments ). Employing the Shari ah-compliant techniques that economically result in an effective leverage of the investment is often alien to conventional managers and sponsors and, perhaps more importantly, to their investors. Dr. Simon G. Grieser Partner, Frankfurt T: +49 69 79 41 1301 sgrieser@mayerbrown.com (ii) Prohibited areas of investment Numerous areas of investment are prohibited under Shari ah law (see prohibited areas of investment ). For otherwise conventional sponsors and managers of Shari ah-compliant funds, the commitment to avoiding prohibited areas of investment seems onerous, especially in blind pools, where the appropriate assessment has to be made in the process of identifying investment opportunities during the life of the fund. To a certain extent the issue can be addressed by donations to charities (purification). In particular, the projected returns of real estate funds with a core or core plus investment strategy do not tolerate substantial amounts of donations for purification purposes. Therefore, for conventional investors, an investment in a Shari ah-compliant fund means an unnecessary restriction of possible investment opportunities, unless the fund is dedicated for investments in an Islamic market environment. In this context, the structure described below aims at achieving the following: (i) Opening a Shari ah-compliant side pocket for conventional real estate funds in order for fund Sponsors to access Islamic investors without having to completely turning the fund into an Islamic fund. (ii) Avoiding purification donations when investing partially in prohibited areas of investment with blended Islamic and conventional equity. Model Fact Pattern The structure discussed in this memorandum assumes a model fact pattern of a real estate fund investing on a blind pool basis. Investments are likely to include business centers, hotels and retail malls. It is assumed that 20 percent of the income from the investments will constitute income from prohibited investments. The fund applies leverage by debt financing at a ratio of 60 70 percent. 2 Shari ah Compliant Fund Structures

Key Shari ah Principles The concepts that underlie Islamic finance derive from Islamic law or the Shari ah, the roots (usul) of which in turn are derived from the: (1) Qu ran, being the holy book of Islam; (2) sunna, which are the binding authority of his dicta and decisions; (3) ijma, or consensus of the community of scholars; and in some parts of the Muslim world, (4) qiyas, or analogical deductions and reasoning. PROHIBITION OF INTEREST PAYMENTS As stated, one of the most important pillars of Shari ah is the Qu ran which expressly prohibits riba. Riba roughly translates as growth or excess but in financial terms this denotes interest. Therefore, Islamic financing structures must not involve any direct payment of interest. Under Islamic law, money is regarded as having no intrinsic value it is seen merely as a medium of exchange. The return on funds provided by the bank must be the result of a commercial risk taken by the bank. The payment and receipt of interest is prohibited in accordance with this principle. For this reason, a contractual obligation to pay interest is considered void under Islamic law. The ban of interest is the main distinctive feature between an Islamic and a conventional economic system. The abolition of interest is meant to eliminate exploitation in business and to contribute to the realization of the Islamic vision of justice. In addition to these goals, the fundamental concept behind it is that gaining profit without working or taking risk is unacceptable. PROHIBITED AREAS OF INVESTMENT In order to qualify as Shari ah-compliant investments, some investments in companies are usually prohibited which involve, inter alia, conventional financial services (including conventional insurance services), gambling and casinos, alcohol or pork production, certain entertainment and any other immoral or unethical activities from the Shari ah Board perspective. These restrictions would also apply to income generated from leases by shops or financial institution which provide for the mentioned products but in this respect there are certain discussions what percentage of revenue is still allowed to qualify as Shari ah-compliant. SHARI AH BOARD Islamic fund structures will be regulated and supervised by a Shari ah Board in the conduct of their investment activities and the fund structure itself. The Shari ah Board determines whether the transactions of the fund manager wishing to engage in Islamic finance comply with the relevant principles either through a written certification by the Shari ah scholars of Board (fatwa) or by confirming their compliance in the relevant annual accounts. The Shari ah Board also advises on investment objectives and monitors investment activity to ensure that it conforms to the principles of Shari ah in every respect. Furthermore, the Shari ah Board or Shari ah auditors, respectively, are responsible to allocate and distribute non-shari ah-compliant income. mayer brown 3

Fund Structure The structure described below should avoid a distribution of non-shari ah-compliant proceeds to Islamic investors based on a combination of a Shari ah structured side pocket and a conventional main fund. The structure is a generic structure that will need modifications in each individual case depending on the tax and regulatory position of the investors, the location of the investments and possible double taxation considerations. STRUCTURE DIAGRAM The structure can be illustrated as follows: SPONSOR GP I Advice/Supervision GP II Shari ah investors Secular investors FUND I SHARI AH BOARD FUND II 100 mio capital 200 mio HOLDING I HOLDING II up to 33 % conventional debt financing/or Shari ah-compliant financing Musharaka or Qard Hassan 130 340 Advice/ Supervision debt financing 60 70 % LP GP III non-compliant 20 % 4 Shari ah Compliant Fund Structures

THE SPONSOR The Sponsor can be any real estate fund sponsor in any jurisdiction pursuing investment policies that tolerate a defined quota of non-compliant items of income (see defined quota of non-compliant profits ). FUND I AND FUND II The Sponsor sets up two fund vehicles for separated pooling of Shari ah investors ( Fund I ) and conventional investors ( Fund II ). Although the structure does not require a certain type of fund vehicle, for the purposes of this paper it is assumed that Fund I and Fund II will be limited partnerships under a suitable jurisdiction, given that limited partnerships are probably the vehicles used most widely in an international institutional fund environment. Fund I is managed by its general partner ( GP I ) which is a vehicle directly or indirectly controlled by the Sponsor. To ring-fence liabilities and to demonstrate the segregation of the Shari ah and conventional pocket, Fund II will be managed by a separate entity, also directly or indirectly controlled by the Sponsor ( GP II ). HOLDING I AND HOLDING II Fund I will make an equity contribution to a corporate holding vehicle ( Holding I ). Fund II will do the same in a separate holding vehicle ( Holding II ). Holding I and Holding II serve as vehicles to apply the desired amount of leverage to the respective investment sleeves. They could also be used for enhancing the taxoptimized repatriation of profits from target jurisdictions. LEVERAGE At the level of Holding II the fund manager can employ his desired leverage as implied by his regular business model. At the level of Holding I Shari ah law should allow for a leverage of up to 33 percent by conventional debt. If this amount of leverage is not sufficient to support an attractive business model for the fund, Shari ah-compliant structures would need to be applied at the level of Fund I or Holding I to raise the investment ratio. For example, Shari ah-compliant leverage finance could consist in qard hassan: a loan per amore in which there is no interest. Such a qard hassan could be provided by the Sponsor or an affiliate. Capital expenses may be compensated by an increased management fee in the Shari ah fund. Alternatively, a musharaka structure (a form of partnership between an Islamic bank and an etrepreneur where both parties provide capital to the enterprise) could be considered. mayer brown 5

THE LP The LP is the holding vehicle for the assets and the purification vehicle, i.e. the vehicle used to allocate (as far as possible) only the Shari ah-compliant items of income to Holding I. To that end, the LP must be interposed directly between the assets and any vehicle that is used for tax purposes to repatriate the profits or for applying leverage. Whether it is actually set up as a limited partnership in a certain jurisdiction will need to be determined in the individual case. It is essential that the law governing the LP provides the feature of allocating special items of income to its partners (tracking stock feature) rather than allocating merely a percentage of total profits of the vehicle. Most jurisdictions such as England, Germany and Delaware award their respective limited partnerships with this feature. Some corporate vehicles also provide for a tracking stock feature. At first instance a tax transparent vehicle (partnership) seems to be preferable in order to avoid a layer of taxable entities in the structure. However, this also depends on the individual case and the jurisdiction the vehicles will be set up in. The LP is managed by its general partner ( GP III ). GP III could be a subsidiary of Holding I and Holding II. The purpose of purification of the income allocated to Holding I will be achieved by the implementation of a private equity style distribution waterfall along the lines of the following: First, 100 percent of Shari ah-compliant profits to Holding I up to its pro rata share in the capital of the LP; second, if compliant profits are not sufficient, then allocation of non-compliant profits to Holding I; third, to Holding II. To determine the profits, all income streams have to be examined and the costs need to be defined that are related to these streams. 6 Shari ah Compliant Fund Structures

DEFINED QUOTA OF NON-COMPLIANT PROFITS The second level of the distribution waterfall illustrates that the share of Holding I in the LP provides the threshold for the quota of non-compliant profits that can be routed through this structure without using donations to purify them. In our assumed scenario Holding I holds a share of roughly 28 percent. This means that at least 28 percent of the profits of the LP should be Shari ah-compliant to avoid donations. Consequently, the share of Holding I in the LP depends on two factors: (i) The ratio of Shari ah investors to conventional investors at level of Fund I and Fund II and (ii) the leverage, be it conventional or merely economic, applied at the level of Holding I and Holding II. THE SHARI AH BOARD The Shari ah Board advises and supervises GP I as manager of the Shari ah-compliant sleeve. The Shari ah Board also advises and supervises GP III. Its main task will be to assist GP III in determining on an ongoing basis the items of profits that have to be considered non-compliant. mayer brown 7

About Mayer Brown Mayer Brown is a leading global law firm with offices in major cities across the Americas, Asia and Europe. We have approximately 1,000 lawyers in the Americas, 300 in Asia and 500 in Europe. Our presence in the world s leading markets enables us to offer clients access to local market knowledge combined with global reach. We are noted for our commitment to client service and our ability to assist clients with their most complex and demanding legal and business challenges worldwide. We serve many of the world s largest companies, including a significant proportion of the Fortune 100, FTSE 100, DAX and Hang Seng Index companies and more than half of the world s largest investment banks. We provide legal services in areas such as Supreme Court and appellate; litigation; corporate and securities; finance; real estate; tax; intellectual property; government and global trade; restructuring, bankruptcy and insolvency; and environmental. OFFICE LOCATIONS AMERICAS Charlotte Chicago Houston Los Angeles New York Palo Alto São Paulo Washington ASIA Bangkok Beijing Guangzhou Hanoi Ho Chi Minh City Hong Kong Shanghai EUROPE Berlin Brussels Cologne Frankfurt London Paris ALLIANCE LAW FIRMS Mexico, Jáuregui, Navarrete y Nader Spain, Ramón & Cajal Italy and Eastern Europe, Tonucci & Partners Please visit www.mayerbrown.com for comprehensive contact information for all Mayer Brown offices. 2009. Mayer Brown LL P, Mayer Brown International LL P, and/or JSM. All rights reserved. Mayer Brown LLP is a limited liability partnership established under the laws of the State of Illinois, U.S.A. This Mayer Brown LLP publication provides information and comments on legal issues and developments of interest to our clients and friends. The foregoing is not a comprehensive treatment of the subject matter covered and is not intended to provide legal advice. Readers should seek specific legal advice before taking any action with respect to the matters discussed herein. 0509