Finasia Capital structures and places Sharia-compliant financing for sovereign and corporate issuers in Central Asia — and helps them attract Gulf and Southeast Asian Islamic institutional investors who are actively seeking compliant, credible opportunities in frontier markets. Our CEO has spoken at international forums on the role of Islamic finance in sustainable development. That commitment runs through every mandate we take on.
What we do for you
Our services are tailored to your specific financing objectives, ensuring that every engagement delivers measurable value.
- Sukuk Issuance Advisory — Full lifecycle advisory from structure selection (Ijara, Musharakah, Wakala, Murabaha) and Sharia Supervisory Board engagement through documentation and settlement. Sukuk are asset ownership certificates, not bonds — we structure them accordingly.
- Murabaha and Commodity Financing — Cost-plus sale arrangements for trade finance, working capital, and asset acquisition, priced on disclosed profit margins with full Sharia governance.
- Ijara (Lease-Based) Financing — Asset-backed lease structures for infrastructure, equipment, and real estate — a clean Sharia-compliant alternative to conventional secured lending.
- Islamic DFI Access — Direct facilitation with the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), ICD, and regional Islamic institutions whose mandates align development objectives with Sharia compliance.
- Islamic Investor Relations & Roadshow Support — We prepare clients to present to Gulf and Asian Islamic institutional investors: business Halal-compliance positioning, Sharia acceptability of sector and operations, investor narrative, and targeted roadshow management with the right institutions.
- Green & Sustainable Sukuk Advisory — Islamic capital increasingly flows toward ESG-aligned instruments. Drawing on our track record in Green Bonds and SDG frameworks, we advise on Green Sukuk and sustainability-linked Islamic structures that satisfy both Sharia requirements and the ESG mandates of international Islamic institutional investors.
- Hybrid Structures — Where transactions require Islamic and conventional tranches, each Islamic component is independently reviewed by a Sharia Supervisory Board and documented to AAOIFI standards.
- Sharia Governance and Documentation — Independent scholar coordination, AAOIFI-benchmarked structuring, and full legal opinion support on every transaction.
For Uzbekistan and Central Asia, Islamic finance is a direct channel to some of the world's most actively deployed institutional capital — and a growing number of Gulf investors are specifically looking for credible frontier market assets. We know how to open that channel from both ends..




