BFM Podcast

Why Junaid Wahedna Left Wall Street to Revolutionise Islamic Finance: The Story Behind Wahed

Tan KW
Publish date: Fri, 28 Jun 2024, 01:17 PM
Why Junaid Wahedna Left Wall Street to Revolutionise Islamic Finance: The Story Behind Wahed

28-Jun-24 10:00

Junaid Wahedna, Founder and Chairman, Wahed

Leaving Wall Street to revolutionize Islamic finance, solo founder Junaid Wahedna raised $82 million in his mission to eliminate interest from Muslim lives worldwide. With that funding, he built a robo-advisor model that's profitable in the three main countries Wahed operates in: the US, the UK, and Malaysia. These markets contribute almost equally to Wahed's approximate $1 billion in AUM. That said, Wahed is still not profitable on the group level.

However, now that the base model works, Junaid has handed the role of CEO to COO Mohsin Siddiqui, who has been tasked with replicating the business model and scaling the company into markets across the world, aiming to take Wahed from $10 million to $100 million in revenue. Junaid has transitioned to the role of Chairman to focus on overall strategy, building new products, and advancing the larger mission.

Join us on this episode of "Open for Business" as we dive into an inspiring conversation with Junaid Wahedna. He shares his entrepreneurial journey, from leaving a lucrative career on Wall Street to creating a platform that caters to the needs of the Muslim community by offering Sharia-compliant investment solutions. Junaid recounts how a taxi ride in New York sparked the idea for Wahed back in 2015, leading to raising $75-$82 million over the last nine years and establishing offices in 11 countries, including Malaysia.

Don't miss out on this captivating discussion with Junaid Wahedna, only on Open for Business.

Inspiration from a Taxi Ride: The idea for Wahed was sparked during a taxi ride in New York when a Bangladeshi driver shared his struggle with Sharia-compliant investments. He didn't want to keep his money in a bank because he was a practicing Muslim and wanted to avoid interest, so he had put all his savings into Apple stock on the advice of his imam.

Mission-Driven Business: Wahed's core mission is to provide Sharia-compliant investment solutions, aiming to eliminate interest from all aspects of its customers' financial lives, reflecting the company's commitment to its values and the community it serves.

Organic Growth Powered by Referrals: Wahed has achieved significant growth through organic means, leveraging community trust and referrals rather than relying heavily on traditional marketing methods.

Solo Founder Success: Despite conventional VC wisdom favoring co-founders, Junaid Wahedna believes that many of the most successful entrepreneurs possess an autocratic personality and emphasizes the importance of control.

Raising Capital While Maintaining Control: Junaid successfully raised between $75-$82 million without giving up control, issuing only common stock and not giving any board seats to investors.

Global Expansion: Wahed has expanded to multiple differing markets (the US, UK, Malaysia, and UAE), demonstrating the scalability and international appeal of Sharia-compliant investment products.

Diverse Product Offerings: Wahed's product portfolio includes a robo-advisor platform, ETFs, equity crowdfunding, and a gold-backed debit card, illustrating the company's innovative approach to addressing various financial needs within the Muslim community.

Balancing Faith and Business: Junaid emphasizes the importance of balancing faith-based values with business decisions, ensuring that Wahed stays true to its mission while achieving profitability.

Efficient and Lean Operations: Wahed's ability to break even quickly in new markets, highlights the company's focus on operational efficiency and cost management. Their new UAE operations currently on track to break even within one year.

Acquisition Strategy: Wahed strategically acquires companies to accelerate growth and enhance its product offerings, such as the acquisition of a digital banking app in the UK for its infrastructure and team.

Future Plans and IPO Considerations: While an IPO is seen as a potential path for liquidity and community ownership, Wahed remains focused on its long-term growth strategy and maintaining control to continue its mission-driven work

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DickyMe

".... in his mission to eliminate interest from Muslim lives worldwide."

A simple Islamic home loan for RM500,000 for 30 year tenure requires monthly repayment not less than RM 3100 at profit rate ~4.00% +-0.50%. Assuming a person completed successfully the monthly dues. After the 30th year, he would have paid RM 1,122,480. If he had bought cash, he would have saved RM 622.480.Another name for Interest is PROFIT 😏

17 hours ago

DickyMe

How many can afford to pay RM3000+without fail for 30 years?
No ups and down in personal life, work life? Business growing exponentially?
Economy always in the pink? Politics stable, harmony like in LALALAND?

17 hours ago

DickyMe

First of all, not many earn more than RM3K.
The politicians have ruined current generation's ability to own a home.

17 hours ago

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