MOHE Centre of Excellence
Professor Dr Rashidah Abdul Rahman Deputy Director, Accounting Research Institute (ARI) Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia [email protected]
Global Development of Islamic Finance Development of Islamic Finance in Malaysia Corporate Governance Framework in Islamic Financial Institutions Risk Profile in Islamic Banks Empirical Findings
Islamic finance was first introduced into the mainstream global banking system in the early 1960s
Myt Ghamr Bank, Egypt (1963)
Pilgrimage Funds Management Board (Tabung Haji), Malaysia (1962)
And witnessed a period of accelerating growth between 1970s1990s. The millenium
Islamic Bank of Britain (2004) Islamic Dev. Bank, Jeddah (1973) Dubai Islamic Bank, UAE (1975) Faysal Islamic Bank, Sudan (1977) Kuwait Finance House (1977) Bahrain Islamic Bank (1979) Islamic Bank of Brunei (1992) Bank Islam Msia Berhad (1983) Bank Muamalat, Indonesia (1992) Islamic Bank of Thailand (2002)
Today, Islamic finance with operations in more than 300 financial institutions and more than 80 takaful operates globally
Estimated size of Islamic banking assets more than USD$1.0 trillion; Global market capitalization of DJMI>USD 10 trillion; 350 Shariah-compliant funds established globally;
Islamic finance growth is 15%-35% globally;
enormous potential business opportunities
COMMITMENT LEVEL
MALAYSIA, KUWAIT, SAUDI ARABIA, DUBAI, BAHRAIN
BUSINESS INNOVATION MARKET INNOVATION COMPETITOR MATCHING
CLUSTER 4
CLUSTER 3 CLUSTER 2 CLUSTER 1
BRUNEI, INDONESIA, SOUTH AFRICA, MOROCCO, TURKEY, QATAR, UNITED KINGDOM
SYRIA, LEBANON. GERMANY, USA, SINGAPORE
MINIMUM PRECENSE MONITOR DEVELOPMENT WAIT & SEE
CHINA, INDIA, HONG KONG, FRANCE
EXPLORE MARKET POTENTIAL
SPORDIC DEVELOPMENT
MARKET DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES
MARKET EXPANSION ACTIVITIES
MARKET REACH
Source: Creating & promoting the value propositions of Islamic Finance: Enter the next Phase by Dr. Mohamad Nedal Alchaar, Secretary General Accounting & Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI)
Malaysian Islamic Banking & Finance Journey
Increase number of players, develop financial markets & enhance Shariah governance Market liberalisation, upgrading infrastructures, strengthen overall Islamic finance landscape
Building foundation of legal, regulatory & Shariah framework
Advanced stage Intermediate stage
Institutional building, stimulate competition, activity generation & market vibrancy
Inception stage
Instituting foundations of Islamic finance & financial inclusion
Visioning, comprehensive & international integration
Islamic Banking Act 1983 Takaful Act 1984 Government Funding Act 1983 1st full fledge Islamic bank 1st full fledge takaful company IIUM was established in 1983 1983 1993
Islamic windows 2nd Islamic bank 2nd takaful company Islamic money market Shariah Advisory Council at BNM
FSMP 10 year roadmap Foreign Islamic banks Islamic subsidiaries New takaful & retakaful licences Tax neutrality policy
IBFIM SIDC INCEIF ISRA BNM Act 2009 IIIBF, IIUM 2005
2001
2010 & beyond
8
FSMP Financial Sector Masterplan, IBFIM - Islamic Banking and Finance Institute of Malaysia, SIDC Securities Industry Development Corporation, INCEIF International Centre for Education in Islamic Finance, ISRA International Shariah Research Academy for Islamic Finance
Comprehensive Financial Landscape
Instituting Foundations for Islamic Finance Inception Stage (1983 1993)
Build solid foundation of legal, regulatory and Shariah framework
Facilitate establishment of Islamic banks Islamic Banking Act 1983
Thrusts Fulfill Muslims needs Mobilize funds for productive purposes
Facilitate establishment of takaful operators Takaful Act 1984 Over the years Proven to be a viable financial intermediation channel Fulfill needs of Muslims & nonMuslim Success enable expansion into new areas and products
Government Investment Act 1983 Facilitate Islamic money market
Governance
Legal & Regulatory
-Islamic Banking Act -Takaful Act -Government Funding Act -Capital Market Services Act -New foreign legal firm
Diversified Players
Islamic Bank & Takaful Companies Banking
Islamic Capital Market -17 Islamic banks -16 Islamic windows -3 International Islamic Banks -14 International Currency Business Units
Islamic Money Market
Shariah Advisory Council
-Central Banking Act
Dispute Resolution
-Judicial system:dedicated high court -KL Regional Centre for Arbitration -Financial Mediation Bureau
Labuan IBFC
Malaysian Financial System
Money Market
Capital Market
Takaful
Financial markets
Money Market
-Islamic interbank money market -Diverse shot-term Islamic money market instruments
Conventional Banks & Insurance Companies
-8 takaful operators -4 retakaful operators -1 International Takaful Operator -7 International Currency Business Units
Fund Management
Capital Market
-58% of outstanding bonds are sukuk -88% Shariah counters -143 Islamic unit trust fund
-9 licensed Islamic fund management companies -35 fund management companies with Islamic mandates
is a set of organisational arrangements whereby the actions of the management of institutions offering Islamic financial services are aligned, as far as possible, with the interest of its stakeholders; provision of proper incentives for the organs of governance such as the BOD, Shariah Supervisory Board and management to pursue objectives that are in interests of stakeholders and facilitate effective monitoring, thereby encouraging IIFS to use resources more efficiently; and comply with Islamic Shariah rules and principles (IFSB, 2006, pp.33)
Conduct financial business in accordance with prohibition of Riba & Gharar
Enhance Islams social objectives in particular the promotion of social behaviour
Development and promotion of integrated Islamic Financial System
Allah the Almighty
Ethical Values Islamic Banks
Shariah Board
Corporate Governance
Internal Arrangement
External Arrangement
Functional role of Islamic banks
Legal & Regulatory arrangement
Financial Information Infrastructure
Agency Solution provider
Trustee/ guarantor
Fund Manager/ Agent/Mydarib
Mudaraba facilitator
Shareholder
Current accounts (CA)
Restricted Investment Account (RIA)
Unrestricted Investment Account (UIA)
Depositor
Stake Holder
Islamic banks shall establish:
a comprehensive governance policy framework reporting of their financial and non financial information acknowledge the right of investment account holders adopt a sound investment strategy mechanism for Shariah scholars applying fatawa and monitoring make adequate and timely disclosure
Shariah Governance Framework Model for Islamic Financial Institutions by Bank Negara (Central Bank) Malaysia
the issuance of fatwa via collective ijtihad supervision (raqabah)
review (mutabaah)
UNIQUE
SHARIAH NON-COMPLIANCE RISK
DISPLACED COMMERCIAL RISK EQUITY INVESTMENT RISK
RATE OF RETURN RISK
ISLAMIC BANK
GENERIC
CREDIT RISK
OPERATIONAL RISK
MARKET RISK
LIQUIDITY RISK
Strategic
Legal
Fiduciary
Reputation
Transparency
Regulatory compliance
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IFSB CLASSIFIED SHARIAH COMPLIANCE RISK AS PART OF OPERATIONAL RISK
OPERATIONAL RISK Risk of losses resulting from inadequate of failed internal process, people and systems or from external events, which includes legal risk and Shariah compliance risk, but excludes strategic and operational risk. SHARIAH COMPLIANCE RISK The risk that arises from the Banks failure to comply with the Shariah rules and principles determined by the relevant Shariah regulatory councils. Liquidity Risk Market Risk SHARIAH COMPLIANCE RISK Operational Credit Risk
Rate of Return Risk
SIX CATEGORIES OF RISK
Equity Investment Risk
Shariah Compliance cuts across the six categories of risk
Based on IFSB
Reference: IFSB Guiding Principles On Risk Management (December 2004)
20
SHARIAH NON-COMPLIANCE RISK MAY OCCURS IN OPERATIONAL RISK FIELDS
INTERNAL PROCESS
Policy/ procedures Documentation
PEOPLE
Employee negligent Communication
SYSTEM
o System support o System monitoring o System design
EXTERNAL EVENT
Regulation Political Outsourcing Fraud (External fraud)
Marketing/
Selling Control framework
Knowledge/ skill
Unauthorized activities
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IFSBS GUIDING PRINCIPLES OF RISK MANAGEMENT
15 guiding principles which cover: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. General requirement for an effective risk management process (1) Credit risk (4) Equity Investment Risk (3) Market Risk (1) Liquidity Risk (2)
6.
7.
Rate of Return Risk (2)
Operational risk (2)
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Mala ysia Mean Pakis tan Mean
5.83 6.09 5.64
Risk Management Practices Understanding Risk Management Risk Identification
5.77 5.88 5.43
Risk Mitigation (Assessment and Analysis)
Risk Monitoring
5.93 6.02
5.85 5.93
Mean of TBoth Test SigLevel 5.80 5.97 5.52 5.89 5.97
Risk management practices
0.5
0.00 0.01
0.27 0.15
VARIABLES
MALAYSIA
PAKISTAN
OVERALL
Coefficient
CONSTANT URM RI RAA RM Adjusted R2 F-statistic Prob. (Fstatistic) 3.33 0.713 0.317 0.421 0.446 0.357 3.163** 0.000
Prob.
0.050* 0.113
Coefficient
3.29 0.708
Prob.
Coefficient Prob.
0.011** 0.150 0.031** 0.045** 0.543
0.034** 3.65 0.122 0.670
0.002** 0.247 0.031** 0.352 0.201 0.448 0.356 3.139** 0.000
0.010** 0.342 0.051* 0.315 0.671 0.446 0.357 3.165** 0.000
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165
284
Abdul Rahman , Syed and Dean (2013), J of Islamic Economics, Banking & Finance, forthcoming
Mean Variables Malaysia Egypt Total Sample
T-test Sig. Level Skewness Kurtosis
Boards involvement in risk management
Process of risk management
5.39
4.83
5.32
0.03
-0.163
-0.072
5.92
5.02
5.81
0.00
-1.508
2.378
Risk management practices
5.85
5.00
5.74
0.00
-1.200
1.371
Abdul Rahman , Syed and Ismail, submitted to Spanish J of Finance and Accounting
ME: Process of Risk Management
Significant
Significant
Significant IV: Boards involvement in risk management
Step 3, Path c
Step 4, Path c Significant, but lower effect than Path c
DV: Risk Management Practices
Figure 1:The Expected Results from Four Hierarchical Regressions (Where, ME= mediator variable, IV=independent variable, DV=dependent variable)
Thank you