Islamic Capital Markets and Products. Managing Capital and Liquidity Requirements Under Basel III

Islamic Capital Markets and Products. Managing Capital and Liquidity Requirements Under Basel III, Simon  Archer audiobook. ISDN28285125

Simon Archer and Rifaat Ahmed Abdel Karim

Genre:foreign reference literature

Language:English

Type:PDF book

Publisher:John Wiley & Sons Limited

Publication date:08.12.2022

Price:$129.83

Views:166

Ensure Basel III compliance with expert analysis specific to Islamic Finance Islamic Capital Markets and Products provides a thorough examination of Islamic capital markets (ICM), with particular attention to the products that they offer and the legal and regulatory infrastructure within which they operate. Since Islamic banks act as asset managers, attention is paid to the regulatory challenges which they face in the light of Basel III, as regards both eligible capital and liquidity risk management. The authors of the chapters are professionals and practitioners, and write from experience. The editors also contributed to some of the chapters. The markets and products covered include Islamic equities, Islamic investment certificates (Sukūk) which are Shariah compliant alternatives to conventional bonds, and Islamic Collective Investment Schemes. The coverage of legal and regulatory issues includes an examination of the implications for ICM of securities laws and regulations and of Basel III, as well as collateralisation issues. Shariah compliance aspects, in terms both of the selection criteria for Islamic equities and of the purification of impermissible components of income, are also examined in some detail, as are the implications of Basel III for eligible capital in general and for Shariah compliant capital instruments in particular. A similar analysis is also made of the implications of the Basel III requirements for liquidity risk management and high quality liquid assets (HQLA), including Shariah compliant HQLA. The book concludes with three case studies, two describing the ICM in Malaysia and Bahrain and a third which describes Sukūk issued as Shariah compliant capital instruments, followed by brief concluding remarks by the editors.

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