scholarly journals A SUCCINCT ANALYSIS OF MITIGATING LIQUIDITY RISK IN ISLAMIC BANKS IN THE LIGHT OF LIQUIDITY AND RISK MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 527
Author(s):  
Atharyanshah Puneri ◽  
Naeem Suleman Dhiraj ◽  
Hafiz Benraheem

Liquidity management has been incessantly challenging for the financialinstitutions and especially Islamic financial institutions due to their nature of business. The�convoluted nature of liquidity management impedes the task of Islamic banks in managing�their liquidity efficiently. Given the intricacies of the subject matter, this paper delves into�elaborating the key aspects of liquidity management; subsequently, discusses the�consequences of poor liquidity management and problems inherent in managing the latter by�analyzing the real-life failure of Islamic financial institution as a result identifying the issues that could possibly jeopardize the existence of the Islamic banks. Finally, equipping the�readers with tools to mitigate the liquidity risk.

2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 464-478
Author(s):  
Michael Becker ◽  
Rüdiger Buchkremer

Purpose The purpose of this study is to examine whether the compliance management activities in the risk management environment of financial institutions can be enhanced using a Process Mining application. Design/methodology/approach In this research, an implementation procedure for a selected Process Mining application is developed and evaluated at a financial institution in Germany. Findings The evaluation of the process data with the Process Mining application Disco shows that the compliance of the real-life execution of business processes can be monitored in real-time. Moreover, potential non-compliant activities and durations can be analysed in a detailed manner. Research limitations/implications When the research results are regarded, it must be considered that a general condition for the usage of a Process Mining application is that the process data is available and exportable in the required format and that data privacy regulations are fulfilled. Originality/value This research presents a practical use case for the implementation of a Process Mining application at the risk management department of financial institutions. It shows the value of using a technical application to carry out tedious tasks that are usually executed manually. This value is discussed and compared with the aim to help financial institutions in determining how the effectiveness and efficiencies of compliance management activities can be improved. Therefore, this research can be taken as a foundation for the practical implementation of a Process Mining application at financial institutions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
DIDIN RASYIDIN

Abstract. Study on Assessment the Commercial Islamic Bank by Financing to Deposit Ratio (FDR) at BJB Syariah Serang. Islamic bank is a bank that operates without relying on interest. Islamic banks can also be interpreted as financial institutions/ banks operations and products are developed based on the Quran and Hadith. Antonio and Perwataatmadja distinguish two senses, namely the Islamic banks and banks operating with Islamic Shari'a principles. Islamic Bank is a bank that operates with Islamic Shari'a and an ordinance operating refers to the provisions of the Qur'an and hadith. The purpose of this study is to determine how percentage and how does the calculation of Financing to Deposit Ratio of Bank Jawa Barat Syariah at the end of 2013. The method used in this research is descriptive cualitative method. Qualitative research method is a method to investigate an object that can not be measured by numbers or other sizes that are exact. The conclusion of the study is the Financing to Deposit Ratio (FDR) at Bank BJB Syariah is 104.28%. This means that banks liquidity ability to anticipate the needs of liquidity and liquidity risk management is weak is ranked fourth compositeAbstrak. Financing to Deposit Ratio (FDR) Sebagai Salah Satu Penilaian Kesehatan Bank Umum Syariah (Study Kasus Pada Bank BJB Syariah Cabang Serang). Bank syariah adalah bank yang beroperasi tanpa mengandalkan bunga. bank syariah juga dapat diartikan sebagai lembaga keuangan yang operasional dan produknya dikembangkan berdasarkan Al-Quran dan Hadis. Antonio dan Perwataatmadja membedakan dua pengertian, yaitu bank syariah dan bank yang beroperasi dengan prinsip syariat Islam. Bank syariah adalah bank yang beroperasi dengan syariat dan tata cara Islam yang mengacu pada ketentuan Al-Qur'an dan hadits. Tujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk menentukan bagaimana persentase dan bagaimana perhitungan Financing to Deposit Ratio Bank Jawa Barat Syariah pada akhir 2013. Metode yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah metode deskriptif analisis kualitatif. Kesimpulan dari penelitian ini adalah Pembiayaan to Deposit Ratio (FDR) di Bank BJB Syariah adalah 104,28%. Ini berarti bahwa kemampuan likuiditas bank untuk mengantisipasi kebutuhan likuiditas dan manajemen risiko likuiditas lemah berada di peringkat keempat.


ICR Journal ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-224
Author(s):  
Sekono Abiola Muttalib

The general consensus of financial experts is that liquidity is the lifeblood of any organisation, which is inclusive of Islamic banks. Hence, effective liquidity management is essential for the efficiency of banking institutions and the economy as a whole. The major provider of liquidity is the short-term money market instruments.  Islamic financial institutions just like their conventional counterparts use short-term mobilised deposit funds to finance long-term loans and projects which expose them to asset liability mismatches and thus, are vulnerable to liquidity problems. Addressing the potential liquidity risk due to the cash-flow mismatches requires an efficient and vibrant Islamic money market as it is an essential and integral part of Islamic financial system. It therefore raises the need for developing an Islamic money market where Shari’ah-compliant financial instruments are to be traded and operated based on Shari’ah principles. Although it is considered the surest approach to sound liquidity risk management in Islamic banks, the dilemma that Islamic money markets are facing now is acute shortage of Shari’ah-compliant financial instruments and the controversies surrounding the few available instruments. A successful liquidity risk management therefore requires ensuring well functioning Islamic money markets with some if not all controversies/addressed through embarking on development of new products or promoting innovation in order to enable Islamic banks to compete effectively with their conventional counterparts. Hence, this study attempts to present a better understanding of various Islamic money market instruments, their roles in managing liquidity and their relationship with liquidity risk management.


Author(s):  
Prawitra Thalib ◽  
Sri Hajati ◽  
Faizal Kurniawan ◽  
Komari Aldiansyah

Baitul Maal wat Tamwil is a financial institution with a sharia concept that was born as a choice that changes the concept of maal and tamwil in one institution. The concept of maal was born and became part of the lives of Muslim communities in terms of collecting and distributing funds for zakat, infaq and shadaqah) productively. While the Tamwil concept was born for purely business activities to benefit from the middle to micro sectors of society. One of the financing activities carried out by BMT is financing based on profit sharing principles. Profit sharing is done by two types with mudharabah and musyarakah contracts. musyarakah is derived from the word syirkah, also called syarikah, which means a cooperation agreement between two or more parties for certain businesses, each party providing the assistance fund, and will be borne together in accordance with the aid fund, or mutual agreement. The methods used in the writing of this article are normative research using a statute approach and a conceptual approach.the result of this research indicates distribution of funds or financing must pay attention to various matters relating to caution both from within and from outside the Islamic Financial Institutions of Islamic Banks and Non-Islamic Banks. Matters issued from internships are in the form of Legal Lending Limit (LLL), financing guidelines, operational aspects. Aside from internal, things that are of caution are also excluded from the external supported by 5C analysis (Character, Condition, Capacity, Capital, Guarantee) and sharia compliance). This analysis must be considered in channeling financing to avoid elements forbidden in Islam.


2022 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 528-544
Author(s):  
Desi Ratnasari ◽  
Muhammad Iqbal Fasa ◽  
A. Kumedi Ja’far

The development of sharia economy in Indonesia is increasing. Islamic economic development can be seen from the development of Islamic financial institutions and the Islamic financial instruments they offer, ranging from Islamic banks, Islamic capital markets, and Islamic insurance. With these developments, nowadays financing activities with sharia contracts are increasing and growing rapidly. However, only a few can pay it off. In other words, non-performing financing or bad loans at Islamic financial institutions often occur. Non-performing financing caused by the inability of the customer as a debtor to pay debts to a financial institution as a creditor resulted in the customer being bankrupted by the financial institution as a creditor. Bankruptcy is defined as the inability of the debtor or debtor (can be a person, legal entity, company) which is proven based on a court decision that the debtor has stopped paying his debts (unable to pay off debts) which results in general confiscation of his assets, so that the debtor is no longer entitled to manage his assets. . If it is associated with zakat, one of the ashnaf of zakat is gharimin or people who are in debt. Zakat institutions in Indonesia have not made bankrupt customers as gharimin who are entitled to receive zakat. The formulation of the problem in this paper is to find out the views of Islamic law on the status of bankrupt debtors as gharimin. The conclusion is that the status of a bankrupt debtor can be determined as a gharimin who is entitled to receive zakat. The use of debt in question can be for personal or public interest. The distribution pattern can use the qardh hasan pattern where the zakat given to the gharimin is not to be owned but to be returned again. The zakat funds are not only used to pay off debts, they can also be used as initial capital for bankrupt debtors to restart their business. Keywords: bankrupt debtor, gharimin, zakat mustahik.


Author(s):  
Rusni Hassan ◽  
Ahmad Azam Othman ◽  
Muhammad Naim Omar ◽  
Mohammad Deen Mohd. Napiah ◽  
Mohamad Asmadi Abdullah ◽  
...  

Abstract: Shariah compliance is the backbone of Islamic banks. As an institution established within the ambit of Shariah, Islamic banks are expected to ensure that their aims, activities, operations and management adhere to the Shariah principles and values. Failure to comply with Shariah, will expose Islamic Financial Institutions (IFIs) to Shariah non-compliance risk. Subsequently, it is an essential duty of the IFIs to manage Shariah risk properly. In order to effectively manage the risk vulnerability of the IFIs, proper measures for risk management have been put in place in different frameworks that are either domestic or international based. In the Malaysian context, IFIs are guided by relevant regulations such as the Shariah Governance Framework 2010, IFSB principles and Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 with regards to Shariah risk management. This research examined the regulatory requirements of the Shariah risk management process for Islamic financial institutions that operate in Malaysia, in the context of the Guidelines on Shariah Governance Framework 2010 issued by the Central Bank of Malaysia. The paper discusses the concept of “risk”, “Shariah risk” and “Shariah non-compliant risk” in the context of Islamic Financial Institutions and also examines the process adopted by the Malaysian IFIs in managing the Shariah risk. The hypotheses that the paper seeks to establish are that there are differences between the concept of Shariah risk and Shariah non-compliant risk; and that the Shariah risk management process adopted by the IFIs are different than the conventional risk management process due to the unique features and requirements of the IFIs.   Keywords: Shariah, Risk management, Islamic Financial Institutions.   Abstrak: Pematuhan Syariah adalah tulang belakang bank Islam. Sebagai sebuah institusiyang ditubuhkan dalam bidang Syariah, bank Islam dijangka memastikan bahawa matlamat, aktiviti, operasi dan pengurusan mereka mematuhi prinsip dan nilai Syariah. Kegagalan mematuhi Syariah, akan mendedahkan Institusi Kewangan Islam (IFIs) kepada risiko ketidakpatuhan Syariah. Selepas itu, adalah tanggungjawab penting IFI untuk menguruskan risiko Syariah dengan betul. Untuk mengatasi kelemahan risiko IFI secara berkesan, langkah-langkah yang sewajarnya untuk pengurusan risiko telah dilaksanakan dalam rangka kerja yang berbeza sama ada di dalam negeri atau antarabangsa. Dalam konteks Malaysia, IFI dipandu oleh peraturan yang berkaitan seperti Rangka Kerja Tadbir Urus Syariah 2010, prinsip IFSB dan Akta Perkhidmatan Kewangan Islam 2013 berkaitan dengan pengurusan risiko Syariah. Kajian ini mengkaji keperluan pengawalseliaan proses pengurusan risiko Syariah untuk institusi kewangan Islam yang beroperasi di Malaysia, dalam konteks Garis Panduan mengenai Rangka Tadbir Urus Syariah 2010 yang dikeluarkan oleh Bank Negara Malaysia. Makalah ini membincangkan konsep “risiko”, “risiko Syariah” dan “risiko tidak patuh Syariah” dalam konteks Institusi Kewangan Islam dan juga mengkaji proses yang diterima pakai oleh IFI Malaysia dalam menguruskan risiko Syariah. Hipotesis ini bertujuan untuk melihat perbezaan antara konsep risiko Syariah dengan risiko tidak patuh Syariah; dan proses pengurusan risiko Syariah yang diterima pakai oleh IFIs adalah berbeza daripada proses pengurusan risiko konvensional disebabkan oleh ciri-ciri unik dan keperluan IFI.   Kata kunci: Syariah, Pengurusan risiko, Institusi Kewangan Islam.


Author(s):  
Noraini Mohd Ariffin ◽  
Fatima Abdul Hamid ◽  
Nur Afiqah Md Amin

Islamic banks are required to ensure their operations and activities comply with the Shariah principles. According to Islamic Financial Services Act (2013) in Malaysia, all operations and activities of Islamic financial institutions including Islamic banks have to comply with decisions made by the Shariah Advisory Council (SAC) of Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and the Shariah Committee (SC) of the Islamic financial institution to ensure Shariah compliance. In practice, Shariah compliance is considered a crucial factor by bank stakeholders, especially Muslim customers in their decision to use Islamic financial products. Thus, one of the ways for Islamic banks to convey their Shariah-compliance to their stakeholders is through annual reports. This study examines the level of compliance on Shariah disclosure in the annual reports of Malaysian Islamic banks. A Shariah disclosure index, comprising mandatory and voluntary items, was developed from Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) guidelines and Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) standards. Shariah disclosure data were collected from the annual reports for the year 2016 of the 16 Islamic banks in Malaysia. Based on Institutional Theory, this study hypothesised high compliance, however the results revealed that none of the banks had full compliance to the mandatory items. Nevertheless, some of these banks disclosed voluntary items. The findings provide useful insights to the regulators and stakeholders on Islamic banks’ compliance on Shariah disclosure. The study also reveals the importance of disclosing additional items in the annual reports of Islamic banks.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-38
Author(s):  
Hisam Ahyani

This research is based on the neglect and lack of socialization of sharia auditing and sharia accounting in an era that is all digital like today. The purpose of this research is to determine the extent of the urgency of sharia auditing and accounting if it is applied in Indonesia, especially in the era of disruption like today, where the current era of disruption has created a separate challenge from the existence of sharia audits and operations which continue to experience developments in the scope of the sharia economy. especially in Indonesia. The research method used in scientific research is literature review by reviewing literature (books and journals and other articles) that support the themes to be discussed (sharia auditing and accounting). The nature of this research is descriptive-analytic using qualitative data analysis. This study resulted in the finding that the urgency of sharia auditing is needed, especially in Islamic banks or non-bank institutions such as LKS (Islamic financial institutions) in Indonesia. Sharia accounting is needed in order to increase the branding value of a company from the accounting system used to ensure the superiority of a bank or Islamic financial institution in Indonesia, especially in the era of disruption (industrial era 4.0) as it is today.


Author(s):  
Melis Melis

This research discusses the management of human resources in marketing the products and services of Islamic financial institutions. The results of this study prove that Islamic banks and financial institutions in Indonesia are developing very fast. However, the image of banks and Islamic financial institutions in Indonesia is not good. For this reason, several policies in managing Islamic financial institutions need to be addressed. One of them is the aspect of human resources. An employee of a bank and an Islamic financial institution that is accepted must have a good personality, an expert in muqalah fiqh, knowledge of Islamic financial institutions, computers / IT and so on. They must be people who support strongly to practice Islamic economics in their lives.  


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