Dvidend Signaling Hypothesis and Short-Term Asset Concentration of Islamic Interest-free Banking
This paper finds that dividend signaling hypothesis is able to explain the phenomenon of assets concentration in short and medium investments in Islamic Interest-Free banking (IIFBs). In this paper a dividend signaling model framework has been introduced, where in the process of maintaining a stable dividend, mangers of Islamic Interest-Free banking (IIFBs) will prefer to invest in investments that have more certainty about its return, leading to a heavy use of mark-up-pricing, which in turn concentrated on short and medium investments. The empirical results are found to be consistent with the prediction of our model. Dividends in Islamic Interest-Free banking (IIFBs) are found to be stable, and bank earnings cashflow is a major source of this stability. Moreover, there is evidence that the short and medium investments are more important in generating earnings than long-term investments.
Year of publication: |
2002-07
|
---|---|
Authors: | Farhat, Joseph ; Hassan, M. Kabir ; Al-Zu'bi, Bashir |
Institutions: | Economic Research Forum (ERF) |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
DIVIDEND SIGNALING HYPOTHESIS AND SHORT-TERM ASSET CONCENTRATION OF ISLAMIC INTEREST-FREE BANKING
HASSAN, M. KABIR, (2003)
-
Economic Performance of the OIC Countries and the Prospect of an Islamic Common Market
Hassan, M. Kabir, (2009)
-
Gulf Monetary Union and Regional Integration
Hassan, M. Kabir, (2008)
- More ...