Extent:
Online Ressource (PDF, 3971 KB, 550 S.)
Series:
Type of publication: Book / Working Paper
Language: English
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record
Islamic Finance: The New Regulatory Challenge; Copyright; Contents; About the Editors; About the Contributors; Foreword; Preface; Preface to the Second Edition; Acknowledgments; Part One: The Nature of Risks in Islamic Banking; Chapter 1: Supervision of Islamic Banks: The Regulatory Challenge-Basel II and Basel III; 1. Introduction; 2. The Structure of Basel II and Basel III: Supervisory Implications; 3. The Islamic Financial Services Board; 4. Contents of This Book; Part One: The Nature of Risks in Islamic Banking; Part Two: Capital Adequacy; Part Three: Securitisation and Capital Markets
Part Four: Corporate Governance and Human ResourcesPart Five: Conclusion; Notes; References; Chapter 2: Banking and the Risk Environment; 1. The Global Risk Environment; 2. The Regulatory Environment; 2.1: Pillar 1-Minimum Capital Requirements; 2.2: Pillar 2-Supervisory Review; 2.3: Pillar 3-Market Discipline; 2.4: Liquidity Risk; 2.5: Leverage Ratio; 2.6: The Basel III Liquidity Regime: The Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR); 2.7: The Basel III Liquidity Regime: The Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR); 2.8: The Basel III Liquidity Regime: The Treatment of Shari'ah-Compliant Banks
2.9: The Impact of Basel III Implementation2.10: Timeline; 2.11: Stress Testing; 3. The Implementation Environment (Setting Up a Risk Management Framework in a Bank); 3.1: Models for the Grading of Credits and Establishing a Credit VaR; 3.2: Connections between Risk Categories; 3.3: Economic Capital; 4. The Future Risk Environment; 5. Islamic Banks and the Risk and Regulation Environment; 5.1: Capital; 5.2: Liquidity; 5.3: Trade Transactions as Liquidity?; Chapter 3: Risk Characteristics of Islamic Products: Implications for Risk Measurement and Supervision; 1. Introduction; 2. Background
3. Types of Risks in Islamic Finance and Their Measurement3.1: Mudarabah Risk; 3.2: Credit Risks in Sales-Based Contracts; 3.3: Equity Risks in Mudarabah and Musharakah Facilities; 3.4: Market Risks and Rate of Return Risks; 3.5: Liquidity Risk; 3.6: Operational Risk; 3.7: Mix of Risks by Type of Product; 4. Overall Risk of an Islamic Bank and Approaches to Risk Mitigation; 4.1: Accounting Definitions; 4.2: Measuring Risks in Investment Accounts and Risk Sharing; 5. Summary and Policy Conclusions; Notes; References; Chapter 4: Risk in a Turbulent World: Insights from Islamic Finance
1. Introduction2. Functions of Risk; 3. Dealing with Risk; 4. The Fundamental Law of Risk; 4.1: Fallacy of Composition; 4.2: Risk Concentration; 4.3: Interconnectedness; 4.4: Risk and the Global Financial Crisis; 4.5: Self-Defeating Strategy; 4.6: Toxic Assets; 4.7: Risk Appetite; 4.8: Swings in Attitudes towards Risk; 5. Islamic Finance; 5.1: Prohibition of Excessive Risk-Taking and Gambling; 5.2: Balance of Rights and Obligations; 5.3: Profits and Liability; 6. Functions of Risk in Islamic Finance; 7. Risk Exchange in Islamic Finance; 8. Regulatory Implications
8.1: Stability is a Collective Endeavour
Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
ISBN: 1-118-24704-3 ; 1-118-24706-X ; 978-1-118-24706-8 ; 978-1-118-24704-4
Source:
ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011828758