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Implication ways of Islamic Finance in the modern context / Implication ways of Islamic Finance in the modern contextKazimov, Magsud January 2015 (has links)
Thesis will be dedicated to analysis of background, environment and opportunities for the application of Islamic finance. The thesis will compare the structures of both conventional and religious banking. I will explain the core Islamic principles, financial instruments available and will describe key regulatory institutions. Description will include practical implementation examples from customer-bank perspective. After defining framework, I will discuss the practical implementation of Islamic finance in different environments. Legal factors concerned with application will be discoursed. The opportunities for Islamic finance towards following the current trends in not only Muslim countries will be analyzed. Moreover, criticism against Islamic finance will be answered by comparison of performance of both conventional and Islamic banks during the financial crisis of 2008.
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Euronotes : risk and pricingFeeney, Paul William January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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Studii, probleme, comentarii bancareAndrucovici, Liviu. January 1972 (has links)
Summary in English. / At head of title: Banca Natională a Republicii Socialiste România. "Autorii: Liviu Andrucovici ... [et al.]." Includes bibliographical references.
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Studii, probleme, comentarii bancareAndrucovici, Liviu. January 1972 (has links)
Summary in English. / At head of title: Banca Natională a Republicii Socialiste România. "Autorii: Liviu Andrucovici ... [et al.]." Includes bibliographical references.
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Bank finance, intermediation costs, and macroeconomic activity an examination of Brazil /Robitaille, Patrice Theresa, January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1988. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Essays on financial intermediationAsaftei, Gabriel. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Economics, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Blockchain for next generation services in banking and finance: cost, benefit, risk and opportunity analysisOsmani, M., El-Haddadeh, R., Hindi, N., Janssen, M., Weerakkody, Vishanth J.P. 2020 June 1930 (has links)
Yes / Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to help in providing a better understanding of the application of blockchain technology in the context of the banking and finance sectors. The aim is to outline blockchain’s benefits, opportunities, costs, risks as well as challenges of the technology in the context of banking and finance services
Design/methodology/approach – Careful examination of the extant literature, including utilising relevant academic-based research databases has been carried out. It covered reviewing various research contributions published in peer-reviewed journals, academic reports, as well as technical reports to help in identifying related benefits, opportunities, costs, and risks.
Findings – The findings reveal that there are limited contributions in utilising blockchain in the banking and finance sectors when compared with other sectors. As such, the study highlighted the relevant perspective of benefits, opportunities, costs, and risks within such sectors.
Practical implications – This study helps in offering a focal point to banking and financial sector managers and decision-makers for realising the benefits of blockchain technology as well as developing strategies and programmes to overcome the identified challenges.
Originality/value – This study highlights the need for a holistic understanding of the various aspects of cost, benefits, risk and opportunities to create blockchain applications that work for banking and finance sectors / NPRP grant # [11S-0117–180325] from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation).
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Islamic financial contracting forms in Saudi Arabia : law and practiceAl-Shamrani, Ali Saeed January 2014 (has links)
The main objective of this research is to examine whether the current practices of Islamic banking and financial activities in Saudi Arabia are compatible with the principles of Shariah. This examination includes the current uses of sukuk (Islamic bonds), the models of takaful (Islamic insurance) and accepted risk transfer mechanisms in Islamic structured finance (Islamic derivatives). The second purpose is to investigate the basic laws of banking and financial activities in Saudi Arabia and examine whether they are compatible with Shariah principles. The final aim is to suggest solutions to the absence of regulatory and supervisory systems of Islamic finance in Saudi Arabia by proposing a legislative and regulatory framework for Islamic banking and finance in Saudi Arabia. The research findings show that there are no specific laws and regulations governing Islamic banking and financial activities in Saudi Arabia. In addition, there is no independent central Shariah board to regulate and supervise Islamic banking and financial activities in Saudi Arabia, nor are there are any specialised commercial courts to look into banking issues. The research finds that there are some articles in the law of supervision of cooperative insurance companies in Saudi Arabia, and its implementing regulations, which do not comply with Shariah, and in addition, there is some incompatibility between the law and its implementing regulations. The final finding is that the issuance of sukuk and Islamic financial derivatives in Saudi Arabia are not consistent with Shariah requirements, due to the absence of regulatory policies and supervisory harmonisation, while Islamic insurance needs to amend some articles of the law of supervision of cooperative insurance companies in Saudi Arabia, and its implementing regulations, in order to comply with Shariah and also to avoid incompatibility between them.
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The impact of financial liberalisation on bank performance : international evidence on efficiency and productivityLuo, Y. January 2014 (has links)
This thesis provides international evidence relating to the impact of financial liberalisation on banking sector performance. Compared to a large number of studies linking financial liberalisation to economic growth and financial fragility, there is relatively little research at the international level linking financial liberalisation to banking sector efficiency and productivity. The research contributes to the literature by making a systematic, cross-country empirical investigation using domestic and international measures of financial liberalisation and evaluates their impact on bank efficiency and productivity by applying a combination of frontier estimation methods, dynamic panel data regressions and Granger causality techniques. The evidence is based on the use of bank-level accounting data and country-level economic data for a sample of 1536 commercial banks covering 88 countries over the period 2000 to 2009. Apart from using the global frontier for estimation of bank efficiency, empirical analysis is conducted across various levels including the use of separate income-group frontiers to determine the robustness of the findings. Using stochastic frontier analysis (SFA) for the estimation of banks’ cost and profit efficiency, the evidence shows that financial liberalisation contributes positively to profit efficiency while the effect on cost efficiency is generally mixed, depending on the measures of financial liberalisation used. Additionally, the results show that while cost efficiency remains, on average, stable during the estimation period (2000-2009), average profit efficiency fluctuates in the pre-crises period (2000-06) but declines sharply during the post crises period (2007-09). Furthermore, accounting explicitly for the influence of risk in banking, the evidence suggests that financial liberalisation, lower cost efficiency and higher profit efficiency of banks all increase the potential for default risk, while the latter also reduces both cost and profit efficiency, providing support for the bad management hypothesis. Additionally, upon accounting explicitly for the role of market power or competition in banking, the evidence suggests that both financial liberalisation and greater market power contribute to higher default risk of banks. On the other hand, greater competition in banking contributes to higher cost but lower profit efficiency of banks under financial liberalisation. The cross-country empirical investigation is also extended to analyse the impact of financial liberalisation on banks’ technical efficiency and productivity growth, using a two-step approach of combining data envelopment analysis (DEA) with panel data regressions. The evidence here suggests that financial liberalisation is robustly and negatively associated with (pure) technical efficiency. Furthermore, the effect on the total factor productivity (TFP) growth (using two-step DEA-type Malmquist method) is positive, although not always statistically significant. The robustness analysis conducted across the different income groups (higher, upper-middle, lower-middle and lower) confirms that the impact on cost, profit and technical efficiency of banks is more pronounced in the more developed (higher and upper-middle) countries than in the less developed countries. In particular, the impact of financial liberalisation is largely insignificant in the lower income countries. This finding generally reflects the greater pace of capital account liberalisation in the higher and upper-middle income countries, where the impact on both cost and profit efficiency is positive. Throughout the analysis, the estimation takes into account country-specific differences in the regulatory, market structure, financial development and macro-economic conditions and the evidence shows that these influences are also mostly significant and robust under financial liberalisation. Hence, the thesis concludes by arguing that financial liberalisation exerts an independent effect on the cost, profit and technical efficiency of banks, while the risks associated with financial liberalisation should be mitigated with better regulatory and institutional structures.
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Impacts and Implementation of the Basel Accords: Contrasting Argentina, Brazil, and ChileBergess, Kristina 01 January 2012 (has links)
This thesis explores the impacts of implementing the Basel Accords on the stability of the banking sector and greater economy, and will particularly focus on Basel II. This study contrasts three Latin American governments that have implemented the Basel Accords. Because Chile's and Brazil's banking sectors have been more successful in implementing the Basel Accords, they will be used as model cases to provide the context to analyze Argentina’s banking sector. The results of this thesis reveal that in order for Argentina to stabilize its banking sector and become a stronger international financial player, it must not only improve the implementation of the Basel Accords, but also simultaneously address discrepancies in political agendas and its banking structure.
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