311 |
Money demand and supply in Saudi Arabia : an empirical analysisAl-Bassam, K. A. January 2009 (has links)
The main objectives of this study are: Firstly, to provide a clear picture of the Saudi money market in terms of its main characteristics, its financial institutions and the obstacles facing the market and its financial institutions. Secondly, to determine appropriate money demand functions for different money definitions in Saudi Arabia, using quarterly data which run from 1976:1 to 1986:4, and to test the stability and forcasting power of these functions. Thirdly, to determine theoretically and empirically the factors affecting the money supply in Saudi Arabia using annual data which run from 1967 to 1987. Finally, to determine empirically the factors affecting the Riyal market interest rate (domestic interest rate), using quarterly data which run from 1979:1 to 1988:2.
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312 |
Empirical evidence of CAPM and APM in the Hong Kong stock marketTam, Anthony C. W. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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313 |
Understanding corporate capital investment decisions in KuwaitAl-Deehani, Talla Moh'd F. F. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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314 |
Ethical investment and the challenge of corporate reform : a critical assessment of the procedures and purposes of UK ethical unit trustsMackenzie, Craig January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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315 |
Foreign exchange risk management in U.K. international companiesGoddard, Michael John January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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316 |
A reappraisal of the methods of statistical sovereign risk analysis : with special reference to the period 1967-1982Oh, Jung-Kyu January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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317 |
Law and practice of profit-sharing in Islamic banking with particular reference to mudarabah and murabahahEl Sharif, Bahgat Bahgat Khalil January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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318 |
The finance of international trade in the Gulf Arab States : a comparative study between the conventional and Islamic banking systems with special emphasis on the United Arab EmiratesAl-Suwaidi, Ahmed A. Mohamed January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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319 |
The operations and development of the Nigerian stock market : an empirical study of the perceptions and understandings of the private investors and stockbrokersAbdullahi, Noruddeen Abba January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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320 |
The legal protection of private foreign investment in the state of KuwaitAl-Saeed, Mansour January 1998 (has links)
Chapter III is dedicated to the discussion of the regulation of foreign investment under the Kuwaiti Commercial Laws (KCLs) concerning foreign investment, forms and legal procedures for establishing such investment in Kuwait and the appropriate legal forms for establishing private foreign investment in Kuwait are also examined. In addition, the incentives that are offered to foreign investors, according to KCLs and double taxation treaties, to which Kuwait is a party in Kuwait territory, are examined here. Chapter IV is devoted to discussing the scope and standards of protection of private foreign investment under international law, in addition to Kuwaiti domestic law. The substantive provisions on the protection of foreign investment through bilateral and multilateral investment agreements, to which Kuwait is also a party, is focused on in this Chapter. Non-commercial risk is considered the most unpredictable risk which may affect foreign investment in the host country and thus, foreign investors usually seek to insure their investments against non-commercial risk under a guarantee scheme to which the host country is a party. Because of the fact that Kuwait is a contracting party to the Inter-Arab Investment Guarantee Corporation of 1974, and the Convention on the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency of 1985, the most important provisions of these schemes are discussed in Chapter V. In addition, since the Kuwait government and United States have acceded to the 1989 Agreement on Investment Guarantees, which provides guarantee for American private investments in Kuwait against non-commercial risks by Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), close attention will be provided to this scheme in this Chapter. Since the availability of effective, independent, impartial and appropriate mechanisms in resolving investment disputes is considered to be a fundamental guarantee for the protection of foreign investment, the mechanisms for the settlement of disputes arising out of, or in connection with, foreign investment in Kuwait are highlighted in Chapter VI. The general conclusions and evaluations of the study are aired in Chapter VII.
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