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Islamic Finance: The Regulatory Challenge PDF

428 Pages·2007·4.85 MB·English
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Islamic Finance: The Regulatory Challenge Islamic Finance: The Regulatory Challenge Edited by Simon Archer and Rifaat Ahmed Abdel Karim JohnWiley&Sons(Asia)PteLtd Copyright©2007byJohnWiley&Sons(Asia)PteLtd Publishedin2007byJohnWiley&Sons(Asia)PteLtd 2ClementiLoop,#02-01,Singapore129809 Allrightsreserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmittedinanyformorbyanymeans,electronic,mechanical,photocopying, recording,scanning,orotherwise,exceptasexpresslypermittedbylaw,without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate photocopy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center. RequestsforpermissionshouldbeaddressedtothePublisher,JohnWiley&Sons (Asia)PteLtd,2ClementiLoop,#02-01,Singapore129809,tel:65-6463-2400, fax:65-6463-4605,e-mail:[email protected]. Thispublicationisdesignedtoprovideaccurateandauthoritativeinformationin regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisherisnotengagedinrenderingprofessionalservices.Ifprofessionaladvice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional personshouldbesought. Neithertheauthorsnorthepublisherareliableforanyactionspromptedorcaused bytheinformationpresentedinthisbook.Anyviewsexpressedhereinarethose oftheauthorsanddonotrepresenttheviewsoftheorganizationstheyworkfor. OtherWileyEditorialOffices JohnWiley&Sons,111RiverStreet,Hoboken,NJ07030,USA JohnWiley&Sons,TheAtriumSouthernGate,ChichesterP0198SQ,England JohnWiley&Sons(Canada)Ltd,5353DundasStreetWest,Suite400,Toronto, OntarioM9B6HB,Canada JohnWiley&SonsAustraliaLtd,42McDougallStreet,Milton,Queensland4064, Australia Wiley-VCH,Boschstrasse12,D-69469Weinheim,Germany LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData ISBN 978-0-470-82189-3 WileyBicentennialLogo:RichardJ.Pacifico Typesetin10.5/13ptPalatinobyLaserwordsPrivateLimited,Chennai,India. PrintedinSingaporebySaikWahPressPteLtd. 10987654321 Contents AbouttheEditors vii AbouttheContributors ix Foreword xvii Preface xix Acknowledgments xxi 1 Supervision of Islamic Banks and Basel II: The Regulatory Challenge SimonArcherandRifaatAhmedAbdelKarim 1 Part 1 The Nature of Risks in Islamic Banking 9 2 BankingandtheRiskEnvironment HennievanGreuningandZamirIqbal 11 3 RiskCharacteristicsofIslamicProducts:ImplicationsforRiskMeasurement andSupervision Dr.V.Sundararajan 40 4 Capital Structure and Risk in Islamic Financial Services WafikGraisand AnomaKulathunga 69 5 Inherent Risk: Credit and Market Risks AbdullahHaronandJohnLeeHin Hock 94 6 Operational Risk Exposures of Islamic Banks SimonArcherandAbdullah Haron 121 7 Law and Islamic Finance: An Interactive Analysis YusufTalalDeLorenzo andMichaelJ.T.McMillen 132 8 Supervisory Implications of Islamic Finance in the Current Regulatory Environment HariBhambra 198 Part 2 Capital Adequacy 213 9 RiskandtheNeedforCapital CharlesFreelandandStevenFriedman 215 10 Measuring Risk for Capital Adequacy: The Issue of Profit-sharing InvestmentAccounts SimonArcherandRifaatAhmedAbdelKarim 223 11 MeasuringOperationalRisk ElisabethJackson-Moore 237 12 SupervisoryImplicationsofIslamicBanking:ASupervisor’s Perspective TobyFiennes 247 Part 3 Securitization and Capital Markets 257 13 SecuritizationinIslamicFinance AbdulkaderThomas 259 14 TheRoleofCapitalMarketsinEnsuringIslamicFinancialLiquidity StellaCox 271 15 RegulatingIslamicCapitalMarkets RobertGrayandArshadIsmail 282 vi Contents Part 4 Corporate Governance 293 16 CorporateGovernanceforBanks HamidYunis 295 17 SpecificCorporateGovernanceIssuesinIslamicBanks SimonArcherand RifaatAhmedAbdelKarim 310 18 Corporate Governance and Supervision: Basel Pillar 2 ChizuNakajima andBarryA.K.Rider 342 19 TransparencyandMarketDiscipline:BaselPillar3 DaudAbdullah(David Vicary) 366 Part 5 Conclusion 379 20 HumanResourceManagementofIslamicBanks:ResponsestoConceptual andTechnicalChallenges VolkerNienhaus 381 21 ConcludingRemarks SimonArcherandRifaatAhmedAbdelKarim 400 Index 409 About the Editors SimonArcherwasProfessorofFinancial ManagementattheUniver- sity of Surrey, U.K., where he continues to supervise Ph.D. students. Previously, he was Midland Bank Professor of Financial Sector Accounting at the University of Wales, Bangor. After his studies inphilosophy,politics,andeconomicsatOxfordUniversity,hequal- ified as a Chartered Accountant with Arthur Andersen in London and then moved to Price Waterhouse in Paris, where he became PartnerinchargeofManagementConsultancyServicesinFranceand Scandinavia.Hisacademiccareerthusbeganafterworkingasaprac- titioner, mainly in management consulting. Professor Archer’s main research interests are in international accounting, accounting theory, and accounting for banks, including the financial reporting, capital adequacy, risk management, and corporate governance of financial institutions.HisrecentworkfocusesonIslamicfinancialinstitutions. He is also co-author of the International Accounting and Financial Reporting Standards Guide, as well as co-editor of Miller European Accounting and Islamic Finance: Innovation and Growth (London: EuromoneyBooks,2002). Rifaat Ahmed Abdel Karim is the Secretary-General of the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB), a post he has held since the IFSB began operations in 2003. Prior to his current post, he was the Secretary-General of the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions. He is a member of both the Standards Advisory Council of the International Accounting Standards Board, nowservinghissecondthree-yearterm,andtheConsultativeAdvisory GroupoftheInternationalAuditingandAssuranceStandardsBoard. Professor Rifaat has been Visiting Professor at the University of Surrey (U.K.) since 1996, and is an Honorary Professor at Monash University in Australia. He is the co-author of Islamic Finance: Innovation and Growth (London: Euromoney Books, 2002) and BusinessandAccountingEthicsinIslam(London:MansellPublishing Co., 1991). He is the first recipient of the Euromoney Outstanding Contribution to the Development of Islamic Finance Award, and a recipientofotherdistinguished awards. vii About the Contributors Daud Abdullah (David Vicary) is the Managing Director of Hong Leong Islamic Bank. His work experience has taken him to some 32 major countries in Europe, Asia-Pacific, the Middle East, and Latin America during the last 34 years. Daud has developed an extensive international experience in the field of banking operations andconsulting,havingassistedbanksintheirrestructuringforgreater efficiency, cost control, and to better meet customer expectations. Since December 2003, he has been an Auditing and Accounting Committee Board Member of AAOIFI (Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions). Daud is also a well- known Islamic finance speaker at IFSB (Islamic Financial Services Board) and global Islamic banking seminars, particularly on matters relatingtothegrowthanddevelopmentoftheindustry. Hari Bhambra currently works for the Dubai Financial Services Authority(DFSA),theindependentregulatoryauthorityfortheDubai International Financial Centre, where she has been one of the key developers of the regulatory framework for Islamic finance for the DFSA. She has over seven years’ experience in financial services, from both a regulatory and industry perspective. Previously, Hari worked with Goldman Sachs International in London, after which she continued to assist the industry by joining a compliance consul- tancypracticewheresheadvisedFinancialServicesAuthority’s(FSA) regulatedfirmsonallaspectsofitsrequirements,aswellasassisteda number of firms to obtain FSA authorization. She holds a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in law and a diploma in legal practice from The CollegeofLaw,London. StellaCoxhasworkedinIslamicfinancesince1985andisManaging DirectorofDDCAPGroup,thejointventurebetweenDawnay,Day, and IPGL. Prior to 1998, she was a Director of Dresdner Kleinwort BensonwhereshewasresponsiblefortheMiddleEasternandIslamic financial marketplaces. Stella is a member of the Islamic Financial Services Board Task Force on Markets and Instruments for Shariah Compliant Liquidity Management. She also serves on the Board of Governors of the U.K. Institute of Islamic Banking and Insurance, and is a member of the BMA’s project team for the development of ix x AbouttheContributors Islamic commodity markets. Stella speaks regularly at international conferences and contributes to many publications. In 2005, she co- authored the Euromoney publication, Structuring Islamic Finance Transactions. YusufTalalDeLorenzoisascholarofIslamictransactionallawwhose 30-yearcareerhasbeennotedinTheFinancialTimes,TheNewYork Times, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The Middle East Banker, andothers.BasedintheWashington,D.C.area,heservesasaShari’ah advisor to international financial entities, including index providers, institutional investors, mutual funds, hedge funds, real estate funds, private equity funds, home finance providers, and investment banks. ShaykhYusufistheauthorofthethree-volumeCompendiumofLegal OpinionsontheOperationsofIslamicBanks,thefirstEnglish/Arabic reference on the fataway issued by Shari’ah boards. In addition, he wrote the introduction to Islamic Bonds, the 2003 book that intro- duced sukuk and transformed the world’s Islamic capital markets. His work has appeared in journals and newsletters and as chapters in books, including Islamic Asset Management (Euromoney Books, 2004),IslamicRetailFinance(EuromoneyBooks,2005),andIslamic Finance:Innovation&Growth(EuromoneyBooks,2002).Hisentries on the terminology of Islamic finance appear in The Oxford Dictio- naryofIslam. Toby Fiennes currently works as a Special Advisor at the Reserve BankofNewZealand,advisingonchangestothefinancialregulatory landscape. Prior to that, he worked in Barclays Bank for 10 years, before becoming a banking supervisor, first at the Bank of England and then at the U.K.’s Financial Services Authority (FSA) from its inceptionin1998until2005.Tobycontinuestotakeanactiveinterest inIslamic bankingandwas,formanyyears,theFSA’sprimarypoint of contact for the industry by helping with the authorization of the Islamic Bank of Britain, the first such bank in Europe. He has a Master’sdegreeineconomics fromCambridgeUniversity,U.K. CharlesFreelandisDeputySecretary-GeneraloftheBaselCommittee on Banking Supervision at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland. As well as acting as the principal secretary for the Basel Committee itself, and being responsible for the overall coordination of Basel Committee publications, Charles has chaired several ofthe Committee’s task forces and currently chairs two ofits AbouttheContributors xi working groups, on cross-border banking and the non-G10 liaison group on Basel II. He often represents the Basel Committee at the meetings of regional banking supervisory committees and heads the organization of its biennial world banking supervisory conferences. Charles holds an M.A. from St Andrews University and spent his earlyprofessionalyearsattheBankofEngland. Steven Friedman has been a member of the Secretariat of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision since August 2005 while on a secondment from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. At the Secretariat, Steven specializes in the advanced approaches to regulatory capital for credit risk under Basel II, as well as in credit risk modeling practices. Prior to joining the Secretariat, Steven spent five years on the trading desk at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He holds a Master’s degree in internal relations from the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at the Johns HopkinsUniversityinWashington,D.C. Wafik Grais is a senior advisor at the World Bank. He heads the Financial Sector Assessment Program and oversees developments in Islamicfinancialservices.Previouslyhewasdirectorofprivate-sector andfinanceprogramsfortheMiddleEastandNorthAfrica(MENA). In 1997–98, he represented the Government of Egypt on the team settinguptheBankforCooperationandDevelopmentinMENA.He holdsaPh.D.anddegreesineconomicsandpoliticalsciencefromthe UniversityofGeneva,Switzerland. Robert Gray is Chairman of Debt Finance and Advisory of HSBC Bank plc. He joined HSBC in May 1994 as Chairman of HSBC Markets Ltd., responsible for developing HSBC’s capital markets capabilities worldwide. In addition, he serves as Chairman of HSBC Financial Services (Middle East) Ltd., HSBC Saudi Arabia Ltd., and HSBC Securities (Japan) Ltd., and as a Director of HSBC Bank Egypt SAE and British Arab Commercial Bank. He is also the Vice- Chairman of the International Capital Market Association (ICMA) and Chairman of the ICMA Regulatory Policy Committee. Robert graduated from St John’s College, University of Cambridge with an Honorsdegreeinhistory. AbdullahHaronisAssistantSecretary-GeneraloftheIslamicFinancial ServicesBoard.Previously,hewasaProjectManagerwherehismain area of work was the preparation of guidance on risk management xii AbouttheContributors and the supervisory review process. He has also participated in task forcesontakafulregulationandsupervision,aswellasacompilation guideonprudentialdatabaseofIslamicfinancialservicesinstitutions. His prior experience includes the development of a risk management and measurement framework, and insurance prudential regulation andsupervision.AbdullahreceivedaBSLASinactuarialsciencefrom theUniversityofIllinoisandanMBAfromOhioUniversity. Zamir Iqbal works as Principal Financial Officer with the Quantita- tive Strategies, Risk and Analytics department in the Treasury of the WorldBankinWashington,D.C.HeearnedhisPh.D.ininternational finance fromthe George Washington University where he also serves as adjunct faculty of international finance. He has published several articles on Islamic finance in reputed journals and has presented papersatinternationalforums.Hehasextensiveexperiencewithcap- ital markets, exotic derivative products, risk management, financial sector development, and financial modeling. His research interests include Islamicfinance, financial engineering, structured finance, and internationalbanking. ElisabethJackson-MooreisaformerManaging Director ofMoody’s Investors Service Financial Institutions Group, based in Cyprus. She spent over eight years in this position, and was responsible for Moody’s bank ratings in nearly 30 countries in the Middle East, Africa, Eastern Europe, and South Asia. She retired at the end of 2003andiscurrentlyaconsultantinthefinancialservicesfield.Before joiningMoody’s,ElisabethwasManagingDirectorofCapitalIntelli- gence (CI), a specialist rating agency covering banks in the emerging markets of the Middle East, Europe, and Asia. Her early career was spent researching in the fields of agriculture, pharmaceuticals, and socialscience intheU.K. Anoma Kulathunga is a doctoral student at the George Washington University Business School, in the United States, and a consultant at the World Bank. Her research interests are financial sector develop- mentandIslamicbanking. John Lee Hin Hock is a Partner of KPMG Malaysia. John is KPMG GlobalLeadforIslamicFinance,theASPACregionHeadofFinancial Risk Management, and the Head of Financial Services for Malaysia. He has extensive knowledge of strategic consulting, banking, capital

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"Islamic Finance: The Regulatory Challenge…is therefore timely and a truly welcome addition to the growing literature on this subject…I congratulate the two professors for their fine contribution to the evolving art and science of the regulation of Islamic finance." -Dr. Zeti Akhtar Aziz, Govern
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