Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli

Following the aspiration of the Malaysian government in becoming a well-known Islamic finance hub, there are several foreign Islamic banks have been granted certain licenses to be operated in this country along with the dual system permitted by the Malaysian authorities within the local commercial b...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zulkifli, Innamul Hasan
Format: Monograph
Language:en
Published: Bachelor Of Business Administration (Hons) Marketing 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/34486/1/34486.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/34486/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1833064849268015104
author Zulkifli, Innamul Hasan
author_facet Zulkifli, Innamul Hasan
author_sort Zulkifli, Innamul Hasan
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
description Following the aspiration of the Malaysian government in becoming a well-known Islamic finance hub, there are several foreign Islamic banks have been granted certain licenses to be operated in this country along with the dual system permitted by the Malaysian authorities within the local commercial banks. However, is this system and the existence of foreign Islamic banks will benefit to both financial institutions and government at large? In finance world, high risk, typically, associated with high return. Nevertheless, liquidity risk can be one of the serious issues that need to be properly addressed by the financial institutions. Therefore, this particular study is conducted in order to determine the level of liquidity risk among the Islamic banks established in Malaysia. All the samples of Islamic banks established in Malaysia were included in this study consisting of 10 local-owned and 6 foreign-owned. This research had applied multiple regressions in explaining the variation of bank’s performance by some the selected predictors related to the liquidity risk. Assumptions of normality, autocorrelation, heteroscedasticity and multicollinearity were tested for each dataset obtained from the financial statements before the estimations of the regression. These tests helped the researcher to come up with more credible results. The results found that all the predictors relating to the liquidity risk significantly affect the performance of the local-owned Islamic banks in Malaysia. However, this is contradict with the foreign-owned Islamic banks which there was only one variable of liquidity gap can explain the performance of the banks. It can be observed that local Islamic banks have better performance in overcoming NPLs with the sufficient amount of cash reserves while foreign Islamic banks have better performance of optimising liquidity gap in generating profit with lower risk of bankruptcy
format Monograph
id my.uitm.ir-34486
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
language en
publishDate 2015
publisher Bachelor Of Business Administration (Hons) Marketing
record_format eprints
spelling my.uitm.ir-344862025-02-28T04:14:32Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/34486/ Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli Zulkifli, Innamul Hasan Bank reserves. Bank liquidity. Loan loss reserves Liquidity Special classes of banks and financial institutions Finance, Islamic Following the aspiration of the Malaysian government in becoming a well-known Islamic finance hub, there are several foreign Islamic banks have been granted certain licenses to be operated in this country along with the dual system permitted by the Malaysian authorities within the local commercial banks. However, is this system and the existence of foreign Islamic banks will benefit to both financial institutions and government at large? In finance world, high risk, typically, associated with high return. Nevertheless, liquidity risk can be one of the serious issues that need to be properly addressed by the financial institutions. Therefore, this particular study is conducted in order to determine the level of liquidity risk among the Islamic banks established in Malaysia. All the samples of Islamic banks established in Malaysia were included in this study consisting of 10 local-owned and 6 foreign-owned. This research had applied multiple regressions in explaining the variation of bank’s performance by some the selected predictors related to the liquidity risk. Assumptions of normality, autocorrelation, heteroscedasticity and multicollinearity were tested for each dataset obtained from the financial statements before the estimations of the regression. These tests helped the researcher to come up with more credible results. The results found that all the predictors relating to the liquidity risk significantly affect the performance of the local-owned Islamic banks in Malaysia. However, this is contradict with the foreign-owned Islamic banks which there was only one variable of liquidity gap can explain the performance of the banks. It can be observed that local Islamic banks have better performance in overcoming NPLs with the sufficient amount of cash reserves while foreign Islamic banks have better performance of optimising liquidity gap in generating profit with lower risk of bankruptcy Bachelor Of Business Administration (Hons) Marketing 2015-07 Monograph NonPeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/34486/1/34486.pdf Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli. (2015) Industrial Training. Bachelor Of Business Administration (Hons) Marketing, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Kelantan. (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Bank reserves. Bank liquidity. Loan loss reserves
Liquidity
Special classes of banks and financial institutions
Finance, Islamic
Zulkifli, Innamul Hasan
Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli
title Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli
title_full Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli
title_fullStr Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli
title_full_unstemmed Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli
title_short Malaysia is a potential of Islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign Islamic banks / Innamul Hasan Zulkifli
title_sort malaysia is a potential of islamic finance hub: a comparative study on liquidity risk towards performance of both local and foreign islamic banks / innamul hasan zulkifli
topic Bank reserves. Bank liquidity. Loan loss reserves
Liquidity
Special classes of banks and financial institutions
Finance, Islamic
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/34486/1/34486.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/34486/
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/