ºÝºÝߣshows by User: DataInvestConsultLebanon / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: DataInvestConsultLebanon / Thu, 01 Nov 2012 02:23:06 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: DataInvestConsultLebanon Marketdriven shariaadriven /slideshow/marketdriven-shariaadriven/14977871 marketdrivenshariaadriven-121101022308-phpapp01
In the aftermath of the global financial crisis and the financial stability forum of the IMF and the Basel III regime, effective liquidity risk management is denoted in this paper as a multiple equilibria between the challenge for compliance and the quest for Sharia’ah debt driven instruments is seen crucial for the sustainability of risk islamic banking. This paper looks towards the profitability of Islamic instruments and where their core risks. It also argues that the issue of sukuks and the compliance effort towards Basel laws are not helping islamic finance to provide practical solutions and directional credibility in promoting the role and scope of Maqasid al Shari’ah (Objectives of Shari’ah) and maslaha (Public Interest); governance and measured reinterpretation of principles of fiqh-ul muamlaat (jurisprudence of transactions) by dynamic ijtehad (the making of a Shari’ah decision by personal effort, independent of any school of thought) leading to the standardisation of cross border regulatory and tax regimes and a legal architecture that is secure and capable of being enforced. KEYWORDS: Liquidity Risk; Islamic Compliance; Sukuks; Debt; Basel Laws; Maqasid Al Shari’ah ]]>

In the aftermath of the global financial crisis and the financial stability forum of the IMF and the Basel III regime, effective liquidity risk management is denoted in this paper as a multiple equilibria between the challenge for compliance and the quest for Sharia’ah debt driven instruments is seen crucial for the sustainability of risk islamic banking. This paper looks towards the profitability of Islamic instruments and where their core risks. It also argues that the issue of sukuks and the compliance effort towards Basel laws are not helping islamic finance to provide practical solutions and directional credibility in promoting the role and scope of Maqasid al Shari’ah (Objectives of Shari’ah) and maslaha (Public Interest); governance and measured reinterpretation of principles of fiqh-ul muamlaat (jurisprudence of transactions) by dynamic ijtehad (the making of a Shari’ah decision by personal effort, independent of any school of thought) leading to the standardisation of cross border regulatory and tax regimes and a legal architecture that is secure and capable of being enforced. KEYWORDS: Liquidity Risk; Islamic Compliance; Sukuks; Debt; Basel Laws; Maqasid Al Shari’ah ]]>
Thu, 01 Nov 2012 02:23:06 GMT /slideshow/marketdriven-shariaadriven/14977871 DataInvestConsultLebanon@slideshare.net(DataInvestConsultLebanon) Marketdriven shariaadriven DataInvestConsultLebanon In the aftermath of the global financial crisis and the financial stability forum of the IMF and the Basel III regime, effective liquidity risk management is denoted in this paper as a multiple equilibria between the challenge for compliance and the quest for Sharia’ah debt driven instruments is seen crucial for the sustainability of risk islamic banking. This paper looks towards the profitability of Islamic instruments and where their core risks. It also argues that the issue of sukuks and the compliance effort towards Basel laws are not helping islamic finance to provide practical solutions and directional credibility in promoting the role and scope of Maqasid al Shari’ah (Objectives of Shari’ah) and maslaha (Public Interest); governance and measured reinterpretation of principles of fiqh-ul muamlaat (jurisprudence of transactions) by dynamic ijtehad (the making of a Shari’ah decision by personal effort, independent of any school of thought) leading to the standardisation of cross border regulatory and tax regimes and a legal architecture that is secure and capable of being enforced. KEYWORDS: Liquidity Risk; Islamic Compliance; Sukuks; Debt; Basel Laws; Maqasid Al Shari’ah <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/marketdrivenshariaadriven-121101022308-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In the aftermath of the global financial crisis and the financial stability forum of the IMF and the Basel III regime, effective liquidity risk management is denoted in this paper as a multiple equilibria between the challenge for compliance and the quest for Sharia’ah debt driven instruments is seen crucial for the sustainability of risk islamic banking. This paper looks towards the profitability of Islamic instruments and where their core risks. It also argues that the issue of sukuks and the compliance effort towards Basel laws are not helping islamic finance to provide practical solutions and directional credibility in promoting the role and scope of Maqasid al Shari’ah (Objectives of Shari’ah) and maslaha (Public Interest); governance and measured reinterpretation of principles of fiqh-ul muamlaat (jurisprudence of transactions) by dynamic ijtehad (the making of a Shari’ah decision by personal effort, independent of any school of thought) leading to the standardisation of cross border regulatory and tax regimes and a legal architecture that is secure and capable of being enforced. KEYWORDS: Liquidity Risk; Islamic Compliance; Sukuks; Debt; Basel Laws; Maqasid Al Shari’ah
Marketdriven shariaadriven from DataInvestConsultLebanon
]]>
199 3 https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/marketdrivenshariaadriven-121101022308-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&height=120&fit=bounds document White http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/post http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/posted 0
https://public.slidesharecdn.com/v2/images/profile-picture.png