Main Article Content

Abstract


Purpose

This paper aims to critically investigate the liquidity risk management of Islamic banks and develop an alternative regulatory framework appropriate for liquidity management of these banks.





Design/methodology/approach

The specific risk profile of an Islamic bank requires developing a new and more efficient regulatory framework, which relies on risk- sharing and symmetric information among parties. The paper makes a differentiation between small local banks and internationally active Islamic banks and proposes to apply liquidity requirements only for internationally active Islamic banks.





Findings

A new proposal for the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) of Islamic banks is developed in this paper towards mitigating risks and concurrently protecting the interests of investment account holders. Minimum and maximum thresholds are proposed for each liquid asset in this new LCR framework. An alternative liquidity approach is discussed to complement the proposal and several policy options are suggested.





Originality/value

As participation banks are exposed to market liquidity and market risks, more high-quality liquid instruments within a risk-sharing regulatory framework may provide the inner adjustment process through which any mismatch regarding maturity, risk, value or linkage with the real economy is corrected systematically. It offers policy implications for regulators, supervisors and international organizations.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/IJIF-03-2018-0033



Keywords

Framework Islamic banking Liquidity Regulation Liquidity risk

Article Details

How to Cite
Dolgun, M. H., Mirakhor, A., & Ng, A. (2019). A proposal designed for calibrating the liquidity coverage ratio for Islamic banks. ISRA International Journal of Islamic Finance, 11(1), 82–97. Retrieved from https://journal.inceif.edu.my/index.php/ijif/article/view/450