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Does Islamic banks' securitization involvement restrain their financing activity?

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Author Info
Roza Hazli Zakaria
Abdul Ghafar Ismail
Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to validate the concern that banks' increasing involvement in securitization activity restrains banks' lending, as well as their degree of risk tolerance. Theoretical frameworks claim that securitization reduces risk, hence decreasing banks' degree of risk aversion. Subsequently, banks would be motivated to increase their percentage of assets devoted to risky activities, which is lending to economic sectors. However, banking statistics dictates that banks' lending is on the decline while banks' securitization activities are on the rise. Design/methodology/approach – The paper refers specifically to the Malaysian Islamic commercial banks and utilizes standard panel data analysis. Findings – Supportive evidence was found that banks' involvement in securitization activity do restrain their lending activity. In addition, banks tend to have a riskier portfolio composition following their involvement in securitization activity. Taken together, this signals that banks' involvement in securitization activity needs to be regulated or restricted since excessive securitization activities could curtail credit and increase risk inherent in banks' lending portfolio. Originality/value – This study departs from previous literature in the sense that an alternative method is introduced to measure banks' securitization activity.

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Publisher Info
Article provided by Emerald Group Publishing in its journal Humanomics: The International Journal of Systems and Ethics.

Volume (Year): 24 (2008)
Issue (Month): 2 (May)
Pages: 95-109
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Handle: RePEc:eme:humpps:v:24:y:2008:i:2:p:95-109

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Related research
Keywords: Banks; Investment appraisal; Islam; Loans; Malaysia; Securities;

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This page was last updated on 2009-12-18.


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