Analysis of The Influence of Liquidity, Credit and Operational Risk, in Indonesian Islamic Bank’s Financing for The Period 2007-2013

Ousmane Diallo, Tettet Fitrijanti, Nanny Dewi Tanzil
(Submitted 15 December 2015)
(Published 18 December 2015)

Abstract


The purpose of this paper is to analyze the influence of credit, liquidity and operational risks in six Indonesian’s islamic banking financing products namely mudharabah, musyarakah, murabahah, istishna, ijarah and qardh, in order to try to discover whether or not Indonesian islamic banking is based on the “risk-sharing” system. This paper relies on a fixed effect model test based on the panel data analysis method, focusing on the period from 2007 to 2013. The research is an exploratory and descriptive study of all the Indonesian islamic banks that were operating in 2013. The results of this study show that the Islamic banking system in Indonesia truly has banking products based on “risk-sharing.” We found out that credit, operational and liquidity risks as a whole, have significant influence on mudarabah, musyarakah, murabahah, istishna, ijarah and qardh based financing. There is a correlation between the credit risk and mudarabah based financing, and no causal relationship between the credit risk and musharaka, murabahah, ijarah, istishna and qardh based financing. There is also correlation between the operational risk and mudarabah and murabahah based financing, and no causal relationship between the operational risk and musharaka, istishna, ijarah and qardh based financing. There is correlation between the liquidity risk and istishna based financing, and no causal relationship between the liquidity risk and musharaka, mudarabah, murabahah, ijarah and qardh based financing. A major implication of this study is the fact that there is no causal relationship between the credit risk and musharakah based financing, which is the mode of financing where the islamic bank shares the risk with its clients, but there is an influence of credit risk toward mudarabah mode financing, a financing mode where the Islamic bank bears all the risk. These findings can lead us to conclude that the Indonesian Islamic banking sector is based on the “risk sharing” system.

Full Text: PDF

DOI: 10.22146/gamaijb.8402

References


Abdullah, M, S. Shahida; A. G. Ismail. 2011. Operational risk in islamic banks: Examination of issues. Qualitative Research in Financial Markets 3 (2): 131-151. Emerald Group Publishing, Limited.

Abedifar, P., P. Molyneux, and A. Tarazi. 2013. Risk in islamic banking. Review of Finance 17 (6) (January).

Ahmed, N., M. F. Akhtar, and M. Usman. 2011. Risk Management Practices and Islamic Banks: An Empirical Investigation from Pakistan. Interdisciplinary Journal of Research in Business 1 (6) (June): 50-57.

Al-Tamimi, H. A., and F. M. Al-Mazrooei. 2007. Banks risk management: a comparison study of UAE national and foreign banks. The Journal of Risk Finance 8 (4): 394-409.

Ariffin, N., S. Archer, and R. Karim. 2009. Risks in islamic banks: Evidence from empirical research. Journal of Banking Regulation 10 (2): 153-163.

Arunkumar, R., and G. Kotreshwar. 2005. Risk Management in Commercial Banks: A Case Study of Public and Private Sector Banks. SSRN eLibrary.

Asdrubali, P., Sørensen, B.E., Yosha, O., 1996. Channels of interstate risk sharing: United States 1963–90. Quarterly Journal of Economics 111: 1081–1110.

Askari, H., Z. Iqbal, N. Krichene, and A. Mirakhor. 2012. Risk Sharing in Finance: The IslamicFinance Alternative. Singapore: John Wiley and Sons (Asia) Pte. Ltd.

Bauer, W., and M. Ryser. 2004. Risk management strategies for banks. Journal of Banking and Finance 28: 331–352.

Baxter, M., and M. J. Crucini. 1995. Business cycles and the asset structure of foreign trade. International Economic Review 36: 821-854.

Chapra, M. U. 1992. Islam and the Economic Challenge. Leicester, U.K.: The Islamic Foundation.

Chapra, M. U. 2007. The case against interest: Is it compelling? Thunderbird International Business Review 49 (2) (March/April): 161-186.

Cochrane, J. H., 1991. A simple test of consumption insurance. Journal of Political Economy 99: 957–976.

Creswell, J. W. 2009. Research Design: Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods Approaches (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE publications.

Diamond, P., 1967. Cardinal welfare, individualistic ethics, and interpersonal comparison of utility: Comment. The Journal of Political Economy 75: 765–766.

Giannini, N. G. 2013. Faktor yang mempengaruhi pembiayaan mudharabah pada bank umum syariah di Indonesia. Accounting Analysis Journal 2 (1): 96-103

Idris, A. R., F. F. A. H. Asari, N. A. A. Taufik, N. J. Salim, R. Mustaffa, and K. Jusoff,. 2011. Determinants of islamic banking nstitutions’ profitability in malaysia. World Applied Sciences Journal 12 (Special Issue on Bolstering Economic Sustainability): 1-7. 2009.

Islamaj, E., 2012. Financial liberalization and consumption smoothing: What have we learned so far? Working Paper, Vassar College. Available at http://irving.vassar.edu/ faculty/ei/survey.pdf.

Jinnah, M. A. 2012. The concept of risk sharing in takaful. In Time to Move to the Next Phase of Islamic Finance: Risk Sharing and its Significance in Islamic Finance.ISRA Bulletin 13 (December): 6-7.

Khan, T. 2003. Credit risk management: A framework for islamic banking. Paper presented at the Islamic Banking: Risk Management, Regulation and Supervision, Jakarta, Indonesia.

Kose, M. A., Prasad, E.S., Terrones M. E., 2007. How does financial globalization affect risk sharing? Patterns and channels. International Monetary Fund Working Paper WP/07/238.

Lewis K., 1996, What can explain the apparent lack of consumption risk sharing? Journal of Political Economy 104 (April): 267-97.

Mace, B. J. 1991. Full insurance in the presence of aggregate uncertainty. Journal of Political Economy 99: 928–956.

McNeil, A. J., R. Frey, and P. Embrechts. 2005. Quantitative Risk Management: Concepts, Techniques and Tools. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Mills, P. S., and J. R. Presley. 1999. Islamic Finance: Theory and Practice. Basingstoke: Macmillan Press.

Obstfeld, M., 1994. Are industrial-country consumption risks globally diversified? In: Leiderman, L., and A. Razin (Eds.), Capital Mobility: The Impact on Consumption, Investment, and Growth. Cambridge University Press, New York.

Obstfeld, M., and K. Rogoff. 1996. Foundations of International Macroeconomics: 273. MIT Press.

Prastanto. 2013. Faktor yang mempengaruhi pembiayaan murabahah pada bank umum syariah di Indonesia. Accounting Analysis Journal 2 (1).

Ray, D., and E. Cashman. 1999. Operational risks, bidding strategies and information policies in restructured power markets. Decision Support Systems 24 (3-4): 175–182.

Seif, I. T. 2009. The current financial and economic crisis within the markets: An overview. Paper Presented at the Harvard-LSE Workshop on Risk Management (Islamic Economics and Islamic Ethico-Legal Perspectives on Current Financial Crisis), London School of Economics, February 26.

Shahid, M. A., and Z. Abbas. 2012. Financial stability of islamic banking in Pakistan: An empirical study. African Journal of Business Management 6 (10): 3706-3714

Siddiqui, A. 2008. Financial contracts, risk and performance of islamic banking. Managerial Finance 34 (10): 680-694. Emerald Group Publishing, Limited.

Srairi, S. 2009. A comparison of the profitability of Islamic and conventional banks: The case of GCC countries. Bankers, Markets and Investors 98, 16-27.

Steffensen, J. 2013. Islamic finance sources of growth and prospects for global development (An interview with Daud Vicary Abdullah). The National Bureau of Asian Research (November 7).

Sorensen, B. E., and O. Yosha. 1998. International risk sharing and European monetary unification. Journal of International Economics 45: 211–238.

Stockman, A.C., and L. L. Tesar. 1995. Tastes and technology in a two-country model of the business cycle: Explaining international comovements. American Economic Review 85: 168–185.

Wilson, R., 1968. The theory of syndicates. Econometrica 36: 119–132.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.




Copyright (c) 2015 Gadjah Mada International Journal of Business

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.