Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia

Malaysian Islamic banks operate in different organizational structures, namely domestic, locally foreign incorporated, and development financial institutions which may have an influence on their stability. This research evaluates the bankruptcy profiles of 19 selected Malaysian Islamic banks from 20...

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Main Authors: Nik Nurul Hidayah Nik Zainudin, S. Shahida, Ahmad Azam Sulaiman@Mohamad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Islam Indonesia 2019-10-01
Series:Economic Journal of Emerging Markets
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.uii.ac.id/JEP/article/view/12676
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spelling doaj-d3fd802962bd4e43a3c9976a4ca96b882020-11-24T21:21:36ZengUniversitas Islam IndonesiaEconomic Journal of Emerging Markets2086-31282502-180X2019-10-0111219521210.20885/ejem.vol11.iss2.art79118Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from MalaysiaNik Nurul Hidayah Nik Zainudin0S. Shahida1Ahmad Azam Sulaiman@Mohamad2Faculty of Economics and Management, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, MalaysiaCenter for Inclusive and Sustainable, Development, Faculty of Economics and Management, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, MalaysiaDepartment of Syariah and Economics, Academy of Islamic Studies, Univeristy of Malaya, MalaysiaMalaysian Islamic banks operate in different organizational structures, namely domestic, locally foreign incorporated, and development financial institutions which may have an influence on their stability. This research evaluates the bankruptcy profiles of 19 selected Malaysian Islamic banks from 2010 to 2017 and analyses the insolvency risk associated with the three different organizational structures. Using the Altman’s Z-Score Model (2000), a stability test was conducted. Findings/Originality: the paper finds that, on average, the development financial institutions were the most stable banks, followed by foreign Islamic banks. It also finds that bigger domestic Islamic banks were situated in the safe zone as they had high Z-score values. Furthermore, asset quality ratio contributed to higher Z-score values. An appropriate asset-liability management therefore helps ensure the stability of Islamic banks in Malaysia. An effective macroprudential supervisory regime must also be in place to increase the resilience of the financial system.https://journal.uii.ac.id/JEP/article/view/12676altman model, z-score, stability, domestic bank, foreign bank, developmental financial institutions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nik Nurul Hidayah Nik Zainudin
S. Shahida
Ahmad Azam Sulaiman@Mohamad
spellingShingle Nik Nurul Hidayah Nik Zainudin
S. Shahida
Ahmad Azam Sulaiman@Mohamad
Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia
Economic Journal of Emerging Markets
altman model, z-score, stability, domestic bank, foreign bank, developmental financial institutions
author_facet Nik Nurul Hidayah Nik Zainudin
S. Shahida
Ahmad Azam Sulaiman@Mohamad
author_sort Nik Nurul Hidayah Nik Zainudin
title Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia
title_short Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia
title_full Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia
title_fullStr Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Do bankruptcy profiles of Islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from Malaysia
title_sort do bankruptcy profiles of islamic banks differ across organizational structure? evidence from malaysia
publisher Universitas Islam Indonesia
series Economic Journal of Emerging Markets
issn 2086-3128
2502-180X
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Malaysian Islamic banks operate in different organizational structures, namely domestic, locally foreign incorporated, and development financial institutions which may have an influence on their stability. This research evaluates the bankruptcy profiles of 19 selected Malaysian Islamic banks from 2010 to 2017 and analyses the insolvency risk associated with the three different organizational structures. Using the Altman’s Z-Score Model (2000), a stability test was conducted. Findings/Originality: the paper finds that, on average, the development financial institutions were the most stable banks, followed by foreign Islamic banks. It also finds that bigger domestic Islamic banks were situated in the safe zone as they had high Z-score values. Furthermore, asset quality ratio contributed to higher Z-score values. An appropriate asset-liability management therefore helps ensure the stability of Islamic banks in Malaysia. An effective macroprudential supervisory regime must also be in place to increase the resilience of the financial system.
topic altman model, z-score, stability, domestic bank, foreign bank, developmental financial institutions
url https://journal.uii.ac.id/JEP/article/view/12676
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