Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks

Abstract The Islamic banking industry is still considered in its infancy period. However, the growth is quite fast considering the type of business and the products that they have. In Brunei Darussalam, Islamic banking has just started it operation on January 1993, meaning to say that the indus...

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Main Author: Bunchuan, Dahang
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20695/
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author Bunchuan, Dahang
author_facet Bunchuan, Dahang
author_sort Bunchuan, Dahang
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Abstract The Islamic banking industry is still considered in its infancy period. However, the growth is quite fast considering the type of business and the products that they have. In Brunei Darussalam, Islamic banking has just started it operation on January 1993, meaning to say that the industry is still at its growing stage. The competition, however, for client base is very competitive due to the market size in Brunei. The main objective for the set up of the Islamic banking was as part of the fardhu kifayah (religious obligation) and providing the Muslim population with halal venues for investing and funding their businesses and personal needs. This paper looks how Islamic bank start as a complementary product if not a substitutes to the conventional banking financial instruments especially in the Islamic Bank of Brunei context. Detail explanation of similarities of financial instrument will be laid out in this paper. The emergence of western banking giants opening-up subsidiaries or Islamic windows and competing directly has created greater impacts on the banking industry in Brunei. This will be determined by the bank's performance, market share, strategic approach and regulatory factors. Finally, addressing the issues and challenges faced by Islamic Banking in the small economies. For example Countries like Brunei with limited customer base and where the multinational banks has creep in taking advantage of their expertise to win certain high profile financing projects and in end recommending some suggestions on 'how the local Islamic bank need to react accordingly'.
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spelling nottingham-206952018-02-03T05:43:47Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20695/ Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks Bunchuan, Dahang Abstract The Islamic banking industry is still considered in its infancy period. However, the growth is quite fast considering the type of business and the products that they have. In Brunei Darussalam, Islamic banking has just started it operation on January 1993, meaning to say that the industry is still at its growing stage. The competition, however, for client base is very competitive due to the market size in Brunei. The main objective for the set up of the Islamic banking was as part of the fardhu kifayah (religious obligation) and providing the Muslim population with halal venues for investing and funding their businesses and personal needs. This paper looks how Islamic bank start as a complementary product if not a substitutes to the conventional banking financial instruments especially in the Islamic Bank of Brunei context. Detail explanation of similarities of financial instrument will be laid out in this paper. The emergence of western banking giants opening-up subsidiaries or Islamic windows and competing directly has created greater impacts on the banking industry in Brunei. This will be determined by the bank's performance, market share, strategic approach and regulatory factors. Finally, addressing the issues and challenges faced by Islamic Banking in the small economies. For example Countries like Brunei with limited customer base and where the multinational banks has creep in taking advantage of their expertise to win certain high profile financing projects and in end recommending some suggestions on 'how the local Islamic bank need to react accordingly'. 2006 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20695/1/Islamic_Banking_and_Finance-MBA_Dissertation.pdf Bunchuan, Dahang (2006) Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished) Islamic Banking competition and strategy
spellingShingle Islamic Banking
competition and strategy
Bunchuan, Dahang
Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks
title Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks
title_full Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks
title_fullStr Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks
title_full_unstemmed Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks
title_short Islamic Banking and Finance: Is IT Complementing or Competing The Conventional Banks
title_sort islamic banking and finance: is it complementing or competing the conventional banks
topic Islamic Banking
competition and strategy
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20695/