This document provides an overview of Islamic banking and finance practices in Malaysia, including the Islamic Inter-Bank Money Market (IIMM) and foreign exchange trading. The IIMM facilitates short-term liquidity management between Islamic banks using various Shariah-compliant instruments like Mudharabah Inter-Bank Investment and Wadiah Inter-Bank Acceptance. The document also outlines Government Investment Issues, Bank Negara Monetary Notes, and other instruments that Islamic banks can use for liquidity management. It describes the concepts of foreign exchange trading like Bai' al-Sarf that are applied in Malaysia in accordance with Shariah.
3. ISLAMIC INTER-BANK MONEY
MARKET
Introduced : BNM on 3 January 1994.
Short-term intermediary : Provide ready
source of short-term investment outlets based
on the principles of shariah.
Aim : Facilitating the bank with shortage of
liquidity and with excess of liquidity.
Match the funding requirement.
Participating banks : Commercial
banks, Merchant Banks, eligible Finance
companies and eligible discount houses (bill
broker).
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4. TYPES OF INSTRUMENTS OF IIMM
Mudharabah Inter-Bank Investment
Wadiah Inter-Bank Acceptance
Government Investment Issue
Bank Negara Negotiable Notes
Sell and Buy Back Agreement
Cagamas Mudharabah Bonds
When Issue
Islamic Accepted Bills
Sukuk BNM Ijarah
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5. MUDHARABAH INTER-BANK
INVESTMENT
MII refers to a mechanism whereby a deficit Islamic
banking institution (investee bank) can obtain
investment from a surplus Islamic banking institution
(investor bank) based on Mudharabah (profit
sharing)
Period : Overnight to 12 months.
Min : RM 50,000
Rate of return : Agreed up-front
Actual return : End of the investment period
Upon maturity : Principal + Profit
BNM introduced the minimum benchmark rate.
Surplus IB
(INVESTOR
BANK)
Deficit IB
(INVESTEE
BANK)
Invest its surplus
funds
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6. WADIAH ACCEPTANCE
Wadiah Acceptance, is a transaction between
BNM and the Islamic banking institutions.
It refers to a mechanism whereby the Islamic
banking institutions placed their surplus fund
with BNM based on the concept of Al-Wadiah.
Acceptor of funds(Custodian/Trustee) : Take
care of the funds without to pay any return on
the account.
Hibah(Gift) : Any dividend paid by bank.
Facilitate liquidity management : BNM use this
to absorb excess liquidity from the IIMM.
Islamic
Banks
BNM
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7. GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT
ISSUES (GII)
Government raise funds : Issuance of non-
interest bearing.
Primary Reason : IB want to hold liquid papers
meet statutory liquidity requirements and
investment (To park idle fund).
Introduced in July1983 under the concept of
Qard al-Hasan. The concept of Qard al-Hasan
does not satisfy the GII as tradable instruments
in the secondary market.
To address this shortfall, BNM opens a window to
facilitate the players to sell and purchase the
papers with the central bank. The price sold or
purchase by the players is determined by
BNM, which maintains a system to record any
movement in the GII.
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8. BANK NEGARA MONETARY NOTES-i
(BNMNiI)
BNMN-i are Islamic securities issued by Bank
Negara Malaysia replacing the existing Bank
Negara Negotiable Notes (BNNN) for
purposes of managing liquidity in the Islamic
financial market.
The instruments will be issued using Islamic
principles which are deemed acceptable to
Shariah requirement.
Maturity : Lengthened from 1 year to 3 years.
Can be issued depends on investor’s demand
Discounted Basis
Coupon-Bearing Basis
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9. SELL AND BUY BACK AGREEMENT
(SBBA)
Entered by : 2 parties.
Bilateral Agreement.
Two separate agreement :
First Agreement : Seller (owner) sells & Buyer
(investor) buys at a specified price agreed by
both.
Forward Purchase Agreement : Buyer promises
to sell back to the original owner who should buy
it back at a specified price and future date.
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10. CAGAMAS MUDHARABAH BONDS
Introduced on 1 March 1994 by Cagamas
Berhad
Aim to finance the purchase of Islamic housing
debts from financial institutions that provides
Islamic house financing to the public.
Cagamas purchase the pooled debt on the basis
of Bai’ al-Dayn.
For securitization of the debts : They created
Bondholde
r
Cagamas
Share the earned profits
according to the ratios
agreed earlier by both
parties.
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11. WHEN ISSUES (WI)
When Issues is a Transaction of sale and
purchase of debt securities before the
securities is being issued.
The National Shariah Advisory Council
viewed that the WI transaction is allowed
based on the permissibility to promise for sale
and purchase transactions.
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12. ISLAMIC ACCEPTED BILLS (AB-i)
Objective : Encourage and promote domestic
and foreign trade.
Types of AB-i :
Imports and Local Purchases
Exports and Local Sales
The AB-i is formulated based on the Shariah
concepts of:
Al-Murabahah
Bai’ ad-Dayn
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13. AB-i IMPORTS & LOCAL
PURCHASES
Financing under : Al-
Murabahah
Customer allowed: A deferred
payment term up to 200 days.
Securitized by : Bill of
Exchange
Bai’ al-Dayn : if bank decides to
sell IAB to the 3rd party.
BANK appoints
CUSTOMER
CUSTOMER
purchases the goods
from SELLER and pay
on behalf of BANK
Resell goods to the
CUSTOMER at a price
+ profit margin
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14. AB-i EXPORT & LOCAL SALES
Traded under : Bai’ al-Dayn
EXPORTER
prepare export
documentation
Sent to the
IMPORTER’s
BANK
EXPORTER
shall draw from
CB a new bill
of exchange as
a substitution
bill, this will be
the IAB.
BANK
purchases the
IAB
Proceeds
credited to
EXPORTER’s
account
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15. ISLAMIC NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS
(INI)
The INI covers two instruments such as:-
Islamic Negotiable Instruments of Deposit (INID)
The applicable concept is Al-Mudharabah. It refers to
a sum of money deposited with the Islamic banking
institutions and repayable to the bearer on a
specified future date at the nominal value of INID
plus declared dividend.
Negotiable Islamic Debt Certificate (NIDC)
The transaction involves the sale of banking
institution's assets to the customer at an agreed price
on cash basis. Subsequently the assets is purchased
back from the customer at principal value plus profit
and to be settled at an agreed future date.
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16. ISLAMIC PRIVATE DEBT
SECURITIES
Islamic Private Debt Securities (IPDS) has
been introduced in Malaysia since 1990.
At the moment, the IPDS which are
outstanding in the market were issued based
on the Shariah compliant concept of
Bai’ Bithaman Ajil
Murabahah
Mudharabah.
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17. AR-RAHNU AGREEMENT-i (RA-i)
Under RA-i:
The Lender will provide a loan to the borrower based on
the concept of Qard al- Hasan.
The borrower will pledge its securities as collateral for the
loan granted.
However, in the event where the borrower fails to
repay the loan on maturity date, the lender has the
right to sell the pledged securities and use the
proceeds from the sale of the securities to settle the
loan. If there is surplus money, the lender will return
the balance to the borrower.
BNM will use RA-i as a liquidity management tool for
its money market operations.
Return from the RA-i will be in the form of gift (hibah)
and is determined based on the average inter bank
money market rates.
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18. SUKUK BANK NEGARA MALAYSIA IJARAH
(SBNMI)
This sukuk based on the Ijarah or ‘sale and lease
back’ concept.
A special purpose vehicle, BNM Sukuk Berhad
has been established to issue the sukuk Ijarah.
The proceeds from the issuance will be used to
purchase BNM’s assets.
Assets then be leased to BNM : For rental
payment (distributed to investors as a return on
semi-annual basis)
Maturity : End of the lease tenure (then sell the
assets back to BNM)
BNM Sukuk BHD : Issue the Sukuk Ijarah.
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19. FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Foreign Exchange is the exchange of one
currency for another, or the conversion of one
currency into another currency.
Foreign exchange transactions encompass
everything from the conversion of currencies to
billion-dollar payments made by corporate giants
and governments for goods and services
purchased overseas
Increasing globalization has led to a massive
increase in the number of foreign exchange
transactions.
The Foreign Exchange is formulated based on
the Shariah concepts of Bai’ al-Sarf.
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20. FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Definition of Bai' al-Sarf:
Sale of money for money such as the sale of gold-for-gold or
silver-for-silver.
Bai' al-sarf is applicable to modern spot forex which is
based on the spot rate which the deal settlement is
expected to be completed shortly after the contract has
been executed.
Majority of scholars opine that different currencies of
different countries consist of different intrinsic values
and purchasing power.
Condition of Bai' al-sarf:
Taking possession before leaving one another
Equal for equal transaction
Freedom from khiyar syarat (option of condition)
Non deferment
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21. FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Parties involved in Foreign Exchange:
Commercial Banks on behalf of clients.
BNM
Individual
Money brokers as middlemen.
Characteristics of Islamic Foreign Exchange:
Freedom from pricing control and manipulation
Entitlement to transact at fair prices
Freedom to contract
Freedom from Gharar
Freedom from Riba
Freedom from Maysir
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22. TYPES OF ISLAMIC FOREIGN
EXCHANGE
Spot Market
• An exchange between
items which are the same
such as currencies with
currencies.
• Islamic jurists on the view
that currencies of different
countries can be
exchanged on a spot
basis at a rate different
from unity.
Forward Market
• In general, majority of
scholars on the view that
currency exchange on a
forward basis is not
permissible, that is, when
the rights and obligations
of both parties relate to a
future date.
• However, recently the IFI
practice Bai’ al-sarf based
on waad (promise) or
murabahah commodity
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