South Korea's central bank has joined the
Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB), one of the main standard-setting
bodies for Islamic finance,
as regulators across Asia build closer ties to the growing industry, reports
Reuters (28 March 2014).
Guidelines issued by the Kuala Lumpur-based
IFSB are gaining prominence as the industry takes a greater share of the
banking sector in several majority-Muslim countries and expands into new markets.
The Bank of Korea is the 59th regulatory body
to join the IFSB, bringing total membership to 184, joining the likes of the
central banks
of Luxembourg and Japan
and the monetary authorities of Hong Kong and Singapore.
The move could augur stronger links between
South Korea
and Islamic finance
hubs in southeast Asia, the report added.
THE REPORT GOES ON:
South Korea's Export-Import Bank of Korea
already has a bond programme in Malaysia that can issue Islamic bonds,
or sukuk, although it has yet to tap the market.
This week, Hong Kong lawmakers passed a
bill that will allow the AAA-rated government to raise around $500 million via
sukuk, or Islamic bonds.
In a separate statement, the IFSB also
adopted a revised guideline on the supervision of Islamic finance institutions,
helping tighten regulatory oversight of industry practices.
The latest update complements stricter
Basel rules, agreed globally to make banks
safer after the 2007-09 credit crisis.
In the past two years, the IFSB has issued
separate guidelines on liquidity risk management, stress testing and capital
adequacy.
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