Islamic Banks In Usa

INTERESTING TOPICS FOR YOUR FINANCE ESSAY:
Finance is one of the major subjects of commerce at higher levels, which deals with the money. Students of finance have to write number of finance essays in order to enhance their learning skills. It is necessary the finance essay topic you choose must be original and well-researched. Mostly students feel overwhelmed when it comes on choosing a topic for their finance essay. Usually a finance essay contains five paragraphs, which includes: Introduction, body and supporting paragraphs and conclusion.
Following are some topics that help you to choose a topic for your finance essay. You can easily take help from the topics given below:
• Banking system in USA
• Household finance
• Toll grade communication
• Fiscal policy to resolve liquidation
• Internet commerce
• Review of stock market crises
• Currency issues
• Interest rate policy of Royal bank of Scotland
• What is consumer credit and how it works?
• Costing: A case study
• Financial analysis of Toyota corporation
• What is absorption and managerial costing?
• What is corporate banking?
• Define corporate finance
• What is risk?
• Investment
• Define the role of security exchange commission of Pakistan.
• Rising capital
• Branches of finance
• Define personal finance
• What is general banking
• The Mexico Peso crises
• Analyzing financial markets
• Financial analysis of Pepsi
• An example of financial projection
• Capital Budgeting
• Describe mutual funds
• Finance and its importance in banks
• Islamic banking and conventional banking: Difference
• What is budgeting?
• Risk management
Above are some finance related topics that help you to choose a topic of your choice. You will find enough material on the above topics. If you are unable to find a topic of your interest from this list you can take help from books, class lectures and class discussion for topic selection. You can also take help from your teachers and friends in choosing a topic of your interest.
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About the Author
Shariah Finance Already in the USA.flv
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Wreckful’s Run The masterly new thriller from the author of The Bone Box is based on potentially explosive current international reality, as well as actual archeological finds of great magnitude. The Islamic Republic of Iran threatens to destroy ‘the great Satan’ America and wipe off the map ‘the little Satan’ Israel. Against this background, Avi “Wreckful” Inbar, an Israeli fighter pilot, flies a mission to bom… |
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Sailing from Byzantium: How a Lost Empire Shaped the World $11.38 A gripping intellectual adventure story, Sailing from Byzantium sweeps you from the deserts of Arabia to the dark forests of northern Russia, from the colorful towns of Renaissance Italy to the final moments of a millennial city under siege….Byzantium: the successor of Greece and Rome, this magnificent empire bridged the ancient and modern worlds for more than a thousand years. Without Byzantium… |
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Palestine Inside Out: An Everyday Occupation $1.71 How the “peace process” has made life impossible for ordinary Palestinians.This book is not about suicide bombers. Tending one’s fields, visiting a relative, going to the hospital: for ordinary Palestinians, such everyday activities require negotiating permits and passes, curfews and closures, “sterile roads” and “seam zones”—bureaucratic hurdles ultimately as deadly as outright military incursi… |
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Analyzing Risk for Islamic Banks $61.88 Islamic finance is emerging as a rapidly growing part of the financial sector in the Islamic world and is not restricted to Islamic countries, but is spreading wherever there is a sizable Muslim community. According to some estimates, more than 250 financial institutions in over 45 countries practice some form of Islamic finance, and the industry has been growing at a rate of more than 15 percent annually for the past several years. The market’s current annual turnover is estimated to be $70 billion, compared with a mere $5 billion in 1985, and is projected to hit the $100 billion mark by the turn of the century. Since the emergence of Islamic banks in the early 1970s, considerable research has been conducted, mainly focusing on the viability, design and operations of a "deposit-accepting" financial institution, which operates primarily on the basis of profit and loss partnerships rather than interest. This publication provides a comprehensive overview of topics related to the assessment, analysis, and management of various types of risks in the field of Islamic banking. It is an attempt to provide a high-level framework (aimed at non-specialist executives) attuned to the current realities of changing economies and Islamic financial markets. This approach emphasizes the accountability of key players in the corporate governance process in relation to the management of different dimensions of Islamic financial risk. |
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Product Development in Islamic Banks $34.23 Habib Ahmed systematically deconstructs the development of Islamic financial products for banks. Islamic banking began in the 1970s to establish financial services compatible with Islamic law. Driven by market forces, it has grown rapidly in both Muslim countries and international financial sectors and is projected to grow at an annual rate of fifteen to twenty percent. A key factor of future growth is the availability of new products to satisfy the needs of various investors. While other texts discuss the basic principles and contracts of Islamic banking and finance, this text takes the lead in describing how to take these elements and develop them into desirable financial products. It begins with the basic principles that contribute to the making of Islamic financial products, then details more intricate issues relating to product development. It maps different stages of the development cycle and features case studies that demonstrate the structures of various products. The volume also critically evaluates issues relating to product development, such as the types of products used by Islamic banks and the approaches they adopt to help them grow. |
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Credit Risk Management in Islamic Banks $71.18 No Synopsis Available |
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Understanding Islamic Finance $54.99 In Understanding Islamic Finance Muhammad Ayub introduces all the essential elements of this growing market by providing an in-depth background to the subject and clear descriptions of all the major products and processes associated with Islamic finance. Key features include: Discussion of the principles of Islamic finance; Introduction to the key products and procedures that International Financial Institutions are using or may adopt to fund a variety of clients ensuring Sharī´ah compliance; Discussion of the role Islamic finance can play in the development of the financial system and of economies; Practical and operational examples that cover deposit and fund management by banks involving financing of various sectors of the economy, risk management, accounting treatment, and working of Islamic financial markets and instruments. This book is not only an important text for all banks and financial institutions entering this particular market with a commitment to building Islamic financial solutions, but is also essential reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of Islamic finance. |
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Islamic Banking – A $300 Billion Deception $11.77 Islamic banks currently control about $300 billion in assets. This book assesses the underlying rationale of Islamic banking, that the Quran prohibits all forms of interest. The author maintains that, first, a correct interpretation of the Quran, keeping in mind the context, would indicate that what the Quran prohibits is usury -exorbitant interest. Second, Islamic banks do not practice what they preach; they all charge interest, but disguised in Islamic garb. Thus they engage in deceptive and dishonest banking practices. The author also offers some policy recommendations, including the need for Ijtihad, Enlightenment, and critical thinking. Islamic banks, if they wish to practice genuine and authentic Islamic banking, should become more like venture capital firms. |
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Islamic Finance in the Global Economy $38.12 In the past decade, Islamic finance has grown at rates exceeding 20% a year. Islamic finance is now a $200 billion industry, with operations in over 70 countries. This book explains the paradox of a system rooted in the medieval era thriving in the global economy.Coverage is exhaustively comprehensive, defining Islamic finance in its broadest sense to include banks, mutual funds, securities firms and insurance companies. The author places Islamic finance in the context of the global political and economic system and covers core issues including the moral economy of Islam, differences between countries such as Pakistan, Iran, the Sudan and Malaysia, and religious issues and challenges.Based on rigorous academic research as well as considerable empirical work, this authoritative book is an invaluable reference work for all those with an interest in Islamic and Middle Eastern economics, business and finance.This second edition has been completely revised and updated to take into account the great changes and developments in the field in recent times. |
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Introduction to Islamic Banking and Finance $42.99 Introduction to Islamic Banking and Finance is a succinct guide to the key characteristics of Islamic banking highlighting how these differ from conventional banking. This detailed book illustrates how Islamic banking is consistent with the Sharia’a, a key element of which is the prohibition on collecting and paying interest. This central religious precept appears to rule out most aspects of modern finance but it does allow money to be used for trading tangible assets and business, which can then generate a profit. Brian Kettell’s book looks at all aspects of Islamic banking, including chapters on its creation and evolution through to detailed discussions of the issues involved in the Sharia’a contracts of Murabaha, Mudaraba, Musharaka, Ijara, Istisna’a, and Salam. Islamic insurance (Takaful) is also covered. Finally the book takes a look at Sharia’a law and Sharia’a boards, indicating the roles and responsibilities that come with membership.Islamic banks have been operating in places such as Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia and Dubai for some time. Conventional bankers have traditionally viewed the sector as a small, exotic niche but recent years have seen a dramatic surge in popularity. A number of Western investment banks have started working with Muslim clerics to create new ranges of financial products designed for devout Muslims, a large and growing market. Although estimates of the size of the Islamic finance industry vary greatly, everyone agrees that it is expanding rapidly and this is the perfect book for anyone looking to understand the industry. |
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Islamic Financial Services in the United Kingdom $40.45 The second installment in Edinburgh University Press’s Guides to Islamic Finance series, as well as the first book-length study of Islamic financial services in Great Britain, this volume emphasizes how British examples of Islamic financial provision illustrate both the main characteristics of Islamic financial teaching and key issues in the lives of British Muslims. Coverage is comprehensive, with chapters on the history of Islamic financial provision in Great Britain, personal deposit accounts, personal finance and credit cards, home finance, investment funds and share dealing, insurance, "sukuk," and commercial financing. Elaine Housby is broadly sympathetic to the general spirit and aims of the Islamic financial tradition, yet she is also critical of its manifestations in practice. Her book is especially topical, since most Islamic banks based in Britain remain relatively unaffected by the problems facing other British banks. This is partly due to the prohibition against toxic assets, which are not compliant with shariah law, and they are also forbidden to borrow from wholesale markets or pay "riba" (interest). Instead Islamic banks rely on their own deposits for funding, a traditional and more sustainable business model. |
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Case Studies in Islamic Banking and Finance $60.99 Case Studies in Islamic Banking and Finance is a pioneering resource that provides practical insights into the real world of Islamic financial transactions, and illustrates the complexities of this rapidly growing mode of modern finance.Based around 12 individual cases, the book stimulates discussion and develops the reader’s understanding of Islamic finance by contrasting the theoretical concepts discussed in the author’s companion text Introduction to Islamic Banking and Finance with practical real world situations. The cases cover core Islamic banking and finance topics including the Ijara, Mudaraba and Musharaka contracts; Islamic mortgages for home finance; leverage; and issues involved in opening an Islamic bank. Financial statement analysis for Islamic banks, the implications for fund management for equity investing and the impact of loan defaults on Islamic and conventional banks are also included. Each chapter concludes with a set of questions designed to test the reader’s understanding of each case, with suggested solutions at the end of the book.This book is a must have resource for those wishing to apply their understanding of this complex subject and is an essential read for anyone seeking practical examples of how to apply the concepts in a real world environment. |