Posts Tagged ‘Financial Scandals’

TBTF – Bear Sterns collapse and Syariah compliance

// December 31st, 2009 // No Comments » // Business

While on holiday, I bought the book “Too Big To Fail” by Andrew Ross Sorkin. I’m about one-fifth of the way through the book. Really gripping stuff, but I wish I had a better way of remembering the names of the key players. Maybe I should put the profiles of the ensemble cast in an Appendix, along with their photos (haha!).

On Monday I recalled a comment from the first Chapter, and recounted it to one of my colleagues at work. Apparently, sources on Wall Street have it that a group of short-sellers maliciously manipulated Bear Sterns’s share price and reputation. This eventually resulted in the merger of Bear Sterns with JP Morgan in a stock swap of $2 per share, down from $172 per share a year earlier. The $2 offer was revised to $10 per share, but that is still less than 10% of the $172 high.

I recounted this story to my colleague because she attended a recent two-day seminar conducted by the Centre for Islamic Banking, Finance and Management (CIBFM) on Syariah compliant financial services, and she had briefed me earlier on some of the materials presented during the seminar.

From what we learned, key in determining if a transaction is “Syariah compliant” is whether it adheres to a set of 5 key principles:

  1. Avoidance of “Riba” – I think of this as “Usury“. Whether “profit sharing” agreements in murabaha (profit-sharing) transactions really represent “Interest” on debt (where a debt is a present obligation of the entity arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits, per the IASB Framework) … ah, that is the topic of a whole separate series of blog posts!
  2. Avoidance of “Gharar” – A deceptive sale with uncertain payoffs, benefiting one party at the expense of the other
  3. Avoidance of “Maysir” – Games of chance and gambling
  4. Avoidance of transactions involving prohibited commodities – all that is “Haram” e.g. Alcohol, drugs, etc.
  5. Contracts must have mutual consent, purpose and motive – quite similar to how in common-law systems, the key requirements for the creation of a contract are offer & acceptance, consideration, intention to create legal relations, legal capacity and formalities.

So I was thinking … between running a modern financial services firm and maintaining Syariah compliance … how do we reconcile these two needs? Are they congruent? Are they competing?

More after the break.

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Guest Post on re:The Auditors

// December 16th, 2009 // No Comments » // Business

Francine McKenna and I correspond over Twitter on various topics covering Corporate Governance and the “Expectations Gap” between auditors and the stakeholders they serve. She has more than twenty years of experience in the consulting and professional services environment including tenures in both the US and abroad at PwC, KPMG/BearingPoint, JP Morgan and Jefferson Wells/Manpower. She is a freelance writer and a frequent speaker in and out of the accounting/audit world.

Francine invited me to author a guest post on her blog, “re: The Auditors“. She writes and speaks passionately, authoritatively and most importantly, critically about the audit profession and the auditor’s role in capital markets.

I jumped at the chance to author a guest post on her blog, and this is the result. It’s a summary of the first Plenary session at AFA16 where I was invited to present a paper.

http://retheauditors.com/2009/12/15/a-guest-post-from-bruneis-pengiran-izam/

If you’re an accountant, I heartily recommend adding her RSS news feed to your newsreader and keep up to date with the latest developments that affects all accountants everywhere.

Financial scandals – Have auditors succumbed to greed?

// December 10th, 2009 // 1 Comment » // Business

This week, we hosted the 16th ASEAN Federation of Accountants confernce here in Brunei and I was very pleased when I received an invitation from BICPA and the organising committee to present a paper on the above topic.

I’ve uploaded my slides to slideshare.net, and I also attach high res slides after the break below.