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Featured researches published by Saad Azmat.


Economic Affairs | 2009

Applying North's Laws of Motion to the Edge of the West

Saad Azmat

This paper uses Douglass Norths theories of institutional economics to explain progress in Muslim Spain. It argues that it was efficient economic institutions in the guise of a free-market economy where the property rights of different strata of society were well protected, which ensured lasting prosperity. This paper postulates that while a population explosion could have been responsible for the initial growth in Spain, it was an efficient formal–informal institutional matrix that ensured a high level of long-term growth.


Social Science Research Network | 2017

Can Islamic Banks Have Their Own Benchmark

A. S. M. Sohel Azad; Amirul Ahsan; Saad Azmat; Abdelaziz Chazi

This paper attempts to answer whether Islamic banks can have their own benchmark rate. In so doing, the paper investigates the nature of the relationship Islamic interbank benchmark rate (IIBR) and its comparable conventional counterpart, London interbank offer rate (LIBOR). The dynamics of the two series are investigated to examine the stability of the spread between IIBR and LIBOR, referred to as ‘Islamic premium’ or ‘piety premium’. The findings suggest that there are both long-term and short-term dynamic relationships between the two rates providing significant evidence of their convergence and co-movement. Our results also show that the existence of the IIBR-LIBOR spread is a reflection of the cost of funding and profit potential of the participating IIBR rate-setters. We find that, in addition to the determinants of the credit spreads, fundamental news of the panel banks are dominant factors driving the ‘piety premium’. We argue that the Islamic banking industry is operating in a global context, where it is highly improbable that its rates can decouple from the global benchmarks. Given that Islamic banking products and their risk return profile are similar to conventional products, arbitrage activities force Islamic rates to converge with the global benchmark rates.


Pacific-basin Finance Journal | 2014

Issuer's choice of Islamic bond type

Saad Azmat; Michael T. Skully; Kym Eva Brown


Pacific-basin Finance Journal | 2015

Can Islamic banking ever become Islamic

Saad Azmat; Michael T. Skully; Kym Eva Brown


Pacific-basin Finance Journal | 2014

The Shariah compliance challenge in Islamic bond markets

Saad Azmat; Michael T. Skully; Kym Eva Brown


Research in International Business and Finance | 2014

Unchecked manipulations, price–volume relationship and market efficiency: Evidence from emerging markets

A. S. M. Sohel Azad; Saad Azmat; Victor Fang; Piyadasa Edirisuriya


Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization | 2014

Credit risk in Islamic joint venture bond

Saad Azmat; Michael T. Skully; Kym Eva Brown


Pacific-basin Finance Journal | 2017

The (little) difference that makes all the difference between Islamic and conventional bonds

Saad Azmat; Michael T. Skully; Kym Eva Brown


Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization | 2016

Investor’s choice of Shariah compliant ‘replicas’ and original Islamic instruments

Saad Azmat; Muhammad Naiman Jalil; Michael T. Skully; Kym Eva Brown


Emerging Markets Review | 2018

Can Islamic banks have their own benchmark

Asm Sohel Azad; Saad Azmat; Abdelaziz Chazi; Amirul Ahsan

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Abdelaziz Chazi

American University of Sharjah

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Atif Saeed Chaudry

Lahore University of Management Sciences

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Hamza Ghaffar

Lahore University of Management Sciences

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