Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence

The substantial influence of Islamic Finance worldwide cannot be neglected with the encouraging potential and growth of Shariah compliant firms especially in Muslim dominated nations. Dual financing systems coexist in harmony between Islamic Finance and conventional thus motivates this study to exam...

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Main Authors: Haron, Razali, Yusoff, Sheila Ainon
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/54781/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/54781/14/54781.pdf
id iium-54781
recordtype eprints
spelling iium-547812017-02-21T07:33:54Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/54781/ Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence Haron, Razali Yusoff, Sheila Ainon HG4001 Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance. The substantial influence of Islamic Finance worldwide cannot be neglected with the encouraging potential and growth of Shariah compliant firms especially in Muslim dominated nations. Dual financing systems coexist in harmony between Islamic Finance and conventional thus motivates this study to examine and compare the determining factors of both types of firms’ financing decisions. By using three different regression techniques, the Pooled Ordinary Least Square (OLS), the Fixed Effects and the Random Effects, we analyse the impact of firm level and industry level determinants on corporate financing of the 290 Shariah compliant and 111 non-Shariah compliant firms in Indonesia. This study found that both the Shariah compliant and the non-Shariah compliant firms consider different determining factors in deciding their financing choices. The difference in the determining factors is most likely due to the different principles governing the two types of firms. The Shariah firms are deemed to adhere to the Shariah principles in running their operations and investments. This study has policy implication as it can assist those responsible to understand further the nature of both types of firms especially in the development of Islamic Finance to make Shariah compliant firms to flourish further with more innovative Islamic financing products to suit the needs. 2016 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/54781/14/54781.pdf Haron, Razali and Yusoff, Sheila Ainon (2016) Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence. In: 4th ASEAN International Conference on Islamic Finance (AICIF 2016), 6th-8th December 2016, Melaka. (Unpublished)
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic HG4001 Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance.
spellingShingle HG4001 Financial management. Business finance. Corporation finance.
Haron, Razali
Yusoff, Sheila Ainon
Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence
description The substantial influence of Islamic Finance worldwide cannot be neglected with the encouraging potential and growth of Shariah compliant firms especially in Muslim dominated nations. Dual financing systems coexist in harmony between Islamic Finance and conventional thus motivates this study to examine and compare the determining factors of both types of firms’ financing decisions. By using three different regression techniques, the Pooled Ordinary Least Square (OLS), the Fixed Effects and the Random Effects, we analyse the impact of firm level and industry level determinants on corporate financing of the 290 Shariah compliant and 111 non-Shariah compliant firms in Indonesia. This study found that both the Shariah compliant and the non-Shariah compliant firms consider different determining factors in deciding their financing choices. The difference in the determining factors is most likely due to the different principles governing the two types of firms. The Shariah firms are deemed to adhere to the Shariah principles in running their operations and investments. This study has policy implication as it can assist those responsible to understand further the nature of both types of firms especially in the development of Islamic Finance to make Shariah compliant firms to flourish further with more innovative Islamic financing products to suit the needs.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Haron, Razali
Yusoff, Sheila Ainon
author_facet Haron, Razali
Yusoff, Sheila Ainon
author_sort Haron, Razali
title Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence
title_short Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence
title_full Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence
title_fullStr Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence
title_full_unstemmed Does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? An Indonesian empirical evidence
title_sort does the corporate financing behaviour of shariah compliant firms differ from non-shariah compliant firms? an indonesian empirical evidence
publishDate 2016
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/54781/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/54781/14/54781.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T21:17:28Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T21:17:28Z
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