IFSB-FIS E-Workshop Series : Regulatory Capital for Islamic Banks

Date: 9 November 2020 (Monday) Time: 4:30 – 6:30 pm (MYT) Sector: Islamic banking Topic: Regulatory Capital for Islamic Banks Overview In this e-workshop session, the IFSB will be discussing banks regulatory capital, by addressing the specificities of Islamic banking operations and business activities. Regulatory capital requirements were introduced as a prudential measure with the aim of ensuring that risk exposures of a financial institution are adequately supported by high-quality capital that absorbs losses on a going concern basis. This ensures that financial institutions meet their obligations on an ongoing basis as they fall due, while also maintaining the confidence of customers, depositors, creditors and other stakeholders in their dealings with the institution and thereby promoting the resilience and stability of financial systems around the world. Subsequent enhancements to regulatory capital requirements also sought to further protect depositors and other creditors in a gone concern situation by providing an additional cushion of loss-absorbing capital. The basic regulatory capital requirement ensures that financial institutions maintain a minimum capital adequacy ratio at all times. The CAR is a measurement of a financial institution’s available regulatory capital expressed as a percentage of its total risk-weighted assets. We will be taking the participants, in more the details and in a simplified manner, the tiers and components of regulatory capital for Islamic banks, essential eligibility criteria for inclusion in the regulatory capital as well as the necessary regulatory adjustment to the capital that will make its quantification more conservative so that the capital is available at all times to absorb losses.     ***REGISTRATION IS OPEN FOR MEMBERS ONLY***   Event Snapshots

4th Meeting of the Executive Committee of the IFSB

Online

The 4th Meeting of the Executive Committee of the IFSB is scheduled to be held online as follows:   Date 12 November 2020 Time 5:30 to 18:30 (Malaysia time)   Participation in the meeting is by INVITATION only. For more information please email to: [email protected]   Event Snapshots  

IFSB-FIS E-Workshop Series : IFSB-14: Standard on Risk Management for Takaful Undertakings

Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Malaysia

Date : 28 October 2020 (Wednesday) Time : 4:30 – 5:30 pm (MYT) Sector : Takaful Topics : IFSB-14: Standard on Risk Management for Takaful Undertakings Overview IFSB published a few standards dedicated to Islamic insurance industry as an effort to guide the industry towards a stable and sound financial environment. This IFSB-14 Standard is intended to establish minimum standards in the area of risk management, for the direction and guidance of Takaful Operators as well as insurance/Takaful supervisors. This session will discuss how management of risks inherent in the Takaful Undertakings should be implemented in order to bring the Takaful industry to the desired level of effective supervision and regulation, at par with the conventional insurance industry, which always subject to the requirements of Shariah principles. The central focus of this discussion will be given to the specific characteristics of a Takaful Undertakings (TU). Facilitator will help you to understand the fundamental difference of TU from conventional insurers in terms of ownership of the insurance risk, as well as enterprise risk management framework.   ***REGISTRATION IS OPEN TO MEMBERS ONLY***   Event Snapshots  

4th JWG Meeting on Shariah Governance Framework for Institutions Offering Islamic Financial Services (RSGF)

Online (webinar) Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

The 4th Joint Working Group Meeting on Revised Shari'ah Governance Framework Standard is scheduled to be held as follow :   Date 30 November 2020 Time 3.00 PM (GMT +8.00, KL time) Venue Online (webinar)   Participation in the meeting is by INVITATION only. For more information please email to: [email protected]   Event Snapshots  

2nd Innovation Forum – Digital Transformation of Islamic Finance and other Innovative Solutions for Post-COVID-19 Recovery

Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Malaysia

The 2nd IFSB innovation forum sets the stage to enable the most creative minds in the Islamic financial services industry to showcase their pre-developed or conceptualised products, instruments, services, mobile applications, digital platforms and other offerings which exhibit an element of innovation and forward-looking creativity to deal with and respond to the new global reality, particularly focusing on digital and business transformation and other innovative initiatives that will improve the resilience of the Islamic finance industry and accelerate its growth during the post-COVID-19 recovery. This Forum, which is conducted as a regular biennial series, is an effort by the IFSB to bring together the Islamic finance stakeholders to focus on the promotion and development of innovative Islamic finance solutions, vital to create the competitive edge needed to sustain the Islamic financial services industry going forward. This is in-line with the IFSB's Articles of Agreement 4(d) which puts one of the objective of the IFSB as '"to enhance and coordinate initiatives to develop instruments and procedures for efficient operations and risk management". The Forum targets regulators, policy makers, Islamic financial institutions, start-ups and FinTechs, academic and research institutions, financial services providers, legal practitioners, Sharīʿah advisors and other interested stakeholders to enable an enriched discussion on enhancing the culture of innovative thinking and development in the Islamic financial services industry. The audience will be able to interact with the presenters showcasing their innovative solutions and also discuss strategies for the widespread adoption and implementation of such solutions in different jurisdictional settings for the greater benefit of the industry. The 2nd Innovation Forum will feature invited organisations to showcase their products.The presentations and product showcasing will be followed by expert discussions by selected regulators and academics on how these innovative solutions can improve efficiency and risk management in the Islamic financial services industry. This Forum is open for All. For registration and enquiries, please email Ms. Noor Azmah Mohd Yusof at [email protected] Event Snapshots Programme - Event Session(s) Date Time Topics Day 1 30/11/2020 15:30 - 15:45 Opening Remarks 15:45 - 18:30 Digital Transformation of Islamic Finance and other Innovative Solutions for Post-Covid-19 Recovery   Downloadable Documents Event Session(s) - PDF Format

2nd Extraordinary Meeting of the Technical Committee

Online

The 2nd Extraordinary Meeting of the Technical Committee of the IFSB is scheduled to be held online as follows:   Date 1 December 2020 Time 16:00 - 18:30 (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia time)   Participation in the meeting is by INVITATION only. For more information please email to: [email protected]   Event Snapshots

37th Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) Council Meeting

Online

The 37th Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) Council Meeting is scheduled to be held via online on Thursday, 10 December 2020. This meeting is a closed session and participation is by invitation ONLY. If you have any enquiries regarding the meeting, please contact Ms. Nissa at [email protected] and Mrs. Ida Shafinaz at [email protected]. More information will be posted on this page in the weeks ahead. Please stay safe and well during this challenging time.   Event Snapshots

21st Islamic Financial Stability Forum – The Implications of COVID-19 on the Stability of Islamic Financial Services Industry

Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Malaysia

The IFSF provides opportunity to renowned IFSI leaders, decision markers and regulators to offer diverse perspectives as well as exchange ideas with industry stakeholders across different segments of the IFSI on related regulatory and policy initiatives and issues. This 21st IFSF involves a session of panel discussion that focuses on the COVID-19 related issues and their implication for the stability and resilience of the IFSI. Further, it also attempts to have forward looking policy to prevent the potential and unprecedented crisis and industry responses facing the current and future crisis. The COVID-19 pandemic no doubt exerts significant pressures on both the regulatory and supervisory authorities (RSAs) as well as supervised firms including the institutions offering Islamic financial services (IIFS). This is especially in terms of coping with the dynamics of the consequences of the pandemic depending on its effects and duration, as well as adapting supervisory approaches and working practice respectively toward the apparent, anticipated, and obscure risks that may result due to contraction in the real economy to which the IFSI is highly exposed. In addition, it is likely that the need to urgently address the matters arising from the outbreak of COVID-19 may have subsumed attention to other wider issues relating to how the IFSI complements the achievement of the sustainable development goals including the social development. These developments will obviously put both the stability and resilience of the IFSI to test in the later part of 2020 and perhaps beyond. The specific issues relating to these broad concerns are amongst the focus of the panel discussion session of this 21st IFSF besides the prospect of Islamic finance taken into account the lesson learnt from the pandemic.   Event Snapshots   Programme - Event Session(s) Date Time Topics Day 1 16/12/2020 14:30 - 14:40 Opening Remarks 14:40 - 16:00 Panel Discussion on Assessing the effectiveness of regulatory and supervisory response to maintain financial stability upon the impact of COVID-19 and way ahead In many jurisdictions, recommendations have been offered on the use of regulatory buffers, the need to preserve compliance with international standards, and promote international and inter-organisational coordination. A few have also looked at these issues with focus on the specificities of Islamic financial services such as balance sheet components, relatively smaller size of the IFSI in many jurisdictions, and the state of the economy of countries where Islamic finance is practiced. While the effect of the first wave of the pandemic is starting to manifest, especially as various fiscal, monetary and other stimulus introduced by the various governments are being relaxed, the impact of the second wave of COVID-19 is also likely to take effect in the coming months. Not only might there be a significant increase in credit risk due to financing delinquencies, market liquidity might also be strained, and asset markets might be disrupted. Moreover, the indispensability of digitalising financial services due to social distancing as a new normal to flatten the curve of the pandemic also presents technology-related risks that might result from staff remote access to financial network as well as outsourcing of cloud services for instance to third-parties. Also, the abruptness and pervasiveness of the COVID-19 pandemic and the responses it elicited might also have impacted on the requisite attention needed on other wider issues including for instance, climate change and financial inclusion which are also considered important to the IFSI. While these challenges affect the entire financial system in a jurisdiction, their implications for the IFSI might also present peculiar effects given the specificities of Islamic finance.   Discussion Points: What is the effect of the prudential regulatory and supervisory policy response to COVID-19to maintain financial stability of IFSI in general? Are various stimulus packages introduced stimulating new spending and preventing job losses quickly enough as desired especially to the households and SMEs to which the Islamic banks are highly exposed? Are there any unexpected prudential consequences peculiar to the specificities of the IFSI that have emerged from the crisis and what are their implications? How can the Islamic banks deal with regulatory capital treatment of ECLs given that IFRS-9 did not specify such treatment for profit and loss sharing contract, for instance? What are the peculiar impediments and risks to the digital transformation of the IFSI as necessitated by COVID-19? Are there legacy infrastructure, human capital or capital budgeting constraints, for instance? How effective is the coordination and communication among various regulators and supervisors of Islamic finance segments in response to COVID-19? What factors should the regulatory and supervisory authorities consider to be of utmost importance, as countries where Islamic finance is practiced gradually ease the lockdown? What are the forward looking policy to be pursued taken into account the lesson learnt from pandemic? To what extent has the focus on the effect of the pandemic subsumed attention on other wider issues and initiatives that are pertinent to Islamic finance such as financial inclusion, climate change, etc? · 16:00 - 16:15 Q&A Session

32nd Arabic Editing Committee Meeting

Online

The 32nd Arabic Editing Committee Meeting is scheduled to be held as follows:   Date 2 - 4 February and 6 - 10 February 2021 Time 2:00 pm - 6:00 pm (Malaysia time) Venue Online   Participation in the meeting is by INVITATION only. For more information please email to: [email protected]

IFSB-FIS E-Workshop Series – IFSB-17: Core Principles for Islamic Finance Regulations (CPIFR Related to Prudential Regulations and Requirements for IIFS)

Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Malaysia

Date : 15 February 2021 (Monday) Time : 4:30 – 6:30 pm (MYT) Sector : Islamic banking Topic : IFSB-17: Core Principles for Islamic Finance Regulation (CPIFR Related to Prudential Regulations and Requirements for IIFS)   Overview The main objective of the Core Principles for Islamic Finance Regulations – CPIFR is to provide a foundation for regulatory and supervisory authorities to regulate Islamic financial services industry with consideration the specificities of the IIFS in the banking segment and the lessons learned from the financial crisis, and complementing the existing international standards, principally the BCBS’s Core Principles for Effective Banking Supervision (Basel Core Principles, or BCPs). In this online FIS Workshop IFSB will address three CPIFR, covering Transactions with related parties, Treatment of Investment account holders (IAHs) and Islamic windows operations. FIS Workshop facilitator will discuss how core principles requirements help to prevent abuses arising in transactions with related parties and to take measures on the risk of conflict of interest. During the session participants will get understanding on regulatory treatment, governance and disclosures, capital adequacy and associated risk-absorbency features related to IAH’s. Moreover Islamic windows operations, their permitted forms, supervisory review process will be also covered. The facilitator will also share with some Case studies and open floor to Q&A to bring more interactivity to the session.   ***REGISTRATION IS OPEN FOR MEMBERS ONLY***