Digital Banking and Fintech

Fintech, Digitalization, and Blockchain in Islamic Finance: Retrospective Investigation

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Sun, 01/29/2023 - 11:23
The increasing interest in Fintech, Blockchain, and Digitalization in Islamic Finance created a new area in the literature, requiring a systematic review of these academic publications. The scope of the analysis is limited to journal articles to understand the trends in the indexed journals. Results are categorized into three sections, Islamic banks’ digitalization, Blockchain and Crypto Assets research, and Islamic non-bank financial institutions’ digitalization.

Fintech Strategies of Islamic Banks: A Global Empirical Analysis

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Sun, 01/29/2023 - 11:14
As new digitalization strategies storm the banking industry, banks which are behind the technological curve may struggle to keep pace. This is a well-known challenge in the Islamic banking sector in particular; however, this research shows that little is being done in order to achieve unified digitalization in operations. The 2020 Global Islamic Bankers Survey (GIBS) from CIBAFI sought opinions and data from 101 Islamic banks, which outlined both their institutions’ adoption of financial technology and their awareness of existing technologies.

Fintech as a Financial Disruptor: Abibliometric Analysis

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Sun, 01/29/2023 - 11:02
The present-day financial system is being influenced by the rapid development of Fintech (financial technology), which comprises technologies created to improve and automate traditional forms of finance for businesses and consumers. The topic of Fintech as a financial disruptor is gaining popularity in line with the swift spread of digitalization across the banking industry, whereby this paper contributes to the field by presenting a novel bibliometric analysis of the academic literature related to Fintech as a financial disruptor.

Central Bank Digital Currencies, Internet of Things, and Islamic Finance: Blockchain Prospects and Challenges

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Sun, 01/29/2023 - 10:52
This paper introduces the need for blockchain technology integration for Islamic financial institutions. The article presents three main applications of blockchain technology. It explains how such technology can be used in the banking and financial sectors by providing examples for each application. Given its relevancy, the paper expands on Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) as one of the blockchain applications. The article then discusses salient points on how the banking sector would be affected by what is described as the future of money.

Gig/Platform Economy: The Next Big Opportunity for Takaful?

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Fri, 09/09/2022 - 22:48

The World Bank recently released “The Global Findex Database 2021: Financial Inclusion, Digital Payments, and Resilience in the Age of Covid-19” which shows that 76 percent of adults globally have access to an account with a bank or a regulated financial institution. The rise in the past decade has been the fastest ever with over a 50 percent jump in the population with access to banking accounts and this was largely possible due to rapid advances in technology and digital infrastructure for financial services.

The Technological Impact in Finance: A Bibliometric Study of Fintech Research

Submitted by Munir on Sun, 09/04/2022 - 08:43

This paper is a review of research work done in FinTech that included technological innovation in finance in area such as the credit market (including Peer-2-Peer lending), insurance with a blockchain-assisted smart contract and payment systems (including cryptocurrencies). The paper provides a bibliometric review of FinTech in finance based on the published articles and journals in the Scopus database relating to 1,717 publications available between 1960 and 2021 onward.

Cryptocurrency co-movements and Crypto Exchange Movement: The Relocation of Binance

Submitted by Umar Farooq Patel on Tue, 08/30/2022 - 17:07
Binance, the largest cryptocurrency exchange by traded value, relocated from Hong Kong (origin market) to Malta (destination market). This study exploits this relocation event by examining the comovement of Binance’s native token with the native tokens of other cryptocurrency exchanges in the origin and destination markets. Using multivariate regression analysis, our results show that Binance experienced a significant decline in comovement with its origin market after moving to Malta.