U’um Munawaroh
Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia

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ARE ISLAMIC STOCKS LESS EXPOSED TO SENTIMENT-BASED MISPRICING THAN NON-ISLAMIC ONES? EVIDENCE FROM THE INDONESIAN STOCK EXCHANGE Rizqi Umar Al Hashfi; Ahmad Maulin Naufa; U’um Munawaroh
Journal of Islamic Monetary Economics and Finance Vol 7 No 1 (2021)
Publisher : Bank Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21098/jimf.v7i1.1319

Abstract

The aim of this research is to verify the role of Islamic value in stock mispricing in the Indonesian capital market. Empirically, high investor sentiment can lead to mispricing on equity appraisal. When investors feel excessively optimistic about their valuation, equity will be overpriced, or vice versa. The presence of Islamic values, such as the prohibition of interest, speculative and uncertain transactions, and excessive leverage, arguably reduce sentiment-based mispricing. Daily and cross-sectional market data were employed. In addition, principal component analysis was conducted to construct a firm-specific investor sentiment variable. With regard to the method, the Hausman-Taylor (H-T) approach was used to deal with heterogeneity, endogeneity, and the time-invariant variable in Fama-MacBeth regression. The results show that our baseline analysis confirms the mispricing of overall stocks. However, Islamic stocks are less exposed to sentiment-based mispricing than their non-Islamic counterparts. The results are consistent with our robustness test, in which we estimate the equation model across industry and portfolio. Finally, our findings imply various insights for both investors and policymakers.
NEXUS OF RISK AND STABILITY IN ISLAMIC BANKS DURING THE PANDEMIC: EVIDENCE FROM INDONESIA Sunarsih Sunarsih; Rizqi Umar Al Hashfi; U’um Munawaroh; Endang Suhari
Journal of Islamic Monetary Economics and Finance Vol 8 No 4 (2022)
Publisher : Bank Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21098/jimf.v8i4.1444

Abstract

This paper analyzes the effect of liquidity risk and credit risk on Islamic bank stability and whether the risk-stability nexus changes during the Covid-19 pandemic. Using a panel quarterly dataset of 14 Islamic banks from 2017 to 2020, a total of 224 quarterly-bank observations in total and the system generalized method of moment, we find that credit risk and liquidity risk are negatively associated with bank stability. Moreover, the COVID-19 does not alter the negative relationship between liquidity risk and stability. To validate the results, we also estimate the model using the LSDVC. The LSDVC results remain consistent. These results provide new insight into understanding risk management implementation for minimizing these risks.