Lend
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Lending money under the condition that interest will be paid on the principal is also known as usury and is forbidden under the Islamic faith, where it is called 'riba'.[1] To avoid this prohibition, financiers in Islamic countries have developed bond-like lending instruments known collectively as sukuk, which are not considered interest-paying but still profit the lender.
Latest News
Global banks' unwillingness to lend to each other since the credit crisis began has caused a rise in the spread between the interbank lending-rate benchmark LIBOR and three-month Treasury bills. The situation in the U.S. become so dire that some commentators have called for U.S. Federal Reserve intervention to guarantee short-term interbank lending similar to that in other credit markets.[2]
The Bank of England has reacted to a similar crisis in UK interbank lending by creating a new discount lending facility for emergency overnight loans.[3] The BoE has lowered emergency bank lending rates by 50 basis points to 4.5% and will likely also allow banks to exchange moribund mortgage-backed securities and other impaired debt for higher-quality government bills.
References
- ↑ Prohibition of Interest (Riba) in Islam – The Social, Moral and Economic Rationale. Shodalap.com.
- ↑ How to Unfreeze Bank Lending. Wall Street Journal.
- ↑ Bank to unveil money market reforms next week. Reuters.
