Islamic money market assets have expanded rapidly in the last few years along with the rise of Shariah-compliant banking.
In the UAE, for instance, Islamic certificates of deposit issued by the central bank and held by commercial banks have more than tripled in the past two years, to AED 15.1 billion ($ 4.1 billion) last December from 4.6 billion in 2010, central bank data shows.
The main tool which Gulf banks use to manage such short-term liquidity is commodity murabaha, a common cost-plus-profit arrangement in Islamic finance.
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