LM-2.3.2
Such early warning indicators can be qualitative or quantitative in nature and may include, but are not limited to, the following:
  (a) Rapid asset growth, especially when funded with potentially volatile liabilities;
  (b) Growing concentrations on certain assets or liabilities or funding sources;
  (c) Increasing currency mismatches;
  (d) Increasing overall funding costs;
  (e) Worsening cash-flow or structural liquidity positions as evidenced by widening negative maturity mismatches, especially in the short-term time bands (e.g. up to 1 month);
  (f) A decrease in weighted average maturity of liabilities;
  (g) Repeated incidents of positions approaching or breaching internal or regulatory limits;
  (h) Negative trends or heightened risk, such as rising delinquencies or losses, associated with a particular business, product or activity;
  (i) Significant deterioration in earnings, asset quality, and overall financial condition;
  (j) Negative publicity;
  (k) A credit rating downgrade;
  (l) Stock price declines;
  (m) Widening spreads on credit default Shari'a compliant hedging instrument or senior and subordinated Sukuk;
  (n) Counterparties beginning to request additional collateral for credit exposures or to resist entering into new transactions to provide unsecured or longer dated funding;
  (o) Reduction in available credit lines from correspondent banks;
  (p) Increasing trends of retail deposit withdrawals;
  (q) Increasing redemptions of certificates of deposit before maturity; and
  (r) Difficulty in accessing longer-term funding or placing short-term liabilities (e.g. Murabaha Sukuk).
  August 2018
 
  
        