Aligning Shariah Values and Investing

May 5, 2025

Explore how aligning your investment strategy with Shariah values can help you meet your financial goals while honoring your faith.

Author
Emily Thomas, Head of Investing with Impact, Wealth Management

Key Takeaways

  • Many Muslims rely on Shariah law to guide everyday living, including how they invest.
  • Shariah values can serve as a guide for screening out undesirable investments, targeting specific sectors and themes, or as inspiration for shareholder engagement.
  • Opportunities in Shariah-compliant investing are expanding, with more options in public equities and innovative products like sukuk. 

Many Muslims rely on Shariah law to provide ethical guidance for every aspect of daily living. This can extend to how wealth is earned, managed and invested, which means that everyday financial decisions support not only a devout investor’s strategic goals, but also their spiritual ones. 

 

Based on guidance from religious texts such as the Qur’an and the Sunnah, Sharia-compliant investing can help Muslims achieve their financial goals while also honoring the core principles of their faith.

Principles of Shariah-Compliant Investing

Shariah investing is centered around three core principles:

  • equity, fairness and transparency;
  • risk-sharing; and,
  • ownership and materiality.

 

This includes:

  1. 1
    Prohibiting interest:

    As emphasized in the Qur’an, earning or charging interest, known as riba, is considered exploitative because it creates an unequal relationship between the lender and the borrower.

  2. 2
    Avoiding excessive uncertainty:

    Referred to as gharar, highly speculative investments, such as options, futures and other derivatives, run contrary to the Shariah ideals of certainty and transparency. 

  3. 3
    Avoiding haram investments:

    Activities or industries that are considered haram (proscribed by Islamic law), including trade in commodities such as alcohol, tobacco or pork, should be avoided. 

  4. 4
    Engaging in charitable giving:

    Known as zakat, this is the religious obligation to donate a portion of wealth each year to those in need in order to improve social harmony and economic justice.

  5. 5
    Sharing risk:

    Shariah investing requires that investment returns be earned by sharing risk, not just by the passage of time. This favors the sharing of realized profit and loss, instead of interest.

  6. 6
    Investing in real economic activity:

    All investments must be tied to tangible assets or economic activity, ensuring that value creation is grounded in productivity and not speculation.

Approaches to Shariah Compliant Investing

Your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor can work with you to build a portfolio that incorporates Shariah guidance with your overall financial goals and risk tolerance. Investors can leverage approaches such as:

  1. 1
    Using Shariah values as a restriction screen:

    Investors can screen out industries or sectors considered haram, such as non-Islamic banks and insurance companies, tobacco, weapons, alcohol and gambling.

  2. 2
    Focusing on halal investments:

    Investors can also screen for activities that are halal to ensure investments are aligned with Islamic values, such as screening for investments with low debt ratios.

  3. 3
    Thematic investing:

    Investors can focus on themes that generate a positive impact in accordance with Shariah values, such as companies that provide access to clean water or that support economic equality, education and affordable housing. 

  4. 4
    Seeking to influence company behavior:

    Investors can use shareholder engagement, such as voting proxies and filing shareholder resolutions, to influence the practices of the companies in which they invest in order to spur positive change. 

Opportunities for Investors

When building a Shariah-compliant investment strategy, investors may find that certain asset classes offer more opportunities than others.

 

For example, there are more Shariah-compliant investment strategies in public equities than in fixed income. Although actively managed funds previously dominated equity offerings, growing demand for Shariah-compliant strategies has led to passive investments becoming more widely available, including Shariah-compliant exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

 

Growth and product development in the Islamic finance industry also have led to increased availability of funds covering other asset classes, such as sukuk, a bond-like financial certificate structured to generate returns without infringing on Islamic interest prohibitions.

 

The values of certainty and transparency under Shariah additionally favor asset-backed investments such as real estate or commodities, while alternative investments such as hedge funds are typically excluded due to their speculative strategies. Other asset classes that lend themselves to Shariah-compliant investing include private equity investing with little to no leverage, though these strategies may have more limited availability.

Aligning Your Portfolio With Your Values

With the Morgan Stanley Impact Quotient® (MSIQ), our patented impact reporting tool, your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor can help align your portfolio with your faith-based values and monitor progress toward your goals. Morgan Stanley offers more than 3,000 investment strategies, including strategies on our Investing with Impact Platform that intentionally address Shariah values or can be customized to comply with Shariah law.

 

As the Qur’an teaches, “Whatever good you put forward for yourselves, you will find it with Allah” (Qur’an, 2:110). For many Muslim investors, this principle reminds them that wealth is more than just money, but an opportunity to act justly by investing ethically.

 

Connect with your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor to explore how your investments can reflect your faith and values. To learn more, you can also request a copy of the Global Investment Office report, Investing in Alignment with Shariah Values.

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