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Investments – Shariah Compliancy

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I have give money to builder for investing purpose he will invest this money in his projects when he sell flats he will return an amount as per loss/profit is this permissible according to shariah ?

Answer

Answer:

In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.

As-salāmu ‘alaykum wa-rahmatullāhi wa-barakātuhu

We understand that you have given your funds to a builder to invest on your behalf and return the funds based on a profit and loss sharing basis.

There are various ways of executing such an investment transaction from a Shariah perspective. Hereunder follows the fundamental concepts and rules thereof:

1. Mudarabah – Sweat Partnership

Mudarabah is a partnership wherein one partner contributes investment capital to the partnership and the other contributes the labour/management expertise. The investment partner is the Rabbul Mal while the labourer is the Mudarib.

In a Mudarabah partnership, a fixed profit ratio/percentage may be fixed. For example, partner A receives 60% of the profits while partner B receives 40% of the profits. However, a fixed amount cannot be fixed nor can a percentage on the capital investment be fixed.

All losses will be for the account of the investor.

Based on the scenario in reference, the builder can be deputed as the Mudarib while you will be the Rabbul Mal. All responsibilities of management lie with the Mudarib and the investor has no managerial role unless otherwise agreed.

2. Wakalah – Agency

The builder is appointed by the investor as agent and receives a fixed salary or commission fee. This commission fee or salary is not based on the risk of the project but the work provided by the agent.

3. Istisna – Manufacturing Contract

Istisna is a contract in which the manufacturer or builder pre-sells a product to the purchaser upfront before manufacturing or building with all the stipulations and specifications of the end product including delivery date. The purchaser pays for the product/building during the contract tenure and then takes ownership and possession once the product is completed and fully paid for. Based on this contract, the builder fixes his mark-up on the building and the purchaser re-sells the building for a profit either via a parallel Istisna contract with another buyer during the tenure of the contract or a sale and purchase agreement after taking ownership of the property.

You are welcome to contact the Darul Iftaa to assist you in devising the contract arrangement between yourself and the builder.

And Allah Ta’āla Knows Best

Ismail Desai,

Darul Iftaa

Checked and Approved,

Mufti Ebrahim Desai.

This answer was collected from Askimam.org, which is operated under the supervision of Mufti Ebrahim Desai from South Africa.

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