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What Is Mudarabah (Profit-Sharing) In Islamic Finance?
Islamic Finance uses several types of contracts to help people invest, build businesses, and manage capital without charging interest (riba). One of the most foundational and dynamic contracts used for ethical partnership is called Mudarabah. In this article, we’ll explain what Mudarabah means, provide a simple example, look at its key features and types, explore how it differs from conventional loans, look at how Islamic banks use it today, and discuss why it is so important

salsabeelahk
7 days ago3 min read


What Is Murabahah (Cost-Plus Profit) in Islamic Finance?
Islamic Finance uses several types of contracts to help people buy goods, homes, vehicles, or equipment without charging interest (riba). One of the most commonly used contracts is called Murabahah. In this article, we'll explain what murabahah means, provide a simple example, explain how it differs from conventional loans, why it is allowed in Islam, common uses, advantages, criticisms, and why it's popular in Islamic Banking. What Is Murabahah? Murabahah is a “cost-plus pro

salsabeelahk
May 124 min read


What are Gharar (Uncertainty) and Maysir (Gambling) in Islamic Finance?
In Islamic finance, alongside Riba (interest), Gharar (uncertainty) and Maysir (gambling) are also two important concepts that define what is not allowed in financial transactions. Both of these elements are also prohibited because they lead to unfairness, injustice, or harm. In this article, we'll explain what gharar and maysir mean, its examples and why they are prohibited. 1. Gharar (Uncertainty or Ambiguity) Gharar refers to excessive uncertainty, ambiguity, or lack of cl

salsabeelahk
May 42 min read
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