Why start here: every page in this hub references these three concepts. Understanding the principles makes the rest of the material useful. Skipping them makes it noise.

1. Riba (Interest / Usury)

Riba is the most universally prohibited element in Islamic finance. The prohibition appears repeatedly in the Qur'an in unambiguous terms — Surah Al-Baqarah 2:275 contrasts trade (permitted) with riba (forbidden) and states that those who consume riba "will not stand except as one stands who is being beaten by Satan into insanity."

What it is

Riba is any guaranteed return on lent money, or any compensation for the time value of money. Two classical subtypes:

  • Riba al-nasiah: interest on deferred payment. The bank lends you $1,000, you repay $1,100 a year later. The $100 is riba al-nasiah.
  • Riba al-fadl: unequal exchange of the same commodity. يتداول 1kg of dates for 1.5kg of dates of identical quality is riba al-fadl. Modern relevance: applies to currency-for-same-currency exchanges and to grain trade.

Why it is prohibited

Classical scholars articulate several reasons:

  • It generates wealth without productive economic activity. The lender profits without producing goods, services, or taking entrepreneurial risk.
  • It transfers wealth from the borrower to the lender systemically. Over time, riba-based systems concentrate wealth in lenders rather than circulating it.
  • It introduces compulsion into financial relationships. The borrower must repay the principal plus interest regardless of whether the underlying activity succeeded.
  • It treats money as a commodity with intrinsic time-value. Islamic economic theory treats money as a medium of exchange, not a commodity that generates value on its own.

How riba shows up in trading

  • Overnight swap charges in forex — the most direct example. أنت pay interest on the borrowed currency in your leveraged position.
  • Margin interest in CFD trading — some الوسطاء charge daily interest on the leveraged portion of the position.
  • Negative interest on cash balances — some accounts in negative-rate jurisdictions charge interest on idle cash.
  • Bond trading — conventional bonds pay interest. Sukuk (Islamic bonds) are structured differently to avoid this.

Practical line: if your حساب charges anything called "interest," "swap," "rollover," "financing fee," or "carry cost" — that is the riba element. Swap-free accounts exist specifically to remove it.

2. Gharar (Excessive Uncertainty)

Gharar means uncertainty in a contract — uncertainty about the existence of the subject matter, the price, the quality, the delivery, or the counterparty's obligations. The prophetic hadith forbids "the sale of what one does not have" and "sales with gharar."

What it is

Two thresholds:

  • Gharar yasir (minor uncertainty): small uncertainties inevitable in any trade — the exact quality of fish in a sealed package, the future weather affecting a crop you bought. These are tolerated.
  • Gharar fahish (excessive uncertainty): uncertainty so significant that it makes the contract essentially a gamble. These invalidate the contract.

How gharar shows up in trading

  • يتداول instruments you don't understand — exotic options, structured products, securitized derivatives. If you can't explain to your scholar what the underlying really is, you can't argue gharar isn't present.
  • CFDs on unclear underlyings — synthetic indices, "boost" instruments with multiplied moves. The underlying is engineered rather than real.
  • Binary options — universally considered haram by contemporary scholars. The structure (you win nothing or lose everything based on a single price tick) is gharar combined with qimar.
  • التداول with الوسطاء in jurisdictions with no recourse — uncertainty about whether you can actually withdraw your funds is gharar in the surrounding contract.
  • Forward contracts with deferred settlement — debated. Some scholars accept arbun (deposit-based) forward structures; others reject all forward exchanges.

How gharar interacts with risk management

Important distinction: gharar is uncertainty about the structure of the contract, not uncertainty about the outcome. Every trade has uncertain outcomes — that is just market risk, which scholars do not prohibit. Gharar is uncertainty about what you are agreeing to — what is being delivered, by whom, when, in what condition, with what counterparty obligations.

A clear contract on an unpredictable market = acceptable. A vague contract with hidden conditions, even on a stable market = problematic.

3. Qimar / Maysir (Gambling)

Qimar (or its إضافي general form, maysir) refers to gambling — wealth transfer based on chance with no productive economic basis. The Qur'an prohibits maysir alongside intoxicants and idols (Surah Al-Maidah 5:90-91), calling them "abominations of Satan's handiwork."

What it is

The classical definition has three elements:

  • Wealth at stake on the outcome of a future event.
  • Outcome depends on chance, not on skill, productive effort, or تداول.
  • Zero-sum transfer — one party gains exactly what the other loses, with no جديد value created.

The critical question for trading

Is leveraged speculative trading qimar? Scholars genuinely disagree, and the disagreement turns on whether trading is "depending on chance" or "depending on skill/analysis":

عرض 1: Analytical trading is not qimar

يتداول based on fundamental analysis, technical analysis, written strategy, position sizing, and risk management is a form of commerce. The متداول is providing market liquidity, taking calculated risk on price discovery, and applying skill. Outcomes have probability components but skill changes the distribution. This is closer to merchant trade than to gambling. Held by most contemporary Islamic finance institutions.

عرض 2: Retail leveraged trading IS qimar

Retail traders with 1:500 leverage on $100 deposits are not providing real market function — they are taking unlimited-risk positions on price ticks. Statistical evidence shows the vast majority lose. The structure is mathematically closer to a casino than to commerce. Held by stricter contemporary scholars and some national councils.

The behavior axis

The honest synthesis is that trading structure and trading behavior are two different things. Two traders with the same حساب can produce different rulings on their conduct:

  • Structured متداول: written strategy, journal, position sizing, risk management, treats it as a business. Most scholars across all views would call this commerce.
  • Gambling متداول: trades on hunches, revenge-trades after losses, uses maximum leverage, has no plan. Most scholars across all views would call this qimar regardless of the حساب label.

The حساب is the container. The behavior inside it determines whether the activity is halal in practice.

How the three principles interact

A complete halal-compliance analysis runs all three filters:

  1. Does the contract structure involve riba? If yes (overnight swaps, financing charges, guaranteed returns), the trade is problematic at the structural level. Swap-free accounts address this.
  2. Is the contract clear enough to avoid major gharar? Real underlying, defined counterparty obligations, clear settlement, recoverable in case of dispute. CFDs and offshore الوسطاء raise concerns here.
  3. Is the conduct disciplined enough to avoid qimar? Written strategy, position sizing, journaling. Without these, even a perfect حساب structure becomes haram in practice.

Pass all three, and most scholarly opinions converge on "permitted with discipline." Fail any one of the three, and the activity becomes problematic — even if the other two are clean.

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