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You just celebrated Eid. Now set one financial habit that sticks.
Eid is over. Ramadan reflections are still fresh. This is the best window to set a financial habit that lasts the rest of the year. Most people who start investing do so because of a moment of clarity. Ramadan is one of the best sources of that clarity. The problem is that moment fades fast once normal life resumes. Here is how to lock it in before it fades. Step 1: Open the account. If you do not have a halal investment account yet, open one this week. Not next month. This week. It takes 10 minutes. US: Roth IRA at Fidelity or Schwab, then buy SPUS. UK: Stocks and Shares ISA at Trading 212 or InvestEngine, then buy HIWS. Australia: Hejaz Super or a self-directed account with HIWS. Step 2: Set up an automatic monthly transfer. Pick an amount you will not miss. Even 50 pounds or 50 dollars per month. Set it to go out the day after payday so you never see it sitting in your current account. Automation removes willpower from the equation. Step 3: Delete your brokerage app from your home screen. Seriously. Checking your portfolio daily is the fastest way to make emotional decisions. Move the app to a folder you rarely open. Check it monthly at most. The difference between people who build wealth and people who talk about building wealth is usually one thing: they automated a habit early and then left it alone. You do not need to be an expert. You do not need to pick stocks. You need one halal ETF and one standing order. That is genuinely it. What is the one financial habit you are committing to this week?
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WELCOME TO THE COMMUNITY
Assalamu alaikum and welcome! I'm Dr M Elansary โ€” I've spent the last year researching, writing, and publishing 5 books on halal investing because I believe every Muslim deserves clear, practical guidance on growing wealth the permissible way. This community exists for one reason: to help you invest with confidence and faith. Here's what this space is about: โœ… Ask any halal investing question โ€” no question is too basic โœ… Get real answers from people who've done the research โœ… Share what you're learning with others on the same path โœ… No sales pitches, no spam โ€” just genuine help If you're new here, drop a comment below and tell us: ๐Ÿ‘‹ Where you're from ๐Ÿ“ˆ Where you are in your investing journey (just starting, already investing, or somewhere in between) Looking forward to building this together.
The 6 biggest mistakes new halal investors make (and how to avoid each one)
After years of answering halal investing questions on Reddit and Quora, the same mistakes come up again and again. Here they are โ€” and how to fix them. MISTAKE 1: KEEPING EVERYTHING IN CASH "TO BE SAFE" This is the most common and most costly mistake. Many people think: "I can't invest in stocks because I'm not sure what's halal, so I'll keep my savings in a current account until I figure it out." The problem: Inflation at 3-4% per year means that ยฃ10,000 sitting in a current account loses ยฃ300-400 in purchasing power every single year. Doing nothing is not neutral โ€” it is a guaranteed slow loss. Fix: Start with one halal ETF (SPUS in the US, HIWS or MWIM in the UK) while you learn more. Perfect is the enemy of good. MISTAKE 2: ASSUMING THE BROKERAGE NEEDS TO BE "ISLAMIC" There is no such thing as a "halal brokerage" that matters for your investments. Fidelity, Schwab, Hargreaves Lansdown โ€” these platforms are just pipes. What you buy through them is what determines halal compliance. Fix: Open a standard brokerage account today. Use Zoya to screen what you buy. MISTAKE 3: NOT UNDERSTANDING SCREENING STANDARDS Not all halal ETFs use the same screening method. SPUS uses AAOIFI standards. Some ETFs use Dow Jones Islamic Market methodology. The differences are real and affect which companies are included. Fix: Know which standard your ETF uses. Check the fund's fact sheet. If you're unsure, post the question here. MISTAKE 4: IGNORING PURIFICATION If you own a halal ETF, a small fraction of its dividends may come from companies with minor non-compliant revenue. You are required to donate that percentage to charity โ€” this is called purification. Many investors don't know this exists. Others know but don't do it. Fix: Check your ETF's annual purification ratio (usually in the fund report or on Zoya). Calculate your share. Donate it to any charity. It's typically 1-3% of dividends received โ€” small, but obligatory. MISTAKE 5: BUYING BROAD INDEX FUNDS WITHOUT CHECKING
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The 5-minute primer: What IS ethical/halal investing and where do you start?
If you landed here wondering "what exactly is halal or ethical investing?" โ€” you're in the right place. This post answers the question from scratch. THE CORE IDEA Halal investing (also called ethical, values-based, or Shariah-compliant investing) is simply investing that avoids industries and business practices you consider harmful. The Islamic framework has been doing this for 1,400 years โ€” long before ESG funds existed. The rules come down to four filters: 1. NO INTEREST (riba) โ€” You cannot profit from lending money at interest. This rules out banks, conventional insurance, and bonds that pay interest. Instead of interest, wealth grows through ownership, trade, and profit-sharing. 2. NO HARMFUL INDUSTRIES โ€” Alcohol, tobacco, weapons, gambling, adult content, and pork products are excluded. Not because they can't make money โ€” they do โ€” but because their profits come from harm. 3. NO EXCESSIVE DEBT โ€” Companies that are drowning in debt (total debt over 33% of assets) are screened out. Excessive leverage is seen as financial recklessness. 4. NO DECEPTION โ€” Contracts must be transparent. No hidden fees, no predatory structures. WHAT THIS LOOKS LIKE IN PRACTICE A halal portfolio might include: - Technology companies (Apple, Microsoft) โ€” screened and generally pass - Healthcare and consumer goods โ€” most pass screening - Clean energy โ€” generally fine - Shariah-screened ETFs (SPUS, HLAL, HIWS, MWIM) โ€” pre-screened baskets of stocks A halal portfolio would NOT include: - Bank stocks (JPMorgan, Barclays) โ€” core business is interest - Alcohol producers (Diageo, AB InBev) - Casino operators, defence contractors THE 3 TOOLS YOU NEED 1. Zoya app (free) โ€” type any stock ticker and it tells you instantly whether it passes Shariah screening. Uses AAOIFI standards. Available on iOS and Android. 2. Musaffa โ€” similar to Zoya, more detailed breakdown of why a stock passes or fails each filter. 3. A regular brokerage account โ€” Fidelity, Schwab, or Charles Schwab in the US; Hargreaves Lansdown, AJ Bell, or Trading 212 in the UK. The platform doesn't need to be "Islamic" โ€” you just invest in halal assets through it.
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The 5 biggest mistakes new ethical investors make (and how to avoid them)
I've seen these patterns repeat across hundreds of conversations. If you're new to values-based or halal investing, knowing these mistakes upfront will save you years of frustration. MISTAKE 1: Keeping everything in cash "to be safe" This is the single most common โ€” and most costly โ€” mistake. The thinking goes: "I don't know what's halal, so I'll just leave it in savings until I figure it out." The problem? Inflation is running at 3-5% per year. A ยฃ10,000 savings account loses ยฃ300-500 in real purchasing power every year you wait. Doing nothing is not neutral. It's a slow, guaranteed loss. The fix: You don't need to understand everything before you start. Open a Stocks & Shares ISA or Roth IRA and put ยฃ100 into a halal ETF like HIWS or SPUS this week. Learn as you go. The cost of waiting is real. MISTAKE 2: Investing in broad index funds without checking the screen "I use a passive index fund โ€” isn't that basically halal?" No. A standard S&P 500 fund or FTSE All-World fund includes banks, alcohol companies, weapons manufacturers, and tobacco companies. These fail the business activity screen entirely. The fix: Check every fund you hold in Zoya (free app). If it fails, switch to a screened equivalent. SPUS tracks the S&P 500 halal-screened. HIWS does the same for global developed markets. MISTAKE 3: Confusing a halal PLATFORM with a halal INVESTMENT "I invest through an Islamic bank, so my investments are halal." Wrong. The platform you use to buy investments is separate from the investments themselves. You can buy haram stocks on an "Islamic" platform, or buy perfectly screened halal ETFs on any standard brokerage. What matters is what you're actually holding, not where you hold it. The fix: Use any reputable brokerage (Fidelity, Schwab, Trading212, InvestEngine). Focus on what you buy, not where you buy it. MISTAKE 4: Not understanding purification โ€” and either ignoring it or over-stressing it Some investors don't know purification (tazkiyah) exists and unknowingly keep impure income. Others hear about it and panic, thinking halal investing is impossibly complex.
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