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Islamic Asset Management: An Asset Class on its Own? (Edinburgh Guides to Islamic Finance)

معرفی کتاب «Islamic Asset Management: An Asset Class on its Own? (Edinburgh Guides to Islamic Finance)» نوشتهٔ Natalie Schoon، منتشرشده توسط نشر Edinburgh University Press در سال 2011. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

Islamic asset management has been growing at a similar rate as the Islamic financial industry as a whole and at the time of writing close to 700 funds are incorporated in the major databases with an estimated funds under management of around $70 billion.This book reviews the Islamic asset management industry in detail, including the types of funds offered and their operational procedures. It shows that although there are differences between conventional and Islamic asset management, these do not appear to have a significant impact on how the funds perform. Shari'ah compliant funds are therefore an attractive alternative for Muslim and non-Muslim investors alike.Key Features \* Contains valuable information on Shari'ah compliant fund structures and the type of instruments that can be invested in \* Considers practical implementation matters such as operational issues, available indices and the role of the Shari'ah Supervisory Board \* Includes case studies of the funds available to investors including the BLME $ Income Fund, SWIP Islamic Global Equity Fund, the Saudi Al Rajhi Fund Range and the Malaysian blue chip i-VCAP-MyETF-DJIM25 \* Features a glossary of abbreviations and key Arabic terms \* Relevant to investors and practitioners in the industry, and to non-Muslims interested in investing based on the same set of principles, norms and values Islamic asset management has been growing at a similar rate as the Islamic financial industry as a whole and at the time of writing close to 700 funds are incorporated in the major databases with an estimated funds under management of around $70 billion. This book reviews the Islamic asset management industry in detail, including the types of funds offered and their operational procedures. It shows that although there are differences between conventional and Islamic asset management, these do not appear to have a significant impact on how the funds perform. Sharia'a compliant funds are therefore an attractive alternative for Muslim and non-Muslim investors alike. Key Features Contains valuable information on Shari'ah compliant fund structures and the type of instruments that can be invested in Considers practical implementation matters such as operational issues, available indices and the role of the Shari'ah Supervisory Board Includes case studies of the funds available to investors including the BLME $ Income Fund, SWIP Islamic Global Equity Fund, the Saudi Al Rajhi Fund Range and the Malaysian blue chip i-VCAP-MyETF-DJIM25 Features a glossary of abbreviations and key Arabic terms Relevant to investors and practitioners in the industry, and to non-Muslims interested in investing based on the same set of principles, norms and values What's the difference between conventional and Islamic asset management? This book reviews the Islamic asset management industry in detail, including the types of funds offered and their operational procedures, and finds that the differences are surprisingly minimal. Sharia'ah-compliant funds are therefore an attractive alternative for Muslim and non-Muslim investors alike.

Key Features

* Contains valuable information on Sharia'ah-complaint fund structures and the type of instruments that can be invested in
* Considers practical implementation matters such as operational issues, available indices and the role of the Sharia'ah Supervisory Board
* Includes case studies of the funds available to investors including the BLME $ Income Fund, SWIP Islamic Global Equity Fund, the Saudi Al Rajhi Fund Range and the Malaysian blue chip i-VCAP-MyETF-DJIM25
* Features a glossary of abbreviations and key Arabic terms This book reviews the Islamic asset management industry in detail, including the types of funds offered and their operational procedures. It shows that although there are differences between conventional and Islamic asset management, these do not appear to have a significant impact on how the funds perform. Sharia'a-compliant funds are therefore an attractive alternative for Muslim and non-Muslim investors alike. -- Book Jacket
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