Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sukuk> ?p ?o. }
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- Sukuk abstract "Sukuk (Arabic: صكوك, plural of صك Sakk, "legal instrument, deed, check") is the Arabic name for financial certificates, but commonly refers to the Islamic equivalent of bonds. Since fixed income, interest bearing bonds are not permissible in Islam, Sukuk securities are structured to comply with the Islamic law and its investment principles, which prohibits the charging, or paying of interest. Financial assets that comply with the Islamic law can be classified in accordance with their tradability and non-tradability in the secondary markets.According to Global Islamic Finance Report 2012 Global Islamic Finance Report, $1.34 trillion of assets are being managed according to Islamic investment principles. Such principles form part of Shari'ah, which is often understood to be ‘Islamic Law’, but it is actually broader than this in that it also encompasses the general body of spiritual and moral obligations and duties in Islam. In the Persian Gulf region and Asia, Standard & Poor's estimates that 20 per cent of banking customers would now spontaneously choose an Islamic financial product over a conventional one with a similar risk-return profile.[citation needed]Such religiously inspired non-interest loan systems can be quite mystifying for outsiders. Here the universe of investable securities is limited by certain criteria based on moral and ethical considerations. Islamic finance is also a subset of the global market and there is little to prevent the conventional investor from participating in the Islamic market.".
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink FIPROD_Sukuk.html.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=gambia%20securitization&f=false.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink english.sukuk.ir.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=18&Itemid=30.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=58&Itemid=70.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink reader_1843745445.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink www.gifr.net.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink sukuk-risks.pdf.
- Sukuk wikiPageExternalLink ABSTRACT.
- Sukuk wikiPageID "1478555".
- Sukuk wikiPageRevisionID "605100714".
- Sukuk hasPhotoCollection Sukuk.
- Sukuk subject Category:Islamic_banking.
- Sukuk subject Category:Sharia_legal_terms.
- Sukuk comment "Sukuk (Arabic: صكوك, plural of صك Sakk, "legal instrument, deed, check") is the Arabic name for financial certificates, but commonly refers to the Islamic equivalent of bonds. Since fixed income, interest bearing bonds are not permissible in Islam, Sukuk securities are structured to comply with the Islamic law and its investment principles, which prohibits the charging, or paying of interest.".
- Sukuk label "Sukuk".
- Sukuk label "Sukuk".
- Sukuk label "Sukuk".
- Sukuk label "Sukuk".
- Sukuk label "Sukuk".
- Sukuk label "Сукук".
- Sukuk label "صك إسلامي".
- Sukuk label "スクーク".
- Sukuk label "伊斯蘭債券".
- Sukuk sameAs Sukuk.
- Sukuk sameAs Sukuk.
- Sukuk sameAs Sukuk.
- Sukuk sameAs Sukuk.
- Sukuk sameAs スクーク.
- Sukuk sameAs 수쿠크.
- Sukuk sameAs Sukuk.
- Sukuk sameAs m.054pts.
- Sukuk sameAs Q1145541.
- Sukuk sameAs Q1145541.
- Sukuk wasDerivedFrom Sukuk?oldid=605100714.
- Sukuk isPrimaryTopicOf Sukuk.