Praise be to Allaah.
It is permissible to deal in currencies if the deal is done
hand to hand and the transaction is free of conditions that stipulate riba,
such as the stipulation of fees for delaying the deal, which is interest
that is charged to the investor if he does not take a decision concerning
the deal on the same day.
With regard to hand to hand exchange, this has been discussed
in the answer to question no. 72210.
With regard to the fees for delaying the deal and trading in
margins, a statement has been issued by the Islamic Fiqh Council concerning
this, which says the following:
Praise be to Allaah alone and blessings and peace be upon the
one after whom there is no Prophet, our master and Prophet Muhammad, and
upon his family and companions. To proceed:
The Islamic Fiqh Council of the Muslim World League, in its
eighteenth session that was held in Makkah al-Mukarramah from 10 to
14/3/1427 AH (8 to 12 April 2006 CE), has examined the issue of trading in
margins, which means that the customer pays a small amount of the value of
what he wants to buy, which is called a “margin”, and the agent (the bank or
otherwise) pays the rest as a loan, provided that the purchase contract
remains in the name of the agent as a pledge for the money that was loaned.
After listening to the research that has been submitted and
the detailed discussion on this topic, the opinion of the council is that
this transaction involves the following:
1 – Dealing in buying and selling for the purpose of profit,
and this dealing is usually done in major currencies or financial
certificates (shares and bonds) or some types of products, and it may
include trade in options, futures and the indexes of major markets.
2 – Loans, which refers to the money given by the agent to
the customer directly if the agent is a bank, or via a third party if the
agent is not a bank.
3 – Riba, which occurs in this transaction in the form of
fees for delaying the deal. This is interest that is charged to the
purchaser if he does not make a decision on the same day, and which may be a
percentage of the loan or a set amount.
4 – Commission, which is the money that the agent gets as a
result of the investor’s (customer’s) dealing through him, and it is an
agreed-upon percentage of the value of the sale or purchase.
5 – The pledge, which is a commitment signed by the customer
agreeing to leave the contract with the agent as a pledge for a loan, giving
him the right to sell these contracts and take back the loan if the
customer’s losses reach a specific percentage of the margin, unless the
customer increases the pledge in order to compensate for a drop in the price
of the product.
The Committee believes that this transaction is not
permissible according to sharee’ah for the following reasons:
Firstly: It involves obvious riba, which is represented by
the addition to the amount of the loan which is called “paying fees for
delaying the deal”. This is a kind of haraam riba. Allaah says
(interpretation of the meaning):
“O you who believe! Fear Allaah and give up what remains
(due to you) from Ribaa (from now onward) if you are (really) believers.
279. And if you do not do it, then take a notice of war
from Allaah and His Messenger but if you repent, you shall have your capital
sums. Deal not unjustly (by asking more than your capital sums), and you
shall not be dealt with unjustly (by receiving less than your capital sums)”
[al-Baqarah 2:278-279]
Secondly: The agent stipulates that the customer must deal
through him, which leads to combining both giving a loan for something in
return and paying commission, which is akin to combining giving a loan and
selling at the same time, which is forbidden in sharee’ah because the
Messenger (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “It is not
permissible to give a loan and sell at the same time…” The hadeeth was
narrated by Abu Dawood (3/384) and al-Tirmidhi (3/526), who said it is a
hasan saheeh hadeeth. In this case he has benefited from his loan, and the
fuqaha’ are unanimously agreed that every loan that brings a benefit is
haraam riba.
Thirdly: Dealings that are done in this manner in the global
markets usually involve many contracts that are haraam according to
sharee’ah, such as:
1-
Dealing in bonds, which comes
under the heading of riba which is haraam. This was stated in a resolution
of the Islamic Fiqh Council in Jeddah, no. 60, in its sixth session.
2-
Dealing indiscriminately in
company shares. The fourth statement of the Islamic Fiqh Council of the
Muslim World League in its fourteenth session in 1415 AH stated that it is
haraam to deal in the shares of companies whose main purposes are haraam, or
some of their dealings involve riba.
3-
Selling currencies is usually
done without the hand to hand exchange which makes them permissible
according to sharee’ah.
4-
Dealing in options and futures.
A resolution of the Islamic Fiqh Council in Jeddah no. (63), in its sixth
session, stated that options are not permissible according to sharee’ah,
because the object of dealing in these contracts is not money or services or
a financial obligation which it is permissible to exchange. The same applies
to futures and trading in indexes.
5-
In some cases the agent is
selling something that he does not possess, and selling what one does not
possess is forbidden in sharee’ah.
Fourthly: This transaction involves economic harm to the
parties involved, especially the customer (investor), and to the economy of
the society in general, because it is based on borrowing to excess and
taking risks. Such matters usually involve cheating, misleading people,
rumours, hoarding, artificial inflation of prices and rapid and strong
fluctuation of prices, with the aim of getting rich quickly and acquiring
the savings of others in unlawful ways. Hence it comes under the heading of
consuming people’s wealth unlawfully, in addition to diverting wealth in
society from real, fruitful economic activity to this type of risk that has
no economic advantage, and it may lead to severe economic turmoil that will
cause great loss and harm in society.
The Council advises financial institutions to follow the ways
of finance that are prescribed in sharee’ah and that do not involve riba and
the like, and do not have harmful economic effects on their customers or on
the economy in general, like shar’i partnerships and the like. And Allaah is
the Source of strength.
May Allaah send blessings and peace upon our Prophet Muhammad
and all his family and companions. End quote from Majallat al-Majma’
al-Fiqh al-Islami, issue no. 22, p. 229.
We ask Allaah to guide us and you.
And Allaah knows best.