6 research outputs found

    The Compatibility of Cryptocurrencies and Islamic Finance

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    In this article, I shall examine the compatibility of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies within the context of Islamic law. I shall begin by an introduction of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. I will then discuss the history of money in Islamic history, with an emphasis on the importance ethical financial dealings. I will then argue that Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are highly compatible within Islamic finance, and in many cases, actually provide solutions to problems of government institution controlled currencies, arguing that Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies better address several problems that early Islamic finance scholars were concerned with. Unlike traditional fiat, the supply of Bitcoin and many other digital currencies are fixed, thereby eliminating potential for gharar (deception), and also inflation. In addition, unlike fiat and precious metal coins, digital currencies cannot be altered, forged, or manipulated. Moreover, cryptocurrencies’ peer-to-peer transactions remove the need for any banking institution, thereby eliminating any risk with a third party controlling one’s money. I shall then conclude with a summary of the main points of the article, and examine future possibilities with regards to the role of digital and cryptocurrencies

    Do Islamic indices provide diversification to bitcoin? A time-varying copulas and value at risk application

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    This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Elsevier in Pacific-Basin Finance Journal on 08/04/2020, available online: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pacfin.2020.101326 The accepted version of the publication may differ from the final published version.© 2020 The emergence of new asset classes offers avenues to international investment community however understanding relationship between any two assets in a single portfolio is important. We investigate the risk dependence between daily Bitcoin and major Islamic equity markets spanning over from July 2010 to March 2018. We start by examining long memory properties of Bitcoin and sampled Islamic indices and report significant results. The residuals from fractionally integrated models are then used in bivariate time invariant and time varying copulas to investigate dependence structure. Among all Islamic indices, DJIUK, DJIJP and DJICA exhibit time varying dependence with Bitcoin. In addition, we apply VaR, CoVaR and ΔCoVaR as risk measure to examine spillover between Bitcoin and Islamic equity markets. VaR of Bitcoin exceeds from VaR of Islamic indices and CoVaR of both Islamic and Bitcoin exceeds their respective VaR, suggesting presence of risk spillover between each other. Our results also report asymmetry between downside and upside ΔCoVaR suggesting implications for investors with different risk preferences. Finally, the diversification benefits indicate that Islamic equity market serves as an effective hedge in a portfolio along with Bitcoin.Accepted versio
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