Islamic equity funds (IEFs) differ fundamentally from conventional equity funds since Muslims are prohibited to invest in certain companies/sectors and pay or receive interest. This paper analyzes the risk and return characteristics of a sample of 145 IEFs and determines their risk-adjusted performance over the period 2000 to 2009. Our results show that IEFs are underperformers compared to Islamic as well as to conventional equity benchmarks. This underperformance seems to have increased during the recent financial crisis. We also find that IEF managers are bad market timers. They try to time the market, but in doing so, reduce the return rather than increasing it. An important implication of our results is that Muslim investors might be better off by investing in index tracking funds or ETFs rather than to invest in individual IEFs.
Year
2013
Country
Turkey
Language
English
Abstract
English
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CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No