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Financial uncertainty valuation: does Shariah compliant screening matter?

Fatma Alahouel (Faculte des Sciences Economiques et de Gestion de Tunis, Université de Tunis El Manar, Tunis, Tunisia and Unité de Recherche FCF)
Nadia Loukil (Institut Supérieur de Commerce et Comptabilité de Bizerte, Universite de Carthage, Tunis, Tunisia)

International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management

ISSN: 1753-8394

Article publication date: 26 August 2020

Issue publication date: 8 February 2021

417

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to investigate the financial uncertainty vary according to different financial assets type: conventional and Islamic.

Design/methodology/approach

Common factors are related to risk or known information. For this, the authors use general dynamic factor model to extract common variation between both types of indexes. Then they calculate stochastic volatility for each idiosyncratic component. They also carry out the study on three different family indexes respectively, Dow Jones, S&P and MSCI indexes, for the period going from January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2018. Through a comparison analysis with uncertainty index designed for conventional assets, the authors examine the similarity between the two indexes via mean, median and variance tests. They decrypt the interrelation between them by using OLS linear regression, vector autoregressive model.

Findings

The findings show that Islamic assets uncertainty is different from conventional uncertainty level. This difference can be due to the Shariah screening and the prohibition of gharar. The main findings suggest that Islamic financial uncertainty is lower than conventional one. The OLS results prove that conventional financial uncertainties have no impact on their Islamic counterparts. In addition, Islamic financial uncertainty appears to have no significant influence on conventional one exception for Dow Jones pair. Overall, the findings support the decoupling hypothesis in term of uncertainty only for SP and MSCI indexes.

Practical implications

Risk averse investors can find their claim in Shariah-compliant assets, as it offers a low level of financial uncertainty. A portfolio manager may benefit from the long run non-association in uncertainty between Islamic and conventional assets especially in time of crisis.

Originality/value

In this work, the authors measured financial uncertainty differently and take into account the specific features of each index type to improve the results quality.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Authors are thankful to Helena Chulia for providing GDFM package.

Citation

Alahouel, F. and Loukil, N. (2021), "Financial uncertainty valuation: does Shariah compliant screening matter?", International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 57-76. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMEFM-04-2019-0137

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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