đâš RAMADAN HALAL TRADING SERIES â DAY 02
âïž Spot vs Futures â Where Does Risk Become Haram?
Yesterday we discussed Halal trading principles.
Today we address the most controversial topic:
Is Futures trading compatible with Islamic finance?
Letâs break it down calmly and professionally.
đ 1ïžâŁ What Is Spot Trading?
Spot trading means:
You buy the actual asset.
You own it.
No borrowing.
No leverage.
No interest.
If you buy Ethereum on spot,
you own $ETH ETH in your wallet.
You can hold it.
Transfer it.
Sell it.
This resembles real asset ownership.
â ïž 2ïžâŁ What Is Futures Trading?
Futures trading means:
You do NOT own the asset.
You trade contracts.
Usually involves leverage (borrowed capital).
Liquidation risk.
Funding rates (which may resemble interest).
Example: You open 20x long on $BTC Bitcoin
If price moves slightly against you â liquidation.
This is extremely high uncertainty (gharar).
đ Why Scholars Raise Concerns About Futures
Main issues often discussed:
Excessive speculation
No real ownership
Leverage resembles debt-based exposure
Funding fees may resemble riba
Zero-sum contract structure
Islamic finance emphasizes:
â Real asset backing
â Risk sharing
â Transparency
â Fair exchange
Not extreme leverage gambling.
đ Practical Ramadan Advice
During Ramadan, ask yourself:
Are you:
Building wealth? OR
Feeding adrenaline?
Spot trading with risk management = discipline.
High leverage gambling = emotional trading.
Ramadan trains patience.
Your trading should reflect that patience.
đĄ Professional Trading Reminder
If you choose to trade:
Use Spot market
Risk 1â2% per trade
Avoid revenge trading
Avoid overtrading
Avoid leverage
Preserve capital first.
Barakah > Fast profit.
â ïž Disclaimer
This is educational content based on ethical screening principles. For religious rulings, consult a qualified Islamic scholar.