Index Funds and Trackers: Back to Basics
Introduction to
investment funds
The term “fund” covers a number of terms
including mutual funds, collective investment
undertakings, collective investment schemes or
pooled investment vehicles and these terms are
generally used interchangeably. A fund can be
classified in various ways e.g. by its structure, its
investment strategy or its regulatory status.
Funds offer investors the opportunity to
pool their money with other investors in an
investment that’s managed by professional
investment managers. Funds generally invest
in stocks, bonds or other securities according to
each fund’s objective. This paper focuses on a
particular type of fund known as index funds.
Index funds are a type of mutual fund that use a
specific investment style called passive investing.
This paper will also look at different indices in
the global market. The benefits of indexing will
be discussed followed by a Shariah analysis of
conventional platforms to invest in index funds.
The paper concludes with a look at Shariah indices
What is an index fund?
An index fund is an investment fund that attempts to replicate the performance of a given index of stocks
or some other investment type. That can include bonds or even a narrow subset of a financial market,
say, small-cap biotech companies. Index funds are mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that
invest in such a way that the performance of the fund closely tracks that of the target benchmark index,
such as the S&P 500. Because of their passive nature, index funds generally have lower expenses and
potentially higher long-term returns than actively-managed funds.
Most index funds work by identifying an already well-known index, usually maintained by a respected
third party, then building a fund that either owns every asset in the index or achieves the same end by
holding similar securities. For example, an S&P 500 index fund can invest in all 500 components of the
market index in order to replicate its performance.