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Islamic Contract – Contemporary Criticism and Sharī‘ah Debate on Bay‘ al-‘Īnah
Q1: Why is Bay‘ al-‘Īnah controversial in contemporary Islamic finance?
Answer
Bay‘ al-‘Īnah is:
strongly criticised by most contemporary Sharī‘ah scholars and international Islamic finance authorities.
Among institutions disapproving it are:
  • International Islamic Fiqh Academy (IIFA-OIC)
  • AAOIFI
  • Dallah Albaraka
  • Kuwait Finance House
  • Dubai Islamic Bank
The main objection is:
‘īnah may function as a legal stratagem (ḥīlah) to legalise ribā through sale and buy-back arrangements.


Q2: What is the main Sharī‘ah criticism against Bay‘ al-‘Īnah?
Answer
Critics argue that:
  • although the structure formally appears as:
    • two sale contracts,
  • its economic substance resembles:
a cash loan with interest.


Case Scenario 1 – Why Scholars Criticise ‘Īnah
Step 1
Islamic bank sells asset to customer:
  • RM120,000 deferred.


Step 2
Customer immediately resells same asset to bank:
  • RM100,000 cash.


Financial Effect
Customer receives:
✅ RM100,000 cash now.
Customer later pays:
✅ RM120,000.


Difference
120{,}000 - 100{,}000 = 20{,}000
120{,}000 - 100{,}000 = 20{,}000


Critical Analysis
Most contemporary scholars argue:
The commodity merely circulates temporarily to legitimise an increment over cash financing.
Thus:
  • the commodity may not be genuinely intended for trade;
  • the arrangement may merely replicate:
interest-bearing lending.


Q3: Did Imam al-Shāfi‘ī actually approve ribā through ‘Īnah?
Answer
No.
Many contemporary scholars clarify that:
Imam al-Shāfi‘ī did not intentionally legalise ribā.


Al-Shāṭibī’s Clarification
Abu Ishaq al-Shatibi explained that:
It is incorrect to claim that al-Shāfi‘ī approved means leading to ribā.
Rather:
  • al-Shāfi‘ī judged contracts based on:
their outward legal validity,
unless:
  • unlawful intention becomes manifest.


Q4: What was Imam al-Shāfi‘ī’s actual reasoning?
Answer
Muhammad ibn Idris al-Shafi’i argued that:
if a contract fulfils the apparent Sharī‘ah requirements,
it should not be invalidated merely because of suspected intentions.


Al-Shāfi‘ī’s Legal Philosophy
He distinguished between:
✅ outward legal form (ẓāhir);
and
❌ hidden intentions (niyyah).


Example Given by al-Shāfi‘ī – Selling a Sword
A seller sells:
  • a sword to someone.
The seller suspects:
  • buyer may use it unjustly.
However:
  • the sale itself remains legally valid because:
unlawful intention is not certain.


Example Given by al-Shāfi‘ī – Selling Grapes
A seller sells:
  • grapes to buyer.
The seller suspects:
  • buyer may produce wine.
Still:
✅ sale remains valid outwardly,
unless:
  • unlawful purpose becomes explicit.


Application to ‘Īnah
Similarly, al-Shāfi‘ī argued:
  • if:
    • two sales are legally independent;
    • Sharī‘ah conditions fulfilled;
      then:
      ✅ contracts remain outwardly valid.


Even if:
  • parties internally intend liquidity financing.


Important Limitation
However:
  • al-Shāfi‘ī still disliked arrangements:
intentionally designed to circumvent Sharī‘ah prohibitions.
He only refused to invalidate contracts:
  • solely based on suspicion.


Q5: Why do contemporary scholars still reject ‘Īnah despite al-Shāfi‘ī’s view?
Answer
Contemporary scholars place strong emphasis on:
economic substance,
not merely:
legal form.


Critical Contemporary Argument
Modern scholars argue that:
  • systematic institutionalised ‘īnah
    is no longer:
    • isolated individual trade;
      but:
    • organised financing mechanism.


Thus:
  • intention becomes commercially obvious;
  • artificiality becomes apparent.


Case Scenario 2 – Organised Banking ‘Īnah
An Islamic bank:
  • repeatedly executes thousands of identical buy-back transactions.
The customer:
  • never intends to use asset;
  • only seeks cash financing.
The bank:
  • never expects customer to retain asset.


Critical Analysis
Contemporary scholars argue:
the commercial reality clearly reveals financing intent.
Thus:
  • the form of sale merely disguises:
cash-for-cash financing with increment.


Q6: Why does Malaysia still permit Bay‘ al-‘Īnah?
Answer
Malaysia adopts:
a regulated and pragmatic Sharī‘ah approach.
Both:
  • Shariah Advisory Council of Bank Negara Malaysia
    and
  • Shariah Advisory Council of Securities Commission Malaysia
accept:
conditional permissibility of ‘īnah.


Malaysian Regulatory Safeguards
Malaysia imposes:
✅ independent contracts;
✅ proper sequencing;
✅ genuine ownership transfer;
✅ right of delivery;
✅ separate documentation;
✅ prohibition of binding repurchase promises.


Practical Reason for Malaysian Acceptance
Malaysia considers:
  • commercial necessity;
  • banking practicality;
  • minority juristic opinions.
However:
  • regulators continuously tighten requirements
    to reduce:
  • abuse;
  • artificiality;
  • resemblance to ribā.


Q7: Why has the use of ‘Īnah declined in modern Islamic finance?
Answer
The use of ‘īnah has reduced because:
  • stricter regulatory scrutiny exists;
  • international Sharī‘ah criticism increased;
  • tawarruq structures became more widely accepted.


Practical Shift in Islamic Banking
Islamic banks increasingly prefer:
➡ tawarruq;
➡ commodity murābahah;
➡ genuine trade-based structures.
This is because:
  • they are generally viewed as:
    • less controversial;
    • more internationally acceptable.


Overall Critical Analysis
Two Main Approaches Exist
Classical Formalist Approach
(Focus on outward legal validity)
Represented by:
  • al-Shāfi‘ī’s methodology.
Main Principle
If contracts satisfy:
✅ legal requirements,
they remain valid outwardly.


Contemporary Substance-Based Approach
(Focus on economic reality)
Represented by:
  • most contemporary Sharī‘ah councils.
Main Principle
If transaction economically functions as:
interest-bearing financing,
then:
❌ legal form alone cannot legitimise it.


Modern Sharī‘ah Trend
Contemporary Islamic finance increasingly emphasises:
✅ genuine ownership;
✅ real transfer of risk;
✅ authentic commercial substance;
✅ avoidance of legal stratagems (ḥiyal).
Thus:
  • Bay‘ al-‘Īnah remains:
one of the most debated and controversial contracts in Islamic finance.

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Islamic Contract – Legality of Bay‘ al-‘Īnah
Q1: Why do Muslim jurists differ regarding the legality of Bay‘ al-‘Īnah?
Answer
Muslim jurists differ because of:
their different approaches toward:
  • form (ṣūrah);
  • substance (ḥaqīqah);
  • intention (niyyah);
  • legal stratagems (ḥiyal);
  • blocking harmful means (sadd al-dharā’i‘).
The debate revolves around an important question:
Should a contract be judged only by its outward legal form, or should the underlying intention and economic substance also be considered?


Q2: What was Imam al-Shāfi‘ī’s approach regarding contracts?
Answer
Muhammad ibn Idris al-Shafi’i generally held that:
the legal validity of a contract is determined by its outward form and expression.
Meaning:
  • if a contract fulfils Sharī‘ah legal requirements outwardly,
    then:
    ✅ the contract is legally valid.


Important Principle in al-Shāfi‘ī’s Methodology
According to al-Shāfi‘ī:
hidden intentions are not legally enforceable unless they are expressed or clearly manifested.
Thus:
  • courts and judges should not invalidate contracts merely based on suspicion.


Case Scenario 1 – Hidden Intention Not Expressed
A customer purchases:
  • a commodity from a bank
    for:
  • RM120,000 deferred payment.
Later:
  • he independently sells it back for RM100,000 cash.
No:
❌ written promise;
❌ verbal agreement;
❌ mandatory repurchase clause
exists.


Critical Analysis
According to al-Shāfi‘ī’s legal methodology:
✅ the contracts remain outwardly valid.
Why?
Because:
  • each contract independently fulfils legal requirements;
  • unlawful intention was not expressly stated.


Q3: Did all Shāfi‘ī jurists completely prioritise form over substance?
Answer
No.
Some later Shāfi‘ī jurists clarified that:
  • the Shāfi‘ī School sometimes considers:
    • form;
      and at other times:
    • substance and intention.


Among these jurists were:
  • Al-Sharbini
  • Al-Ramli
  • Al-Shirwani
  • Ibn Hajar al-Haytami


Critical Analysis
This demonstrates:
the Shāfi‘ī position is more nuanced than commonly assumed.
It is incorrect to simplistically claim:
“The Shāfi‘ī School fully endorses ‘īnah.”
Rather:
  • the school distinguishes between:
    • presumed intention;
    • manifested unlawful intention.


Q4: How are hiyal and dharā’i‘ related to Bay‘ al-‘Īnah?
Answer
The legality of ‘īnah is closely connected to:
  • legal stratagems (ḥiyal);
  • blocking harmful means (sadd al-dharā’i‘).


What Are Hiyal?
Hiyal
Refers to:
legal devices or stratagems used to achieve a result indirectly.


What Is Sadd al-Dharā’i‘?
Sadd al-Dharā’i‘
Means:
blocking lawful means that may lead to unlawful outcomes.


Position of Mālikī and Hanbalī Schools
The:
  • Mālikī;
  • Hanbalī
schools strongly emphasise:
✅ substance;
✅ intention;
✅ prevention of corruption.
Thus:
  • they reject arrangements that:
outwardly appear lawful but effectively produce ribā.


Case Scenario 2 – Artificial Financing Arrangement
A bank repeatedly performs:
  • immediate sale and buy-back transactions.
The customer:
  • never intends to use asset;
  • only seeks cash.
The commodity:
  • merely circulates temporarily.


Critical Analysis
According to Mālikī and Hanbalī reasoning:
❌ the arrangement becomes prohibited.
Why?
Because:
  • the apparent sale merely serves as:
a cover for interest-based financing.
Thus:
  • allowing such arrangements undermines:
the objectives of Sharī‘ah (maqāṣid al-sharī‘ah).


Q5: What was Imam Abū Ḥanīfah’s position on ‘Īnah?
Answer
Abu Hanifa generally emphasised:
outward contractual form.
However:
❌ he still prohibited ‘īnah.


Basis of Prohibition
Abū Ḥanīfah relied upon:
the narration of Ibn ‘Umar regarding ‘īnah.
The hadith states that:
when people engage in ‘īnah transactions and abandon higher religious obligations,
disgrace will prevail over them.


Critical Analysis of the Hadith
Some scholars:
  • authenticated certain narrations;
  • while others considered some versions weak.
Nevertheless:
  • many jurists accepted the hadith’s meaning due to:
    • supporting Sharī‘ah principles;
    • anti-ribā objectives.


Q6: Why did Imam Mālik and Imam Ahmad prohibit ‘Īnah?
Answer
Both:
  • Malik ibn Anas
    and
  • Ahmad ibn Hanbal
prohibited ‘īnah because:
  • it may function as:
a disguised ribā arrangement.


Their Main Principles
They relied upon:
✅ consideration of intention;
✅ blocking harmful means;
✅ preserving Sharī‘ah objectives.


Critical Analysis
According to them:
  • even if legal form appears valid,
    the arrangement becomes prohibited if:
its real objective is unlawful.
Thus:
  • means leading to ribā should also be blocked.


Q7: Is it correct to say Imam al-Shāfi‘ī outrightly endorsed ‘Īnah?
Answer
No.
This is a:
common misconception.


Important Clarification
Al-Shāfi‘ī’s position was:
more nuanced and conditional.
He did NOT ethically endorse:
  • hidden ribā manipulation.
Rather:
  • he distinguished between:
    • legal adjudication;
    • personal accountability before Allah.


Case Scenario 3 – Explicit Repurchase Agreement
A bank contract explicitly states:
“The customer must resell the commodity back to the bank immediately.”


Critical Analysis
According to the explanation in the text:
❌ al-Shāfi‘ī himself would prohibit this.
Why?
Because:
  • the unlawful intention becomes:
openly manifested.
Now:
  • the second sale is directly linked to the first.
Thus:
  • the arrangement loses independent contractual nature.


Important Practical Application
Modern regulators therefore require:
✅ independent contracts;
✅ no binding repurchase promise;
✅ separate execution;
✅ genuine ownership rights.
This is partly influenced by:
  • concerns raised by jurists regarding:
    • disguised ribā;
    • legal stratagems.


Q8: What is the core debate in Bay‘ al-‘Īnah?
Answer
The central debate is:
Should Sharī‘ah focus primarily on:
  • outward legal form,
    or
  • economic substance and underlying intent?


Two Major Approaches
Formalist Approach
(Mainly associated with al-Shāfi‘ī’s legal methodology)
Focus
✅ legal form;
✅ expressed contractual terms.


Substance-Based Approach
(Mainly associated with Mālikī and Hanbalī methodology)
Focus
✅ actual objective;
✅ economic reality;
✅ prevention of ribā circumvention.


Modern Contemporary Trend
Most contemporary Sharī‘ah scholars today emphasise:
✅ substance over mere form.
Therefore:
  • organised ‘īnah structures remain:
highly controversial in modern Islamic finance.


Overall Conclusion
Bay‘ al-‘Īnah remains:
one of the most debated contracts in Islamic commercial law.
The disagreement stems from:
  • different juristic methodologies concerning:
    • intention;
    • legal form;
    • economic substance;
    • legal stratagems;
    • prevention of ribā.
Modern Islamic finance increasingly moves toward:
➡ genuine trade-based financing;
➡ stronger substance-over-form analysis;
➡ stricter Sharī‘ah governance standards.

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Date and Place of Delivery


Q1: Why must the delivery date be specified in salam?


Answer


The delivery date must be clearly known to:


  • eliminate uncertainty;
  • avoid disputes between contracting parties.


This is important because:


  • salam involves future delivery of goods.





Scholars’ Views on Minimum Delivery Period


Muslim jurists differ regarding:


  • the minimum permissible delivery period.


Some opinions include:


  • minimum three days;
  • more than half a day;
  • at least thirty days;
  • determined by agreement of parties.





AAOIFI Requirement on Delivery Date


According to AAOIFI SS No. 10 (Para 3/2/9):


the delivery date must be clearly known and free from ambiguity.





Example


Valid


“Delivery on 1 December 2028.”


Invalid


“Delivery sometime in future.”





Q2: Why must the place of delivery be specified?


Answer


The place of delivery should be specified especially where:


  • transportation;
  • shipping;
  • logistics


are involved.


This clarifies:


  • delivery obligations;
  • transfer of possession;
  • transportation responsibility.





Example


Valid Delivery Clause


“Delivery at Port Klang on 1 December 2028.”





Q3: Can the buyer sell the salam commodity before possession?


Answer


No.


According to AAOIFI SS No. 10 (Para 4/1):


the buyer cannot sell the muslam fīh before taking possession.


This is because:


  • the buyer has not yet obtained possession;
  • selling before possession may create uncertainty.





Example: Invalid Sale Before Possession


A buyer purchases:


  • 100 tonnes wheat under salam.


Before delivery:


  • the buyer sells the exact wheat to another party.


Problem


The buyer has not yet possessed the wheat.


Result


❌ Not permissible.





Example: Sale After Possession


After:


  • wheat is delivered;
  • buyer takes possession,


the buyer may:


  • sell;
  • lease;
  • transfer the wheat.


Result


✅ Permissible after possession.





Important Principle


Salam is permitted as:


an exception to the normal prohibition of selling future goods.


Therefore:


  • strict rules apply regarding:
  • delivery date;
  • delivery place;
  • possession.


These rules minimise:


  • uncertainty (gharar);
  • disputes;
  • injustice.
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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Example of Parallel Salam
Q1: What is parallel salam?
Answer
Parallel salam refers to:
two separate and independent salam contracts involving three parties.
One party acts:
  • as buyer in the first salam contract; and
  • as seller in the second salam contract.
The two contracts:
  • must remain independent;
  • cannot be legally linked;
  • performance of one contract cannot depend on the other.
Parallel salam is commonly used by:
  • Islamic banks;
  • commodity traders;
  • Islamic financial institutions.


Structure of Parallel Salam
First Salam Contract
Between
  • Islamic bank;
  • supplier/farmer.
The bank:
  • purchases future commodities;
  • pays full price upfront.


Second Salam Contract
Between
  • Islamic bank;
  • final buyer/customer.
The bank:
  • undertakes to deliver similar commodities later.


Case Study: Parallel Salam in Wheat Financing
First Salam Contract
Parties
Buyer (
Muslim
)
Islamic Bank
Seller (
Muslam Ilayh
)
Wheat Farmer


Contract Details
  • Commodity: 100 tonnes wheat
  • Salam purchase price: RM400,000
  • Payment: fully paid immediately
  • Delivery date: 1 December 2028
The bank pays:
  • RM400,000 upfront to farmer.
The farmer promises:
  • future delivery of wheat.


Second Salam Contract
Parties
Buyer
Flour Manufacturing Company
Seller
Islamic Bank


Contract Details
  • Commodity: 100 tonnes wheat
  • Salam selling price: RM480,000
  • Payment: fully paid immediately
  • Delivery date: 5 December 2028
The flour company pays:
  • RM480,000 upfront to Islamic bank.
The bank promises:
  • delivery of wheat later.


Profit Calculation
480{,}000 - 400{,}000 = 80{,}000
480{,}000 - 400{,}000 = 80{,}000


Analysis of the Structure
First Contract
The bank acts as:
✅ buyer.


Second Contract
The bank acts as:
✅ seller.


Important Sharī‘ah Rule
The two contracts:
  • must remain independent;
  • cannot be conditional upon one another.
Thus the bank:
  • remains responsible to deliver wheat to flour company,
    even if:
  • farmer fails to deliver wheat to bank.


Why Is Parallel Salam Used?
Parallel salam allows Islamic banks to:
  • provide financing to producers;
  • secure future commodity supply;
  • manage liquidity and commodity trading.
It is commonly used in:
  • agricultural financing;
  • commodity markets;
  • Islamic trade finance.


Example of Invalid Linked Parallel Salam
The Islamic bank says to flour company:
“We will deliver wheat only if the farmer successfully delivers wheat to us.”
Problem
The second salam contract becomes dependent upon:
  • performance of first salam contract.
Result
❌ Invalid because the two salam contracts are no longer independent.


Easy Way to Understand Parallel Salam
Step 1
Bank buys future commodity from producer.


Step 2
Bank separately sells future commodity to another buyer.


Step 3
Bank earns profit from difference between:
  • purchase price;
  • selling price.


Important Principle
Parallel salam is permissible because:
  • each salam contract stands independently;
  • genuine trading risk exists;
  • the arrangement supports real economic activity without ribā.

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Main Applications of Salam in Contemporary Islamic Finance
In contemporary Islamic finance, salam is mainly used for:
  • short-term financing;
  • agricultural financing;
  • commodity financing;
  • microfinancing; and
  • ṣukūk structuring.


1. Short-Term Financing
Explanation
Salam is commonly used for:
short-term liquidity and financing needs.
This is because:
  • payment is made immediately;
  • delivery occurs within a relatively short future period.
It is suitable for:
  • seasonal production;
  • short production cycles;
  • commodity trading.


Example
An Islamic bank enters salam contract with a wheat producer.
Contract Details
  • Salam price paid immediately = RM500,000
  • Wheat delivery after 6 months
Analysis
The producer obtains:
  • immediate short-term working capital.
Result
✅ Salam used as short-term financing.


2. Agricultural Financing
Explanation
Salam is especially suitable for:
  • farmers;
  • agricultural producers.
Farmers often require:
  • funds before harvest season
    for:
  • seeds;
  • fertiliser;
  • labour;
  • irrigation.
Salam enables:
  • upfront financing;
  • future crop delivery.


Example
A rice farmer requires financing before planting season.
Contract Details
  • Commodity: 20 tonnes rice
  • Salam price = RM80,000
  • Delivery after 8 months
The Islamic bank:
  • pays RM80,000 immediately.
The farmer:
  • delivers rice after harvest.
Result
✅ Salam used for agricultural financing.


3. Commodity Financing
Explanation
Salam is widely used in:
commodity trading and financing.
This involves:
  • standardised fungible commodities.
Examples:
  • wheat;
  • sugar;
  • crude palm oil;
  • metals.


Example
An Islamic financial institution purchases:
  • 100 tonnes crude palm oil through salam.
Contract Details
  • Salam price = RM400,000
  • Delivery after 5 months
Analysis
The producer obtains:
  • production financing.
The institution secures:
  • future commodity supply.
Result
✅ Salam used for commodity financing.


4. Microfinancing
Explanation
Salam is highly suitable for:
  • small farmers;
  • rural entrepreneurs;
  • low-income producers.
This is because salam:
  • provides upfront capital;
  • avoids ribā-based borrowing.
It supports:
  • financial inclusion;
  • small-scale economic activity.


Example
A chilli farmer requires:
  • RM15,000 for farming operations.
An Islamic microfinance institution enters salam contract.
Contract Details
  • Commodity: 3 tonnes chillies
  • Salam price = RM15,000
  • Delivery after 4 months
Result
✅ Salam used for Islamic microfinancing.


5. Ṣukūk Structuring
Explanation
Salam can also be used in:
ṣukūk al-salam structures.
Under this arrangement:
  • investors provide funds upfront;
  • future commodities are delivered later.
The structure is commonly used for:
  • commodity-based financing.


Example
A government-linked entity issues:
  • RM100 million ṣukūk al-salam.
Structure
  • Investors pay capital immediately.
  • Commodities delivered after 6 months.
  • Commodities subsequently sold in market.
Result
✅ Salam applied in ṣukūk structuring.


Important Principle
Salam is important in Islamic finance because it:
  • provides working capital;
  • supports real economic activity;
  • assists producers and farmers;
  • promotes Sharī‘ah-compliant financing.
However:
  • strict conditions apply regarding:
    • full upfront payment;
    • commodity specification;
    • delivery certainty;
    • possession.

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Application of Salam in Islamic Finance
Q1: How is salam applied in Islamic finance?
Answer
In contemporary Islamic finance, salam is mainly used for:
  • short-term financing;
  • agricultural financing;
  • commodity financing;
  • microfinancing; and
  • ṣukūk structuring.
Salam is particularly suitable for:
  • producers;
  • farmers;
  • small businesses
who require:
immediate working capital before production or harvest.


Q2: Why is salam suitable for agricultural financing?
Answer
Farmers often require:
  • cash for seeds;
  • fertiliser;
  • labour;
  • operational expenses
before harvest season.
Through salam:
  • the Islamic financial institution (IFI) pays upfront;
  • the farmer delivers crops later.
This arrangement:
  • provides immediate liquidity to farmer;
  • secures future commodity supply for bank.


Benefit to the Farmer
The farmer receives:
✅ immediate financing
✅ working capital
✅ production support
without:
❌ interest-based loans.


Benefit to the Bank
The bank may:
  • negotiate lower purchase prices;
  • secure future commodities;
  • reduce financing risk through advance payment structure.


Case Study 1: Salam Agricultural Financing
An Islamic bank finances a rice farmer using salam.
Contract Details
  • Commodity: 50 tonnes Grade A rice
  • Salam price paid immediately = RM200,000
  • Delivery period = 8 months
The farmer uses funds for:
  • seeds;
  • fertiliser;
  • labour costs.


Market Value at Delivery
At harvest:
  • market price of rice becomes RM240,000.


Bank’s Potential Profit
240,000 - 200,000 = 40,000



Analysis
  • Farmer receives upfront financing.
  • Bank secures rice at lower agreed salam price.
  • Both parties benefit.
Result
✅ Valid salam financing arrangement.


Q3: What is parallel salam in Islamic finance?
Answer
Parallel salam involves:
  • two separate salam contracts.
The Islamic bank acts:
  • as buyer in first salam;
  • as seller in second salam.
This structure allows the bank to:
  • manage delivery and market risks;
  • lock in future sales.


Case Study 2: Parallel Salam Financing
First Salam Contract
Between
  • Islamic bank;
  • wheat farmer.
Contract Details
  • 100 tonnes wheat
  • Salam purchase price = RM400,000
The bank pays:
  • RM400,000 immediately.


Second Salam Contract
Between
  • Islamic bank;
  • flour manufacturing company.
Contract Details
  • 100 tonnes wheat
  • Salam selling price = RM480,000
The flour company pays:
  • immediately.


Bank’s Profit
480{,}000 - 400{,}000 = 80{,}000
480{,}000 - 400{,}000 = 80{,}000


Analysis
  • Two contracts remain independent.
  • Bank receives payment upfront from second buyer.
  • Bank reduces default and liquidity risk.
Result
✅ Valid parallel salam structure.


Q4: How does salam support microfinancing?
Answer
Salam is highly suitable for:
  • small farmers;
  • rural producers;
  • low-income entrepreneurs.
This is because:
  • they often lack access to conventional financing;
  • salam provides immediate capital without ribā.


Case Study 3: Microfinancing Through Salam
A small chilli farmer requires:
  • RM20,000 for planting season.
An Islamic microfinance institution enters salam contract.
Contract Details
  • Commodity: 5 tonnes chillies
  • Salam price = RM20,000
  • Delivery period = 5 months
Analysis
The salam contract:
  • supports small-scale agriculture;
  • provides Shariah-compliant financing.
Result
✅ Effective Islamic microfinance solution.


Q5: How is salam used in ṣukūk structures?
Answer
Salam can also be used in:
ṣukūk al-salam.
Under this structure:
  • investors finance future production of commodities;
  • commodities are delivered later according to salam terms.


Example: Sukuk al-Salam in Bahrain
The:
91-day Sukuk al-Salam issued by the Central Bank of Bahrain
is a well-known example of salam-based ṣukūk.


Q6: Why is salam the least preferred ṣukūk structure?
Answer
Salam-based ṣukūk face several limitations.


1. Trading Restrictions
The salam commodity:
  • often represents debt or future receivables before delivery.
Islamic law generally restricts:
  • trading debt instruments at profit.
Therefore:
  • salam ṣukūk are less tradable.


2. Strict Delivery Requirements
Salam requires:
  • standardised commodities;
  • fixed future delivery dates.
This reduces:
  • flexibility in structuring investments.


Case Study 4: Salam Ṣukūk Structure
An Islamic institution issues:
  • RM100 million salam ṣukūk
    to finance future wheat production.
Structure
  • Investors provide capital upfront.
  • Wheat delivered after 6 months.
  • Wheat sold in market upon delivery.
Analysis
The ṣukūk:
  • finances commodity production;
  • complies with salam principles.
However:
  • tradability restrictions reduce market flexibility.
Result
✅ Permissible but less commonly used.


Important Principle
Salam plays an important role in Islamic finance because it:
  • supports real economic activity;
  • assists farmers and producers;
  • provides Shariah-compliant working capital financing.
However:
  • strict rules apply regarding:
    • upfront payment;
    • commodity specification;
    • delivery;
    • tradability.

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Commodity (Muslam Fīh
) in Salam Contract

Q1: What is muslam fīh
in a salam contract?
Answer
Muslam fīh refers to:
the commodity or goods to be delivered in the future under a salam contract.
Since salam involves:
  • deferred delivery of goods,
the commodity must be:
  • clearly specified;
  • standardised;
  • deliverable;
  • recognised by the Sharī‘ah.


Q2: What are the conditions of the salam commodity?
Answer
The salam commodity must fulfil several conditions.


1. Commodity Must Be Valuable and Sharī‘ah-Compliant
The commodity must:
  • have commercial value;
  • be lawful according to Sharī‘ah.
Examples
✅ Rice
✅ Wheat
✅ Palm oil
✅ Sugar
Invalid Examples
❌ Wine
❌ Pork


2. Commodity Must Be Clearly Specifiable
The commodity’s:
  • type;
  • quality;
  • quantity;
  • grade;
  • specifications
must be clearly known.
This avoids:
  • uncertainty (gharar);
  • disputes.


Example
Valid Specification
  • 10,000 kg Grade A Thai rice.
Invalid Specification
  • “some good rice.”
The second description is too vague.


3. Quantity Must Be Precisely Determined
The quantity must follow market custom.
If Sold by Weight
Weight must be specified.
Example
  • 5,000 kg wheat.


If Sold by Volume
Exact volume must be specified.
Example
  • 2,000 litres palm oil.


If Sold by Count
Exact quantity must be specified.
Example
  • 1,000 identical bricks.


Important Rule
What is normally sold:
  • by weight → must remain by weight;
  • by volume → must remain by volume.


4. Commodity Must Be Generally Available in Market
The commodity should normally:
  • exist in market supply at delivery time.
This reduces:
  • risk of non-delivery.


Example
Valid
Standard market wheat.
Invalid
Rare collectible item unavailable in market.


5. Commodity Cannot Be a Specific Identified Asset
Salam must involve:
a liability upon the seller,
not:
a specific identified asset.


Example
Invalid Salam
“I sell you THIS specific car after 6 months.”
Problem
The contract concerns:
  • a specific identified asset.
Result
❌ Invalid salam contract.


AAOIFI Requirements Regarding Muslam Fīh
1. Salam Cannot Be for Specific Asset
(Para 3/2/3)
Example
❌ “This exact vehicle.”


2. Currency, Gold, and Silver Restrictions
(Para 3/2/4)
If salam capital is:
  • currency;
  • gold;
  • silver,
then the salam commodity cannot also be:
  • currency;
  • gold;
  • silver.
This avoids:
  • ribā.


Example
A buyer pays:
  • gold now
    for:
  • gold later.
Result
❌ Invalid salam.


3. Commodity Must Be Precisely Specifiable
(Para 3/2/5)
The seller must be capable of delivering:
  • according to exact specifications.


4. Commodity Must Be Clearly Known
(Para 3/2/6)
Specifications must eliminate:
  • ambiguity;
  • uncertainty.


Case Study: Valid Salam Commodity
A buyer enters salam contract for:
  • 50 tonnes Grade A wheat.
Contract Details
  • Weight clearly specified.
  • Quality clearly specified.
  • Delivery date fixed.
Analysis
The commodity is:
  • fungible;
  • measurable;
  • market available.
Result
✅ Valid salam commodity.

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Types of Salam
Q1: What are the types of salam contracts?
Answer
There are two main types of salam contracts:
  1. Ordinary Salam
  2. Parallel Salam
Both involve:
  • advance payment;
  • future delivery of commodities.
However, they differ in:
  • number of parties involved;
  • contractual structure.


1. Ordinary Salam
Definition
Ordinary salam involves:
only two contracting parties.
The parties are:
  • the buyer (muslim); and
  • the seller (muslam ilayh).
Under this arrangement:
  • the buyer pays the full purchase price upfront;
  • the seller delivers the specified commodities at a future date.


Main Features of Ordinary Salam
  • Two parties only.
  • Single salam contract.
  • Full advance payment compulsory.
  • Commodity delivered later.


Case Study 1: Ordinary Salam
A rice farmer requires financing before harvest season.
A trader enters into salam contract with the farmer.
Contract Details
  • Commodity: 20,000 kg Grade A rice
  • Salam price: RM120,000
  • Payment: fully paid immediately
  • Delivery date: 1 December 2028


Structure
Buyer (
Muslim
)
Trader
Seller (
Muslam Ilayh
)
Farmer


Analysis
  • Only two parties involved.
  • Buyer prepays full price.
  • Farmer delivers rice later.
Result
✅ Valid ordinary salam contract.


2. Parallel Salam
Definition
Parallel salam consists of:
two separate and independent salam contracts involving three parties.
One party acts:
  • as buyer in one salam contract; and
  • as seller in another salam contract.
This structure is commonly used in:
  • Islamic banking;
  • commodity financing.


Important Rule in Parallel Salam
The two contracts:
  • must remain independent;
  • cannot be legally linked;
  • performance of one contract cannot depend on the other.
This rule is similar to:
parallel istisnā‘.


Main Features of Parallel Salam
  • Three parties involved.
  • Two separate salam contracts.
  • Contracts must remain independent.
  • Common in Islamic finance institutions.


Case Study 2: Normal Parallel Salam
An Islamic bank finances a wheat producer.


First Salam Contract
Between
  • Islamic bank;
  • wheat farmer.
Contract Terms
  • Commodity: 100 tonnes wheat
  • Salam price paid by bank: RM400,000
  • Delivery period: 6 months
The bank prepays the farmer.


Second Salam Contract
Between
  • Islamic bank;
  • food processing company.
Contract Terms
  • Commodity: 100 tonnes wheat
  • Salam selling price: RM480,000
  • Delivery period: 6 months
The bank undertakes to supply wheat to processing company.


Profit Calculation
480{,}000 - 400{,}000 = 80{,}000
480{,}000 - 400{,}000 = 80{,}000


Analysis
  • Two independent salam contracts.
  • Bank acts:
    • as buyer in first contract;
    • as seller in second contract.
  • Contracts are not legally contingent on each other.
Result
✅ Valid parallel salam.


Q2: Why must the two contracts in parallel salam remain independent?
Answer
If the contracts become linked:
  • the arrangement may create excessive uncertainty (gharar);
  • or resemble prohibited resale before possession.
Therefore:
  • each contract must stand independently;
  • rights and obligations in one contract cannot automatically depend on the other.


Case Study 3: Invalid Linked Parallel Salam
An Islamic bank tells a wheat buyer:
“We will only deliver wheat to you if our farmer successfully delivers wheat to us.”
Problem
The second contract becomes dependent upon:
  • performance of first contract.
Analysis
This violates:
  • independence requirement of parallel salam.
Result
❌ Invalid linked structure.


Difference Between Ordinary Salam and Parallel Salam
Ordinary Salam
Number of Contracts
One contract.
Number of Parties
Two parties.
Structure
Direct buyer-seller relationship.
Common Use
Farmer financing.


Parallel Salam
Number of Contracts
Two separate contracts.
Number of Parties
Three parties.
Structure
Intermediary enters:
  • one salam as buyer;
  • another salam as seller.
Common Use
Islamic banking and commodity financing.


Easy Way to Remember
Ordinary Salam
➡️ “One buyer and one seller.”


Parallel Salam
➡️ “Back-to-back salam contracts with independent obligations.”

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Basic Rules and Conditions of Salam
1. Offer and Acceptance in Salam Contract
Explanation
A salam contract may be concluded using:
  • the word salam;
  • the word salaf;
  • the word sale; or
  • any wording that clearly indicates:
a sale of specified commodities for future delivery in exchange for immediate payment.
What is important in Islamic contracts is:
  • the meaning and intention of the contracting parties,
    not merely:
  • the exact terminology used.
Therefore, any wording that clearly reflects:
  • advance payment; and
  • deferred delivery of specified goods
may validly establish a salam contract.


Key Elements Reflected in the Contract Wording
The wording must indicate:
  1. immediate payment of the price;
  2. future delivery of goods;
  3. clearly specified commodities.


Example 1: Using the Word “Salam”
A trader says:
“I enter into a salam contract to purchase 5,000 kg of rice for RM40,000 to be delivered after 6 months.”
The farmer accepts.
Analysis
  • The word salam is expressly used.
  • Future delivery and upfront payment clearly stated.
Result
✅ Valid salam contract.


Example 2: Using the Word “Salaf”
A buyer says:
“I make a salaf agreement with you for delivery of 100 tonnes of wheat after harvest in exchange for RM300,000 paid today.”
Analysis
  • The term salaf historically refers to salam.
  • Immediate payment and deferred delivery specified.
Result
✅ Valid salam contract.


Example 3: Using Ordinary Sale Wording
An Islamic bank says:
“We purchase 200 tonnes of crude palm oil from you for RM800,000 paid immediately, with delivery after 8 months.”
Analysis
Although the word “salam” is not used:
  • the contract clearly indicates:
    • immediate payment;
    • deferred commodity delivery.
Result
✅ Valid salam contract.


Example 4: Invalid Unclear Arrangement
A buyer says:
“I may pay you later if I agree, and you can supply goods whenever available.”
Analysis
The statement lacks:
  • certainty of payment;
  • certainty of delivery;
  • precise contractual obligation.
This creates:
  • uncertainty (gharar);
  • ambiguity.
Result
❌ Invalid salam contract.


Important Principle
In Islamic commercial law:
contracts are judged by their substance and meaning,
not merely by labels or terminology.
Thus:
  • any wording clearly establishing:
    • advance payment;
    • future delivery;
    • specified commodities
may constitute a valid salam contract.


Summary Notes
Salam Contract May Use:
✅ Salam
✅ Salaf
✅ Sale
✅ Any wording clearly indicating deferred commodity delivery for upfront payment.


Essential Meaning That Must Exist
The contract must clearly show:
  • full advance payment;
  • future delivery;
  • specified commodity;
  • agreed delivery date.

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Islamic Contract – Bay’ al-Salam: Price (Ra’s al-Māl) in Salam Contract 
Q1: What is ra’s al-māl
in a salam contract?
Answer
Ra’s al-māl refers to:
the purchase price or capital paid by the buyer in a salam contract.
In salam:
  • the buyer pays the price immediately;
  • while delivery of the commodities is deferred to a future date.


Q2: Why must the salam price be fully paid immediately?
Answer
The salam price must be:
  • clearly determined; and
  • fully paid at the contract session.
This rule exists to avoid:
exchange of one deferred countervalue for another deferred countervalue,
which is known as:
bay‘ al-kāli’ bi al-kāli’
(sale of debt for debt).


What Is Bay‘ al-Kāli’ bi al-Kāli’?
Explanation
It occurs when:
  • both payment and delivery are deferred.
This creates excessive uncertainty and resembles prohibited debt trading.


Example of Invalid Bay‘ al-Kāli’ bi al-Kāli’
A buyer says:
“I will pay RM50,000 after 6 months for rice to be delivered after 6 months.”
Problem
  • payment delayed;
  • delivery also delayed.
Both obligations are deferred.
Result
❌ Invalid because it resembles sale of debt for debt.


Q3: Why must the seller receive full payment before leaving the contract session?
Answer
The seller must take possession of the salam capital immediately because:
  • salam was permitted to provide immediate liquidity to producers and farmers.
If payment is delayed:
  • the purpose of salam is defeated.
Immediate payment also:
  • prevents uncertainty;
  • distinguishes salam from prohibited debt exchanges.


Q4: Did any jurists allow slight delay in payment?
Answer
Yes.
The Māliki jurists allowed:
  • minor delay of a few days,
provided:
  • the delay is not stipulated as a contractual condition.
Similarly, AAOIFI allows:
  • payment delay of:
    • two or three days at most
      as an exception.




Q5: Can an existing debt be used as salam capital?
Answer
No.
According to AAOIFI SS No. 10 (Para 3/1/4):
an existing debt cannot be recognised as the capital of salam.
This means:
  • salam capital must involve actual payment;
  • not merely set-off or conversion of existing debt.


Example of Invalid Debt as Salam Capital
A farmer owes trader:
  • RM30,000 from previous transaction.
The trader says:
“I will treat that debt as salam payment for future wheat delivery.”
Problem
No actual new payment occurs.
Result
❌ Invalid salam capital according to AAOIFI.


Q6: Why are ribawi items problematic in salam pricing?
Answer
If the salam price itself is:
a ribawi item,
certain exchanges become prohibited to avoid:
  • ribā al-faḍl; and
  • ribā al-nasī’ah.


What Is Ribā al-Faḍl?
Occurs when:
  • ribawi items of same genus are exchanged unequally.
Example:
  • 1 tonne wheat exchanged for 1.5 tonnes wheat.


What Is Ribā al-Nasī’ah?
Occurs when:
  • one ribawi item is delivered immediately;
  • the other is deferred.
This naturally occurs in salam because:
  • commodity delivery is deferred.


Example of Invalid Ribawi Salam
A buyer pays:
  • wheat today
    for:
  • barley delivered later through salam.
Problem
Both:
  • wheat;
  • barley
are ribawi food commodities.
The exchange creates risk of:
  • ribā al-nasī’ah.
Result
❌ Not permissible through salam.


Q7: What are the AAOIFI requirements regarding salam capital?
Answer
According to AAOIFI SS No. 10:
1. Salam Capital Must Be Clearly Known
(Para 3/2/1)
The price must be clearly determined to:
  • remove uncertainty;
  • avoid disputes.


2. Salam Capital Must Be Paid Immediately
(Para 3/1/3)
Payment should occur:
  • at the contract session.
Exception:
  • delay of two or three days may be tolerated.


3. Debt Cannot Be Salam Capital
(Para 3/1/4)
Existing debts cannot be converted into salam payment.


Case Study 1: Valid Salam Payment
A trader enters salam contract with rice farmer.
Contract Details
  • Commodity: 10,000 kg rice
  • Salam price: RM80,000
  • Delivery date: 1 December 2028
The trader:
  • pays RM80,000 immediately during contract session.
Analysis
  • Full payment immediate.
  • Delivery deferred.
  • Valid salam structure.
Result
✅ Valid salam contract.


Case Study 2: Invalid Deferred Salam Price
A buyer agrees:
  • to pay RM100,000 after 4 months
    for:
  • palm oil delivered after 6 months.
Analysis
Both:
  • payment;
  • delivery
are deferred.
This creates:
bay‘ al-kāli’ bi al-kāli’.
Result
❌ Invalid salam contract.


Case Study 3: Invalid Debt Conversion
A supplier owes customer:
  • RM50,000.
Customer proposes:
“Use the debt as salam payment for future wheat delivery.”
Analysis
  • No actual payment occurs.
  • Salam capital not genuinely transferred.
Result
❌ Invalid according to AAOIFI.


Important Principle
Salam is permitted as:
an exception to normal prohibition of selling future goods.
Therefore:
  • strict rules apply to reduce uncertainty and ribā.
The most important rule is:
full upfront payment of the salam capital.

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