Never miss a story — sign up for PLANSPONSOR newsletters to keep up on the latest retirement plan benefits news.
Products October 29, 2007
S&P Adds Three More Shariah-Compliant Indexes
October 29, 2007 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Standard &
Poor's has added three more Shariah-compliant indexes, the
S&P Global Infrastructure Shariah, the S&P Global
Healthcare Shariah and the S&P/IFCI Large-MidCap
Shariah.
Reported by Adrien Martin
According to a press release, the three new indexes include:
- The S&P Global Infrastructure Shariah – meant to provide liquid and tradable exposure to 20 companies from around the world that represent the listed infrastructure universe while adopting explicit selection criteria defined by Islamic law. The group of investments is drawn from the S&P Global Infrastructure Index and has three distinct infrastructure clusters: energy, transportation, and utilities.
- The S&P Global Healthcare Shariah – comprised of companies in the S&P 500, S&P Europe 350, and S&P Japan 500 Shariah-compliant indexes sit in the GICS Health Care sector – which included 72 companies as of the end of September.
- The S&P/IFCI Large-MidCap Shariah – currently includes stocks from the following emerging market countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Egypt, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Turkey. S&P also added five country indexes, including Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia, which are part of the S&P/IFCG emerging market series.
All S&P Shariah indexes are screened by Ratings
Intelligence Partners, a Kuwait-based consulting company
specializing in the Islamic investment market.
For more information, visit
www.standardandpoors.com/indices
.
You Might Also Like:
Real Asset Allocations in Target-Date Funds
Real asset allocations are important for select plan participants.
PSNC 2022: ESG Definitions and New Developments
What is environmental, social and governance investing? And exactly how new—or not—is it?
Proposed SEC Regulations Address Advisers’ ESG Practices, Fund Names
One proposal put forward Wednesday by the Securities and Exchange Commission would restrict the way investment managers use ESG nomenclature...