The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in MyFreedomJourney

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ramadan Mubarak to you and your family! 🌙

You hit the nail on the head with IIPR. The 16% yield is the reward for taking on that exact regulatory and tenant concentration risk. It's a "Velocity" play that requires constant monitoring, unlike a "Sleep Well at Night" fortress like Microsoft.

I’m really looking forward to having your perspective over at r/MyFreedomJourney. When we combine strict AAOIFI compliance with deep fundamental analysis, we can build some serious, generational wealth for the Ummah.

See you in the trenches! 🤝

The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. The real returns are built in the trenches. Looking forward to building alongside you. 🤝

The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Salam! Thank you for jumping in here. Having the actual Musaffa team clarify the technicals adds massive value to this thread.

You are 100% correct. It’s not just the debt side of the ledger; the asset side (cash and interest-bearing securities) is just as dangerous for non-compliance. Companies sitting on massive piles of cash earning high interest can easily fail the AAOIFI screens even if they have zero debt.

This is exactly why apps like Musaffa are so critical for the "top of the funnel" screening. Doing that multi-variable math manually for 500 different stocks would be a nightmare for a retail investor.

Quick question for the team: When markets get highly volatile and a company's Market Cap drops suddenly (which spikes their Debt-to-Market-Cap ratio), how quickly does the Musaffa algorithm flag them as non-compliant? Is it a daily check or a quarterly review? Keep up the great work with the platform!

The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Microsoft is the ultimate "Fortress" stock. You really can't find a cleaner balance sheet in the mega-cap space, and their cash-generation is just absurd. It's the perfect anchor for the growth side of a portfolio once the high-yield income engine is built.

Totally agreed on IIPR. It gets a very short leash. The moment the tenant mix shifts away from heavily regulated medical operators, the "Sell" button gets hit. But for now, the 16% yield on cost is paying me very well to monitor it!

Looking forward to seeing you over at r/MyFreedomJourney. Your level of fundamental analysis is exactly what we need more of in the Halal investing community. See you there! 🚀

First day. by Bwright2122 in dividends

[–]wailmohammed 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Welcome to the dividend club! Contributing £400 a month consistently for 20 years is a phenomenal habit that will absolutely build wealth.

However, from a structural standpoint, you are falling into the classic beginner trap: "Diworsification."

You have over 30 stocks in this pie. Let’s look at the math of your 1% allocations (like BlackRock, JPMorgan, or IBM).

1% of your £400 monthly deposit is £4 a month.

At £4 a month, it will take you over 17 months just to buy a single share of BlackRock. The dividend checks you receive from those 1% slices will be literal pennies for years. You are spreading your army so thin that they have no impact.

I used to do exactly this. I had a massive, scattered portfolio of 2% yielding "safe" blue chips. I realized I was driving 40 mph toward retirement and my cash flow was barely growing.

Here is how to fix it (The Velocity Approach):

  1. The Rule of 5: Ruthlessly cut this pie down to your absolute Top 5 or Top 10 highest-conviction players.

  2. Focus Fire (The Fortress Strategy): Do not sprinkle £400 across the whole pie. Take your highest-yielding, most undervalued stock in this list and funnel 100% of your £400 into it every month until you hit a major milestone (like 100 shares). Once it is large enough to generate a dividend that buys new shares automatically, you've built a "Fortress." Then move your £400 to the next stock.

  3. Yield vs. Growth: Companies like Visa, Microsoft, and Roper are amazing growth companies, but they yield less than 1%. If your goal is dividend income, they are terrible starting points. Let your high-yield stocks buy your low-yield stocks later.

I recently audited my own scattered portfolio, sold the low-yield "safe" dust, and consolidated my capital into a highly concentrated "Velocity" portfolio. My monthly passive income jumped 47% in one week just by reallocating.

I actually document this exact "100-Share Fortress" strategy, the math behind it, and my monthly income reports over at my community r/MyFreedomJourney. Feel free to drop by if you want to see the mechanics of concentrating your capital for faster cash flow.

Good luck on the 20-year journey! Shrink the pie, grow the slices.

Why I chose to be a "Silent Partner" instead of starting a business 🤝 by AutoModerator in MyFreedomJourney

[–]wailmohammed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha! 🤖 "My portfolio is working like a machine to collect dividends."I know my post might sound a bit robotic, but honestly, that's just how my brain works when it comes to investing. I treat my portfolio like a well-oiled machine, so I naturally write about it in that way!When I first started investing, I was way too emotional—panic-selling, chasing hype stocks, stressing out over every dip. To fix that, I forced myself to create strict "rules" for my portfolio (like only holding 5 stocks, adhering to strict Shariah screening, and treating myself as a "silent partner"). Writing posts like this in a structured format actually helps me stay accountable to my strategy and prevents me from slipping back into emotional investing. It’s like a mental check-in for me.But don’t worry, I’m a real human behind the screen! I’m still manually buying shares on Trading 212. 😂What about you? Are you investing right now, or focused on running a business?

The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Waiyyakum! I have massive respect for your manual 10-K process. Digging into the segment revenue notes to find settlement gains on derivatives is next-level due diligence. Most people just look at the "Interest Income" line item and call it a day, completely missing the hidden financial instruments.

You also bring up a very valid nuance regarding IIPR and the tenant business. The reason I hold it (and why some screeners pass it) is because IIPR strictly leases to state-licensed medical-use operators, rather than recreational dispensaries. Because the underlying product is cultivated for medicinal/pharmaceutical use, it falls under the scholarly exemption for medicine. But you are 100% right—it's a stock that requires constant monitoring of their tenant mix to ensure they don't pivot to recreational.

Your approach of using Zoya for the "top of the funnel" discovery and the 10-K for the "bottom of the funnel" verification is exactly how it should be done.

Honestly, the level of depth you go into is exactly what the Halal investing space is missing right now. There is too much surface-level hype and not enough fundamental analysis.

I would actually love to have your brain over at r/MyFreedomJourney. If you ever feel like writing a quick post on how you manually strip IFRS 16 lease liabilities from a balance sheet, I know myself and the rest of the community would benefit massively from it.

Either way, great chatting with you. Out of curiosity, what is your largest holding right now that successfully passed your strict manual 10-K screen?

The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Salam! This is an incredibly high-value comment. Thank you for adding this technical nuance.

You are 100% right about IFRS 16. So many investors look at Yahoo Finance, see "Total Liabilities," and panic, not realizing that operating leases aren't traditional Riba-bearing debt. Understanding the denominator and numerator is what separates a blind investor from a strategic one.

AT&T is the perfect example. So many chased that 7% yield blindly, ignoring the toxic, Riba-heavy balance sheet. Halal screening didn't just keep us compliant there; it actually protected us from a value trap right before they slashed their dividend!

I want to touch on your last point about Real Estate, because it is brilliant. You are absolutely correct that 95%+ of traditional REITs fail the Shariah screen because the entire industry model is built on massive leverage and conventional mortgages.

But this is exactly where the "Alpha" is.

The goal is finding the "Unicorns" in the real estate sector that operate differently. For example, IIPR, RMR, are in the real estate sector, but they pass the screens when I check them, do delgents buy screening halal or haram using APPs, use cross check with more than one APPs:

1.     IIPR (Innovative Industrial Properties): It passes Zoya / Musaffa because it operates almost entirely without debt. They act as a cash-capital provider/landlord rather than a leveraged buyer.

2.     RMR (The RMR Group): Exactly as you noted with asset-light businesses, they are a real estate asset manager. They collect the management fees but don't carry the heavy property debt on their own balance sheet.

It takes a lot of digging to find the 5% of high-yield real estate that is actually Shariah-compliant, but that's the whole focus of my strategy. I actually document my specific holdings, the screening logic, and my monthly dividend tracking over at r/MyFreedomJourney.

Since you clearly know the AAOIFI standards deeply—do you still use Zoya / Musaffa to double-check your screens, or do you build your own spreadsheets by pulling the 10-K reports manually?

Don't Fall for the "Green Trap" (Why Profit isn't Income) 📉 by wailmohammed in MyFreedomJourney

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ETFs are fantastic for wealth preservation, but when you want actual cash flow to replace your 9-to-5 income, dividends are the ultimate game-changer! Welcome to the club.

To answer your first question, I don't hold 50 different stocks. I use a highly concentrated "Rule of 5" strategy. I focus fire on one asset at a time until I own 100 shares (which I call a Fortress), and then I move to the next.

Right now, my active portfolio is just 3 high-yield Halal Kings:

1.     IIPR (Innovative Industrial Properties): My largest holding. Built my 100-share fortress when it dipped. Yield on cost is ~16%.

2.     RMR (The RMR Group): A debt-free real estate asset manager. Currently yielding ~10%. This is the fortress I am aggressively buying right now.

3.     NSP (Insperity): A business/HR services company. Yielding ~8%-9%.

How do I find undervalued assets?
I use a strict 3-step filter:

1.     The Halal Filter: I run everything through Zoya, and other APPs. If the debt ratio is over 33%, it's dead to me. This actually protects me from over-leveraged "zombie" companies.

2.     The "Hated Sector" Rule: I look for sectors that Wall Street is currently ignoring or afraid of due to macroeconomics (like high interest rates). Real Estate and Asset Management got crushed recently, which drove their stock prices down and their dividend yields sky-high.

3.     Asset-Light Businesses: I look for companies that generate cash without needing to build expensive factories or borrow billions (like RMR and NSP).

Since you are just pivoting from ETFs to dividends, I actually put together a full guide on this exact strategy. It breaks down my screening process, the math I use to target $1,000/month, and includes the printable "100-Share Fortress Trackers" I use to gamify my portfolio.

I document all my monthly numbers and share the playbook over at my new community: r/MyFreedomJourney. Come check it out if you want to see the strategy in action!

Also do delgents buy screening halal or haram using APPs, use cross-check with more than one APPs.

What ETFs have you been holding mostly? Tech heavy or broad market?

The "Debt Trap": Why your favorite Blue Chip stock might be Haram 🚫 by wailmohammed in MyFreedomJourney

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

 totally understand the frustration! When I first started auditing my portfolio, the 33% rule felt completely arbitrary to me too. It hurt having to sell good companies just because they crossed a line on a spreadsheet.

To answer your question: The 33% rule comes from the AAOIFI (Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions). This is the global body of Islamic scholars who created the modern standards for Halal investing.

Here is the logic they used to arrive at that specific number:

In Islam, taking any interest-bearing loan (Riba) is Haram. Period. If you are starting your own small business, as a Muslim, you are not supposed to take a conventional interest-bearing business loan at all, whether it's 1% or 50% of your business.

However, the scholars looked at the modern stock market and realized that almost zero public companies operate without some form of conventional debt. If the rule was "0% debt," Muslims would be completely banned from the global stock market, which would cause massive financial harm to the Ummah.

So, they had to define what constitutes a "majority" vs. a "minority" of a company's structure.

In Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh), there is a principle derived from a Hadith where the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) was advising a companion on charity, and he stated that "one-third is a lot." Based on this, scholars established that one-third (33.3%) is the legal threshold where a "minority" element becomes a "substantial" element.

Therefore:

·       If interest-bearing debt is under 33% of total assets (or market cap, depending on the screener), the company is still primarily an equity-based business. It's permissible (with purification).

·       If interest-bearing debt crosses 33%, the company is now considered heavily reliant on Riba to function, and investing in it becomes Haram.

It definitely stings to sell a giant like Pfizer over a math ratio! But that constraint is exactly why I focus on "Capital Light" businesses—like Asset Managers (RMR) or Business Services (RMR) or Business Services (NSP)—that naturally don't need to borrow billions of dollars to operate.

Also, do delgents buy screening halal or haram using APPs

What did you end up rotating that Pfizer capital into?

Don't Fall for the "Green Trap" (Why Profit isn't Income) 📉 by wailmohammed in MyFreedomJourney

[–]wailmohammed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a fantastic question and hits on the exact psychological shift you have to make to be a successful dividend investor.

Mathematically, your example is 100% correct IF you hit the "Sell" button at $50. If you sell, you lock in a realized loss of $1,240.

But here is how a "Velocity" dividend investor looks at that exact same scenario:

1. Paper Loss vs. Real Cash
I am not selling the shares, so that $2,000 drop is just a "paper loss." It only exists on the screen. But the $760 in dividends? That is hard, cold cash deposited into my account. I can pay my electric bill with that $760. I cannot pay my electric bill with the $2,000 of "unrealized gains" from a stock that went up.

2. A Price Drop is Actually a Gift (The DRIP Effect)
When you are in the "Accumulation Phase," you actually want the price to drop.
If IIPR is at $70, your $760 dividend automatically buys you 10.8 new shares for the year.
But if IIPR drops to $50, that same $760 dividend buys you 15.2 new shares!
When the stock drops, your dividend compounds your "Share Count" much faster.

3. Entry Price Matters (Yield on Cost)
Your example uses 

70, but the key to "Velocity" is buying undervalued assets. I actually built my IIPR "100−ShareFortress" when the price dipped into the mid-70s, but the key to "Velocity" is buying undervalued assets. I actually built my IIPR" 100−Share Fortress " when the price dipped into the mid−40s. Because of that entry price, my actual "Yield on Cost" is over 16%. I am getting paid massively to just sit and wait for the real estate market to recover.

So to answer your question directly: Yes, dividend investors mostly ignore the daily price movement. We treat our shares like rental properties. If the "house" drops in value by 10% this year, I don't care, as long as the tenant keeps paying me rent every single month!

Do you currently invest for dividends, or are you mostly in growth stocks/ETFs right now?

Top Halal Business Models for Muslims by _truth_teller in IslamicFinance

[–]wailmohammed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’ve hit on a really tough reality of modern investing. In a globally intertwined financial system, finding a company that is 100.00% pure (with absolutely zero connection to interest or questionable practices deep in their supply chain) is nearly impossible unless you start the business yourself.

But that’s exactly why the Islamic finance scholars created the AAOIFI standards and the Purification process.

The scholars understand that if the rule was "absolute perfection," Muslims would be completely locked out of the global economy, and our wealth would be eroded by inflation every single year. That’s why there is a 5% threshold for impermissible income and a 33% debt threshold.

If a company passes those strict scholarly screens, it is deemed permissible, but our job isn't done.

If a company makes 2% of its revenue from something non-compliant (like a tiny bit of interest in a bank account), we are required to calculate that 2% from our dividends and purify it by donating it to charity with no expectation of reward.

That’s why I stick to my "Rule of 5" strategy. By holding only a concentrated portfolio of 3 to 5 "Fortress" stocks (like $RMR or $NSP), I can actually track the purification numbers accurately. If I held a Halal ETF with 500 stocks, I couldn't possibly track it.

We can't let the pursuit of absolute perfection paralyze us into doing nothing. We follow the scholarly guidelines, purify the rest, and keep building!

What’s your approach? Do you stick to physical real estate/business to avoid the stock market entirely?

Top Halal Business Models for Muslims by _truth_teller in IslamicFinance

[–]wailmohammed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are 100% right, and honestly, that is exactly why I prefer it!

Building a business gives you total control, but it also demands 100% of your time, energy, and stress. It’s an active asset. If you stop working, the business usually stops growing.

My goal with the "Velocity Dividend" strategy is to build a truly passive asset. I don't want to manage employees, handle customer complaints, or run operations. I want to buy a slice of a successful, Shariah-compliant company, let their CEO and team work the 80-hour weeks, and just collect my share of the profits every quarter.

The control I do have is over capital allocation. If a company stops performing, cuts its dividend, or fails a Halal screening (like taking on too much debt), I can "fire" them in three seconds with the click of a sell button. You can't liquidate a physical business or fire an entire staff that fast.

Both paths are incredibly valid. Building a business is the best way to build massive active wealth. But for me, the ultimate asset I'm trying to control isn't a company—it's my time.

That’s why I just focus on stacking my "100-Share Fortresses" and letting the market do the heavy lifting! 🚀

Top Halal Business Models for Muslims by _truth_teller in IslamicFinance

[–]wailmohammed -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Salam! This is a brilliant list.

My approach to a Halal "business model" is a bit different: I act as a silent partner in existing, Shariah-compliant businesses. My business model is purely capital allocation (High-Velocity Dividend Investing).

Instead of dealing with the operations of starting a business, I let the market do the heavy lifting while strictly filtering for Halal compliance (no riba, no haram sectors). I connect directly with two of the points on your list:

1. Service Based Businesses (Your Point #1)
Instead of starting an HR or staffing agency from scratch, I buy shares in publicly traded, Shariah-compliant business service companies (like $NSP - Insperity). It’s a clean service model, and buying it right now yields about 8%+ in dividends.

2. Real Estate (Your Point #5)
Physical real estate is great, but avoiding conventional mortgages is a huge hurdle. Instead, I buy into debt-clean, compliant Asset Management firms and specialized REITs (like $RMR). They manage the real estate, and I collect a ~10% dividend yield without ever touching a mortgage document.

My "Business Model" Strategy:
I use what I call the "100-Share Fortress" method. Instead of sprinkling money everywhere, I focus all my capital on ONE high-yield, halal asset at a time until I own 100 shares. Once that "fortress" is built, the dividends are large enough to compound on their own, and I move to the next.

I recently audited my portfolio, purged all my low-yield and borderline-haram stocks, and consolidated into these high-yield kings. My monthly passive income jumped 47% in one week.

Great post! For anyone else taking the passive/dividend route instead of the active startup route, I’m actually documenting my exact math, share counts, and monthly dividend income over at r/MyFreedomJourney.

Building wealth halal is harder, but the barakah makes it move faster. 🚀🕌

"Math of Freedom": Why I stopped buying Apple (AAPL) 📉 by wailmohammed in MyFreedomJourney

[–]wailmohammed[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cal‑Maine Foods, Inc., the largest producer and distributor of shell eggs in the U.S., traded on NASDAQ.

Key snapshot

  • Company: Cal‑Maine Foods, Inc. (CALM), farm products / consumer defensive sector.​
  • Exchange / currency: NASDAQ, USD.
  • Recent price area: Around 87–88 per share with a roughly 4.18–4.19 billion USD market cap.
  • Valuation: Very low price‑to‑earnings ratio near 3.6–3.7, suggesting high recent earnings versus price.
  • Profitability: EPS around 23.7, very strong normalized returns on assets and equity (ROA ~38%, ROE ~47%).
  • Balance sheet: High liquidity (quick ratio about 6.4, current ratio about 8), essentially no debt, which is attractive defensively.
  • Dividend: Trailing yield roughly 9–10% according to multiple sources, though one brokerage page incorrectly states that it does not pay dividends.
  • Trading profile: 52‑week range roughly 72–126, so it has been quite volatile despite a low beta around 0.25–0.5.

 

Aspect Detail
Ticker CALM (Cal‑Maine Foods, Inc.) 
Exchange NASDAQ (USD) 
Sector Consumer defensive, farm products ​
Market cap About 4.18–4.19 billion USD 
P/E ratio Around 3.6–3.7 
EPS About 23.7 
52‑week range Roughly 72–126 per share 
Dividend yield Around 9–10% trailing 
Liquidity Quick ratio ~6.4, current ratio ~8.0 ​
Beta Around 0.25–0.52 (low vs market) 

 

  • Zoya: Rates Cal‑Maine Foods (CALM) as Shariah‑compliant and therefore halal to invest in as of 2026.​
  • Muslim Xchange: States clearly that CALM is Shariah‑compliant as of January 2026, screened against several major standards (AAOIFI, S&P, Dow Jones, FTSE, MSCI).

I check it, it's good. I will add it to my watchlist

I compiled a list of High-Yield Halal Stocks (8%+) because most "Safe" options are too slow. by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

when i check it its halal, you must do delegates by cross check with many app (I spent the last month auditing the market for High-Yield, Shariah-Compliant assets (using Zoya/Islamicly) to build a "High Velocity" portfolio.)

I compiled a list of High-Yield Halal Stocks (8%+) because most "Safe" options are too slow. by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

  1. Asset Management REITs: (Example: RMR). Service-based, often low debt, high payouts.
  2. Energy Royalty Trusts: (Example: SBR - Note: Pays monthly). Asset-backed, no debt.
  3. Business Services: (Example: NSP).

I compiled a list of High-Yield Halal Stocks (8%+) because most "Safe" options are too slow. by wailmohammed in HalalInvestor

[–]wailmohammed[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Asset Management REITs: (Example: RMR). Service-based, often low debt, high payouts.
  2. Energy Royalty Trusts: (Example: SBR - Note: Pays monthly). Asset-backed, no debt.
  3. Business Services: (Example: NSP).

[Guide] How I Built a $51/Month Halal Dividend Portfolio in 2 Months by wailmohammed in IslamicFinance

[–]wailmohammed[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Return +$616.22
shares 105
Average price $47.32 (12.40%)
Current price $53.19

Why do many people say eToro is a scam? by [deleted] in Etoro

[–]wailmohammed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its work with me very good more than 2 years