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Shariah category · after the next UTASL release

Shariah-compliant unit trusts in Sri Lanka

Compare Shariah-compliant (Islamic) unit trusts in Sri Lanka. Screen annualized YTD returns, fund size, and NAV per unit from the latest UTASL performance report.

Shariah-compliant funds follow Islamic finance principles — no interest-based instruments, no haram sectors, and Shariah board oversight. They are an option for investors who need their portfolio to remain compliant with Islamic finance rules.

Top annualized YTD

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Funds in view

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Combined NAV

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Shariah funds ranked by annualized YTD return

Full universe

Ranked by annualized year-to-date return so reports from different month-ends stay comparable. Always verify the latest figures and the fund offering document with the asset manager.

No funds match this view in the current snapshot. New rows will appear after the next UTASL ingestion run.

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Frequently asked questions

What makes a Sri Lankan unit trust Shariah-compliant?

A Shariah board screens the portfolio against Islamic finance rules: no interest-based instruments (riba), no investment in haram sectors, and ongoing purification of any incidental non-compliant income.

Are returns lower than conventional funds?

Not necessarily. The universe is narrower so periods of out- and under-performance both happen. Compare net annualized returns and the Shariah board's certification before deciding.

Can non-Muslim investors buy Shariah funds?

Yes. Shariah compliance is an investment-policy choice. Any investor who is comfortable with the rule-set and the portfolio can invest, subject to the manager's onboarding.

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Source: Unit Trust Association of Sri Lanka (UTASL) monthly performance reports. Figures are indicative and can contain extraction errors. TaprobaneFi is a research and education site — content on taprobanefi.com/unit-trust-analysis/shariah-unit-trusts-sri-lanka is not personalised investment advice. Always verify with the asset manager before committing capital.