Capital intensity and Sukuk: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
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Capital intensity measures the amount of a firm's investment in capital assets, compared with other factors of production or outputs.
''Sharia-compliant finance.''


A negotiable instrument representing a proportionate share of an underlying capital asset, financed by the cash raised from the issue of the sukuk.


One measure of capital intensity is the firm's Capital to labour ratio, relating to its inputs.
Sometimes referred to (not strictly correctly) as an 'Islamic bond'.


Another measure of capital intensity is the ratio of a firm's assets to its revenues.


== See also ==
* [[Bond]]
* [[Securitisation]]
* [[Securitisation special purpose vehicle]]
* [[Sharia-compliant finance]]
* [[Sharia-compliant fixed income capital markets instruments for cross-border transactions]]
* [[Special purpose vehicle]]
* [[Transition sukuk]]
===Other links===
[http://www.treasurers.org/node/9516 Sweet sukuk, Noel Lourdes, The Treasurer, Nov 2013]


== See also ==
[[Category:The_business_context]]
* [[Assets]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
* [[Capital]]
* [[Capital mobility]]
* [[Capital structure]]
* [[Capital to labour ratio]]
* [[Capitalisation]]
* [[Cost of capital]]
* [[Credit balance]]
* [[Debt capital]]
* [[Enterprise]]
* [[Equity cost of capital]]
* [[Factors of production]]
* [[Finance ]]
* [[Investment bank]]
* [[Labour]]
* [[Land]]
* [[Liabilities]]
* [[Regulatory capital]]
* [[Share capital]]
* [[Working capital]]

Revision as of 21:16, 17 July 2021

Sharia-compliant finance.

A negotiable instrument representing a proportionate share of an underlying capital asset, financed by the cash raised from the issue of the sukuk.

Sometimes referred to (not strictly correctly) as an 'Islamic bond'.


See also


Other links

Sweet sukuk, Noel Lourdes, The Treasurer, Nov 2013