DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Simon ben Sylvia

Dedicated By
Saul Assa and Family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 394 KB)
It Is Permissible To Invest In A Company That Is Open On Shabbat

Is it permissible to invest in a non-Jewish company that conducts business on Shabbat?

 

Rabbi Moshe Halevi, in his work Menuchat Ahava (vol. 1, p. 394), rules that Halacha would allow giving money to a gentile during the week as an investment, even if it is clear that the gentile will conduct his business on Shabbat.  Since the gentile does his work on Shabbat for his own convenience, and the Jew did not specifically instruct or request that the work be performed on Shabbat, no prohibition is involved.  Even though the work performed by the gentile on Shabbat directly affects the Jewish investor, who receives a percentage of the profits, the investment is permissible because the Jew did not specifically request that work be performed on Shabbat.  Rabbi Moshe Halevi adds that the issue of Mar'it Ha'ayin – giving the mistaken appearance of violating Halacha – does not arise in such a case, because when the gentile conducts his business on Shabbat it is not evident that this work involves a Jewish investor.

 

By extension, then, it is entirely permissible to own stock in a company that conducts business, opens its stores, and earns profits on Shabbat.  Even though a Jew receives a share of the company's profits, nevertheless, since the employees do not work on Shabbat at the behest of the Jew, and do not give the appearance of doing so, no prohibition is involved.

 

Thus, one may invest during the week in a non-Jewish company that operates and conducts business on Shabbat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Counting a Minor Towards a Minyan
The Earliest Time for Wearing a Talit With a Beracha
Is the Haftara Recited With Berachot if the Congregation’s Only Sefer Torah is Found to be Pasul?
The Status of a Relative Through Marriage With Respect to Testimony
If a Witness is Related to a Litigant or to Another Witness
Birkat Kohanim – If One Recites the Amida During Birkat Kohanim; The Kohanim’s Prayers Before and After Birkat Kohanim
Reading Tehillim or Other Parts of Tanach at Night
Some Laws of Tzedaka (Charity)
Interlocking the Fingers of the Right Hand with the Fingers of the Left Hand
Removing One’s Shoes Before Going to Sleep
Learning Torah Out Loud
Saying 'Yihee Ratzon ... SheTivne (Build) Bet HaMikdash' At The End Of The Amidah After Taking 3 Steps Back
Is it Forbidden for a Kohen to be in the Same Room as Ashes of a Dead Body?
If Fewer Than Six Men at a Minyan at Minha is Not Fasting on a Fast Day
Sleeping on Clothing Can Adversely Affect One’s Memory
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found