Saudi Arabia raises $9bln in first global Islamic bond
Riyadh: Saudi Arabia raised $9 billion in its first global Islamic bond issue, the government announced on Thursday, a move analysts say could ease pressure on foreign reserves.
The sale of Islamic bonds, known as sukuks, comes after the kingdom in October turned to the conventional global debt market for the first time, raising $17.5 billion in a bond issue.
Saudi Arabia has also sold domestic bonds and drawn on its accumulated reserves, all in an effort to reform the economy and address budget deficits caused by a collapse in oil revenues since 2014.
"The ministry of finance received significant interest for the first international issue of the sukuk programme with an order book from investors in excess of $33 billion," the official Saudi Press Agency said.
There will be two tranches of $4.5 billion, one maturing in 2022 and another in 2027, reflecting "the strong fundamentals of the Saudi economy," it said.
Islamic financial instruments including sukuks are structured to comply with Islamic law, which does not allow the payment of interest.
Riyadh has forecast a budget deficit of $53 billion this year, after an even bigger shortfall last year prompted subsidy cuts and delays in major projects.
In a report this month, Saudi firm Jadwa Investment said the kingdom´s foreign reserves, including securities, bank deposits and gold, had fallen to a near six-year low.
Reserves dropped to $514 billion in February, down $10 billion from the previous month and the lowest level since August 2011, Jadwa said.
"Any new international sovereign bond, or indeed sukuk issuance, should alleviate the pressure on foreign exchange reserve withdrawals," the researchers said.
Patrick Dennis, lead Middle East economist at Oxford Economics in London, told AFP the sukuk sale helps put Saudi Arabia "in a strong position in terms of funding".
While easing the rundown in reserves, it should also continue to reduce the need for borrowing through domestic bonds, which now has not occurred for about six months, he said.
Domestic bond purchases put pressure on the liquidity of banks, threatening their ability to lend and constraining economic growth as a result.
-
'Mortified' Princess Eugenie, Beatrice Plan Interview To Finally Speak Truth In Sarah Ferguson, Andrew-Epstein Scandal -
Lewis Hamilton Spent Years Trying To Catch Kim Kardashian's Attention? -
Royal Strategy Revealed As King Charles, Prince William Issue Statements On Andrew Row -
Inside Will Smith's Struggle To Revive His Career After Infamous Oscar Incident -
What’s Coming Out Of Meghan Markle’s War Against Prince William? Inside People’s Unease -
Australia Seeks Urgent Meeting With Roblox Over 'Disturbing' Content Complaints -
Epstein Case: Ghislaine Maxwell Invokes Fifth, Refuses To Testify Before US Congress -
Ferrari Luce: First Electric Sports Car Unveiled With Enzo V12 Revival -
Chappell Roan Parts Ways With Wasserman Music Over CEO's Ties With Epstein -
Andrew Mountbatten Windsor Publically Shamed After Brother And Nephew Change Decades Old Royal Rule -
Jon Stewart On Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Performance: 'Killed It'' -
Savannah Guthrie Receives Massive Support From Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Garner After Desperate Plea -
Celebrities Take Sides As Brooklyn Beckham’s Feud With David, Victoria Heats Up -
Prince Harry Reacts As Beatrice, Eugenie's Names Surface In Epstein Emails -
Cyprus Joins European AI Race: What It Means For Greek LLMs And Regional Innovation -
Amazon Soon To Launch 'AI Content' Marketplace, Says Report