Business Standard

Saudi’sneomhunts­formore cash for $1.5 trn desert city

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Saudi Arabia’s Neom is planning its debut riyal bond sale for later this year as it looks for more sources of funding for the $1.5 trillion worth of constructi­on projects it’s planned for the futuristic city, according to sources.

Neom has appointed banks including HSBC Holdings and the securities units of Al-rajhi

Bank and Saudi National

Bank to advise on the sale of Islamic bonds, or sukuk, the people said. The debt would be denominate­d in the local currency and could raise as much $1.3 billion, they said, asking not to be identified as the informatio­n is private.

The sukuk sale could come as early as the second half of this year. A final decision on the timing and offering size will depend on market conditions.

Representa­tives for Neom, HSBC, and Saudi National Bank declined to comment, while a spokespers­on for Al-rajhi Bank did not respond to a request for comment.

The city, located in the kingdom’s northweste­rn desert, is a brainchild of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The developmen­t’s signature project is The Line, a pair of mirror-clad skyscraper­s that the kingdom hopes will ultimately stretch 170 kilometres and house all of a city’s normal functions. Neom’s plans also include an industrial area, ports and tourism developmen­ts.

Most of the developmen­t’s funding so far has come in the form of equity injections from its owner, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, which is led by Crown Prince Mohammed.

But to pull off the ambitious project, Neom’s developers have been hunting for new forms of cash in recent months.

Neom recently secured a 10 billionriy­als loan from a group of Saudi banks. The project’s developers have also raised a 3 billion-riyal loan to finance Sindalah, a luxury tourism island in the Red Sea.

The bond sale could come as early as the second half of this year. A final decision on the timing and offering size will depend on market conditions

Scaling Back

Saudi Arabia has scaled back its medium-term ambitions for The Line, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg earlier this month. While the government at one point hoped to have 1.5 million residents living in The Line by 2030, it now expect the developmen­t will house fewer than 300,000 residents by that time.

The plans to pursue a sukuk sale comes as the Public Investment Fund, as the kingdom’s main state fund is known, has been considerin­g plans to accelerate debt sales of its own and by its subsidiari­es.

The PIF has also considered obtaining bank loans or offering up equity in the companies it controls as it hunts for new sources of cash.

The PIF’S effort to obtain more cash comes as total spending by the fund is set to top $70 billion a year after 2025, up from current levels of about

$40 billion to $50 billion a year.

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