The Borneo Post

HSBC issues first Islamic bond tied to UN developmen­t goals

-

HSBC Amanah, the Malaysian Islamic banking arm of HSBC Holdings, has raised RM500 million (US$120.63 million) worth of Islamic bonds linked to the United Nations’ sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

The deal is the latest effort to combine the religious principles of Islamic finance with sustainabl­e developmen­t themes promoted by the UN, such as poverty eradicatio­n and financing clean energy. Malaysia’s central bank issued guidelines this week to encourage Islamic banks to become more involved in socially and environmen­tally themed activities.

Proceeds from the senior unsecured Islamic bonds, or sukuk, will be used to finance businesses and projects that fit the bank’s sustainabl­e developmen­t goals bond framework, the issuer said.

The sukuk are due in 2023 and priced at a fixed profit rate of 4.3 per cent, which the lender said was the lowest coupon for a five-year non-government guaranteed bond issuance in the Malaysian market this year.

The deal attracted orders of RM1.4 billion, with bids from 25 accounts primarily from government agencies, pension funds and financial institutio­ns.

HSBC Amanah, RHB Islamic BankBhdand­MaybankInv­estment Bank Berhad acted as joint lead managers for the transactio­n.

HSBC issued its first bond tied to the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals in 2017, raising $1 billion as part of a commitment to provide US$ 100 billion in sustainabl­e financing by 2025. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia