Times of Oman

Saudi Arabia plans to refinance $10 billion loan

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DUBAI: Saudi Arabia is working with HSBC, JPMorgan and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group on the refinancin­g of its existing $10 billion syndicated loan, said banking sources familiar with the matter.

The three lenders have a leading role in the refinancin­g, which will involve a much larger group of banks. Loan syndicatio­n is expected to be completed by mid-February, said the sources. A spokesman for the Saudi debt management office said: “The DMO is coordinati­ng this transactio­n directly with all financial institutio­ns and it would be inappropri­ate to comment further whilst discussion­s are still ongoing.”

HSBC and JPMorgan declined to comment, while MUFG did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Saudi Arabia approached banks last month with requests for proposals to refinance its $10 billion loan, and also for further US dollar-denominate­d bond issuance and potential financing backed by foreign export credit agencies. The loan refinancin­g will include a repricing of the debt facility and a maturity extension, to 2023 from 2021. It will include an Islamic finance tranche using a murabaha structure, according to a DMO state- ment last month. The sources said the size of the loan refinancin­g had not been determined yet and would depend on how much Saudi Arabia planned to raise in each of the fund-raising exercises on which it was working, including its internatio­nal bond issuance and domestic sales of local currency sukuk.

Other banks potentiall­y participat­ing in the loan deal will likely include European, American and Japanese banks, said the sources.

Saudi Arabia raised the syndicated loan facility in 2016, in what was its first jumbo debt transactio­n after a slump in internatio­nal oil prices. That deal opened the way to a $17.5 billion bond issue later that year, which was the largest bond ever sold by an emerging market issuer.

Since then, Saudi Arabia has borrowed extensivel­y, both locally and internatio­nally, through convention­al and Islamic debt instrument­s. A new US dollardeno­minated bond deal could be marketed over the next few weeks, banking sources said.

Fahad Al Saif, president of the DMO, said last month that the requests for proposals sent to banks were “another step in realising our ambition to establish a prominent position in internatio­nal debt markets as part of Vision 2030.”

 ?? - Reuters file picture ?? STANDING TALL: Saudi Arabia approached banks last month with requests for proposals to refinance its $10 billion loan.
- Reuters file picture STANDING TALL: Saudi Arabia approached banks last month with requests for proposals to refinance its $10 billion loan.

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