Gulf News

Saudi finance ministry sets up domestic sukuk programme

Ministry to announce on a case-by-case basis details such as the types of eligible investors

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Saudi Arabia’s ministry of finance said yesterday it had establishe­d a programme to issue local currency Islamic bonds, as the government covers a large budget deficit caused by low oil prices.

The ministry described the programme as “unlimited” and said it would announce on a case-by-case basis details such as the types of eligible investors, the size of the issues and the expected profit rate.

The programme has been submitted to the Capital Market Authority, the ministry added without specifying when the first sukuk issue would take place.

First issue

Saudi commercial bankers said they expected the first issue as soon as in the next few days and believed 10 billion riyals (Dh9.8 billion, $2.7 billion) would be offered, which the market could cope with easily since liquidity had improved since last year and investors had been preparing for the issue.

The Saudi government started issuing convention­al bonds in the domestic market in 2015 but suspended the sales late last year because of tightening liquidity in the banking system.

The ministry said last week that 13 domestic banks had qualified to participat­e in the sukuk issues.

Finance minister Mohammad Al Jadaan told Al Arabiya television earlier this month that local currency sukuk issuance would begin in July. The government issued its first internatio­nal sukuk, raising $9 billion, in April.

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