Khaleej Times

Foreign investors stay averse to Gulf debt

- Davide Barbuscia

dubai — Bond prices across Gulf nations weakened on Tuesday as foreign investors hesitated to buy, concerned that the diplomatic crisis surroundin­g Qatar would increase risks around the region.

Qatar’s sovereign internatio­nal bonds came under pressure, with its longest-dated paper — a bond maturing in 2046 — registerin­g the largest losses. It is now down by more than 2 cents on the dollar since the end of last week.

But bond prices fell moderately across the six-nation Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, said a Dubai-based portfolio manager, after Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the UAE and Bahrain severed diplomatic and transport ties with Doha early on Monday, accusing it of supporting terrorism.

The GCC debt market has seen a surge in foreign investment over the past year because of a surge in issuance by government­s, which has improved liquidity and created a benchmark yield curve.

But the Qatari crisis has made some foreign institutio­ns more cautious about the region in general, at least until they see whether the dispute can be resolved without any further escalation, fund managers said.

Also, the Saudi Arabian, UAE and Bahraini central banks have not yet clarified how they want commercial banks to handle business ties with Qatar, which involve substantia­l cross-border lending, deposits and syndicated loans.

If the commercial banks are advised to get rid of their Qatari assets in a short timeframe, or if authoritie­s act against Qatari banking assets in their jurisdicti­ons, that could provoke retaliatio­n by Doha and turmoil in the Gulf banking and money markets.

“There hasn’t been a panic selloff so far and the market is still seeing a two-way flow skewed towards better sellers,” said Zeina Rizq, director of fixed income asset management at Arqaam Capital in Dubai. “But things could change pretty drasticall­y if the situation escalates or if the regional central banks ask commercial banks to sell their Qatari paper.”

A senior banker at a foreign bank in Dubai said banks in the UAE had not yet been informed by the UAE central bank about what would happen to their branches and operations in Qatar. “Will a UAE bank lend to a Qatari bank that operates in Dubai or Abu Dhabi, or will it be switched out of the system? There is absolutely no clarity on this. Is this just cutting off diplomatic ties, or leading to economic sanctions against Qatari banks and companies?”

Selling of GCC sovereign and corporate bonds was particular­ly strong on Tuesday at the long end of the yield curve, where more internatio­nal investors are involved.

Saudi Arabia’s bonds maturing in 2046 have lost a little more than 0.5 cent on the dollar since last week. Its 10-year bonds due in 2026 have dropped as much. Oman’s 2047 bonds were also weaker on Tuesday, down by a little more than 1 cent since last week.

“If tensions remain high, the Qatar sovereign is likely to underperfo­rm its GCC peers, with the 30-year part of the curve impacted the most due to its high internatio­nal ownership,” Standard Chartered said in a research report.

There hasn’t been a panic sell-off so far and the market is still seeing a two-way flow skewed towards better sellers Zeina Rizq, director of fixed income asset management at Arqaam Capital

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