The National - News

SAUDI ARABIA INCREASES SYNDICATED LOAN TO $16 BILLION

▶ Kingdom receives ‘exceptiona­l response’ from banks on revised deal

- SARMAD KHAN

Saudi Arabia is upsizing its $10 billion syndicated loan by another $6bn, as the country looks to bolster funding to plug its budget deficit and boost spending to revive growth in the Arab world’s biggest economy.

The kingdom received “an exceptiona­l response to this process from the global bank market, from both existing holders and new banks”, the debt management office of the Ministry of Finance said in a statement.

Pricing for the revised $16bn funding facility will be “set at a margin representi­ng a 30 per cent reduction”, it said.

The original funding secured in 2016 carried a spread of 120 basis points over Libor, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Requests for proposals were sent to the 14 relationsh­ip banks that participat­ed in the original funding round two years ago, in addition to a group of financial institutio­ns who have sought to join the kingdom’s core bank group, the DMO said in the statement.

Internatio­nal lenders, including HSBC Holdings, JP Morgan and Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, were part of the 2016 deal, the country’s first loan for at least 15 years.

The DMO is currently finalising the documentat­ion process and intends to close the financing by mid-March.

Keeping in mind the strong global demand for Sharia-compliant issuances from the kingdom, a significan­t Islamic tranche will be introduced to the new transactio­n, it said.

Saudi Arabia, like the rest of its Arabian Gulf peers, relies heavily on the sale of hydrocarbo­ns for state revenues. The kingdom has been forced to cut spending in the past three years after oil prices slumped from a mid-2014 peak of $115 per barrel to as low as $29 per barrel in early 2016.

While crude prices have stabilised near $70 a barrel in recent months, Riyadh still needs to borrow from domestic and internatio­nal debt capital markets to plug its estimated $52bn budget deficit for 2018.

The kingdom, whose economy shrank by 0.5 per cent last year, announced a record expansiona­ry budget for 2018 to kick start growth, and plans to raise $31bn this year. It secured about $36bn in 2017, including $14bn from domestic bonds and $22bn from internatio­nal

debt markets. The consistent progress made by the kingdom over the past two years to realise goals of its Vision 2030 economic transforma­tion agenda via the Fiscal Balance Programme is evident through the global market’s response to the up-scaled transactio­n, the DMO said.

The improved terms are a “recognitio­n of the strengthen­ing of the Saudi economy”, Minister of Finance Mohammed Al Jadaan said.

“This also illustrate­s the Ministry of Finance’s role as part of Vision 2030’s ambition to create a global investment powerhouse.”

 ??  ?? Visitors walk through New York’s Chelsea Market. Google is reportedly close to reaching a $2.4bn deal to add the building to its New York campus
Visitors walk through New York’s Chelsea Market. Google is reportedly close to reaching a $2.4bn deal to add the building to its New York campus
 ??  ?? Saudi Arabia wants to bolster funding to plug its estimated $52bn budget deficit for 2018
Saudi Arabia wants to bolster funding to plug its estimated $52bn budget deficit for 2018

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