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Moody’s affirms Islamic Developmen­t Bank’s AAA rating thanks to strong capital base

- THE NATIONAL

Moody’s Investors Service has affirmed the Islamic Developmen­t Bank’s AAA rating with a stable outlook, the credit rating agency said yesterday.

The AAA-rating is based on the bank’s strong capital base, Moody’s said.

“The Islamic Developmen­t Bank benefits from a strong liquidity position, and is considered a benchmark issuer within the global sukuk market,” Moody’s said. “It is a benchmark issuer within the Islamic finance world, being one of the few AAA-rated issuers. Given the scarcity of high-quality, Sharia-compliant securities, the bank’s sukuks have always found strong demand.”

The Jeddah lender, a multilater­al developmen­t bank with a subscribed capital of $33 billion, is part of the Islamic banking industry that has grown at a double-digit rate over the past decade, reaching $3.5 trillion last year alone. Sukuk – an Islamic bond, structured to generate returns for investors while adhering to Sharia, which prohibits taking interest – is a key part of the Islamic finance system.

Total internatio­nal sukuk issuances reached $95bn in 2017, after achieving $85bn the year before.

Islamic Developmen­t Bank’s stable outlook is based on the expectatio­n that its risk profile is likely to remain “very strong” over the medium term even as its capital base expands, Moody’s said.

The bank, the largest developmen­t organisati­on in the Muslim world, will “soon” launch a $2.5bn sukuk, Reuters reported in March.

Earlier this year, the bank launched a fund to provide seed money to innovative startups and SMEs, helping them to implement developmen­t projects related to the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Transform fund, which has a target capital of $500 million, will run in tandem with a new online hub called Engage, designed to connect innovators to each other and assist them in developing their ideas.

Moody’s said that several factors may affect the lender’s stable outlook.

“A faster-than-expected increase in borrowings would undermine the IDB’s capital adequacy ratios and would lead to downward pressure on the rating. Similarly, downward rating pressure would emerge in case of rating downgrades of key shareholde­rs,” Moody’s said.

The bank has pledged $750m as part of an $11bn pledge for Lebanon at a conference in Paris as global institutio­ns jostled for influence in a country that has borne much of the weight of the conflict in Syria.

 ?? Layton Thompson ?? Bandar Hajjar, president of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank, addresses a sukuk summit in London
Layton Thompson Bandar Hajjar, president of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank, addresses a sukuk summit in London

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