Arab Times

Saudi raises $9bn in first sukuk issue

Move could ease pressure on foreign reserves

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RIYADH, April 13, (AFP): Saudi Arabia raised $9 billion in its first global Islamic bond issue, the government announced on Thursday, a move analysts say could ease pressure on foreign reserves.

The sale of Islamic bonds, known as sukuks, comes after the kingdom in October turned to the convention­al global debt market for the first time, raising $17.5 billion in a bond issue.

Saudi Arabia has also sold domestic bonds and drawn on its accumulate­d reserves, all in an effort to reform the economy and address budget deficits caused by a collapse in oil revenues since 2014.

“The ministry of finance received significan­t interest for the first internatio­nal issue of the sukuk programme with an order book from investors in excess of $33 billion,” the official Saudi Press Agency said.

There will be two tranches of $4.5 billion, one maturing in 2022 and another in 2027, reflecting “the strong fundamenta­ls of the Saudi economy,” it said.

Islamic financial instrument­s including sukuks are structured to comply with Islamic law, which does not allow the payment of interest.

Riyadh has forecast a budget deficit of $53 billion this year, after an even bigger shortfall last year prompted subsidy cuts and delays in major projects.

In a report this month, Saudi firm Jadwa Investment said the kingdom’s foreign reserves, including securities, bank deposits and gold, had fallen to a near six-year low.

Reserves dropped to $514 billion in February, down $10 billion from the previous month and the lowest level since August 2011, Jadwa said.

“Any new internatio­nal sovereign bond, or indeed sukuk issuance, should alleviate the pressure on foreign exchange reserve withdrawal­s,” the researcher­s said.

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