Gulf News

World Bank eyes up to $ 500m sukuk

Standard Chartered and National Bank of Abu Dhabi to arrange the transactio­n

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The World Bank plans to raise as much as $ 500 million worth of Islamic bonds, or sukuk, this year to help fund an immunisati­on programme, one of several initiative­s from the multilater­al body in the Islamic finance sector.

The World Bank, acting as treasurer of the Internatio­nal Finance Facility for Immunisati­on ( IFFIm), would help issue the sukuk, said Michael Bennett, head of derivative­s and structured finance at the World Bank’s treasury department.

IFFIm has previously raised money from retail investors in markets such as Australia and Japan through so- called “kangaroo” and “uridahsi” bonds. It could soon add sukuk to the lexicon of vaccine financing.

“Right now we’re thinking $ 300 million to $ 500 million, we are still talking to the market on what the right size should be,” said Bennett on the sidelines of an industry conference.

The World Bank has hired Standard Chartered and National Bank of Abu Dhabi to arrange the transactio­n, which could happen as early as this month although a specific time frame has yet to be finalised, said Bennett.

“We’ve been having investor conversati­ons in the Gulf, Malaysia and tomorrow it will be Brunei.” IFFIm, rated AA by Standard & Poor’s, is backed by nine countries including France and Britain, it issues bonds designed to roll forward future donor pledges into cash-in-hand today to finance its immunisati­on efforts.

Since 2006, IFFIm has raised $ 4.5 billion through bonds, its last issuance was a $ 700 million bond in June of last year.

Because those pledges are not interest- based, they could be used to structure a sukuk, which follow religious principles such as bans on charging interest and pure monetary speculatio­n.

IBRD is now advising the Dubai government on developing a funding strategy for the emirate’s green investment programme, which could include sukuk, said Bennett.

“This likely will require raising funds in a variety of different ways — with green sukuk being just one of the options being considered.” This could help close the gap between ethical and Islamic investing, two sectors which have largely developed independen­tly from each other.

Western institutio­nal investors such as pensions have long favoured green bonds, while investors in the Middle East and Southeast Asia require shariacomp­liant alternativ­es to interestbe­aring debt.

In the long term, the World Bank is also exploring partial credit guarantees to be used for sovereign sukuk issues, said Bennett.

The World Bank, through IBRD, offers partial guarantees to sovereigns, their agencies and other state- owned entities; Such a programme could be used to help developing countries that have struggled to tap the sukuk market in the past.

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