Saudi mortgage refinancing firm plans $1 bln sukuk sale

24/04/2019 Reuters

 

Saudi Real Estate Refinance Co. (SRC), modelled on US mortgage finance firm Fannie Mae, aims to issue up to SAR 4 billion ($1.07 billion) of long-term sukuk this year, its chief executive said on Tuesday.

 

The plan by SRC, a subsidiary of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign Public Investment Fund, comes as it prepares to purchase more home loan portfolios from mortgage financing companies and banks to boost the Kingdom’s secondary mortgage market.

 

SRC, formed in 2017, is also keen to tap foreign institutional investors for its debt sale this year, Fabrice Susini told Reuters in an interview.

 

Read: Saudi wealth fund's real estate subsidiary is planning a sukuk sale

 

 “Our strategy is clearly to tap the market twice this year,” he said.

 

“We are really looking at probably issuing something between ... 2 and 4 billion riyal that we may be issuing in two tranches.

 

He said SRC was looking at sukuk in the 10 to 15-year range, to help minimize refinancing risks. Generally speaking we are trying to issue as long as possible,” Susini said.

 

He said the company was assessing whether it could also issue bonds in currencies other than the local riyal.

 

In March, SRC completed a SAR 750 million sukuk issue with multiple tenors, under a program that allows it to issue up to 11 billion riyals of local currency denominated Islamic bonds.

 

“The rule of the game for us is, like many projects across the Kingdom, attract liquidity from foreign investors,” Susini said.

 

He said SRC had spent SAR 1.2 billion from its balance sheet buying mortgages from local mortgage financing companies and provided liquidity to these firms.

 

It has also signed initial accords with several commercial banks to acquire housing mortgage portfolios.

 

Saudi Arabia’s housing ministry is targeting the mortgage market to reach a total value of SAR 502 billion by 2020 from around 300 billion riyals now.

 

The government wants to increase activity in the real estate market as it moves to revitalize the economy and is taking steps to reform the sector as part of its 2030 reform plan.

 

It has been working with developers and local banks to counter a shortage of affordable housing — one of the country’s biggest social and economic problems.

 

Saudi Arabia wants 60 percent of its nationals to own homes by 2020, up from 47 percent in 2016.

 

The size of real estate financing relative to its gross domestic product is 5 percent in Saudi Arabia compared to 69 percent in the United States, 74 percent in the United Kingdom and 43 pct in Canada, the housing ministry has said.

 

“The goal of SRC in this market was to make sure that we will be able to refinance at least around 10 percent of the market in 2020, and 20 percent of the market by 2028,” Susini said.

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