Saudi Arabia to issue $3 to $5 billion in international sukuk by Q3 2019

02/05/2019 Reuters

 

Saudi Arabia will issue $3 billion (£2 billion) to $5 billion in new international sukuk around the third quarter as part of plans to diversify financing of the national budget deficit, a senior finance ministry official told Reuters.

 

Riyadh began issuing debt in international markets in 2016 after its finances were snagged by lower global oil prices. It has since become one of the biggest emerging markets issuers, having sold nearly $60 billion in international bonds, including $11 billion in sukuk.

 

At the end of 2018, it also had more than $80 billion in outstanding domestic debt, borrowed through conventional and Islamic bonds.

 

Fahad Al-Saif, who heads the Kingdom's Debt Management Office (DMO), said in an interview that about 40 percent of the $31.5 billion in debt planned for this year had been issued in the first quarter.

 

"At the end of quarter one, we have reached 55 percent local, 45 percent international. We believe that the ratios will be more skewed towards the local (debt issues) by the end of this year..." he said late on Wednesday.

 

International sukuk are planned for the third quarter "subject to timing, pricing, market conditions and obviously demand and supply," Saif added.

 

Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter and the largest Arab economy, issued its latest international bond in January, raising $7.5 billion out of over $25 billion in demand.

 

The Saudi finance minister said last week that Riyadh might issue euro-denominated bonds this year depending on market conditions, and is considering debt in other currencies such as the yuan.

 

Saif told Reuters that the DMO was focused mostly on Saudi riyals, dollars and possibly euros.

 

"Certain markets that we are paying attention to at the moment, do we have them as strict plans? Not yet. Are we discussing them as part of our medium term debt strategy? Yes."

 

The DMO is also considering in the medium term raising financing backed by foreign export credit agencies, which offer loan guarantees and sometimes financing to encourage trade and lower the costs of international business.

 

But more than a year after requesting proposals from banks, the plans remain at an early stage.

 

"There is no strict timeline. We are in discussions. We are getting ourselves into the terminologies and the jargons of the ECA financing type. We are trying to match what is the right project versus the right financing to be tapped into...," he said.

 

State oil giant Saudi Aramco received more than $100 billion in orders last month for its debut bond - even after its prospectus said the Kingdom would not guarantee the notes - but chose to sell only $12 billion.

 

Last week the Saudi energy minister said Aramco would remain active in debt markets, raising the prospect of potential impacts on Saudi Arabia's debt-to-GDP ratio and its sovereign credit rating.

 

Saif dismissed those concerns, saying: "The ample demand that Aramco has received proves that there is a quite decent appetite to the Kingdom in fact beyond anyone’s expectations."

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