Islamic Development Bank to increase sukuk program

DNE
DNE
2 Min Read

JEDDAH: The Islamic Development Bank (IDB) plans to increase its $3.5 billion sukuk program to as much as $8 billion and issue a sukuk bond worth $600 million by year end, its vice-president said on Wednesday.

Abdul Aziz al-Hinai said $2.9 billion of the current program had been issued and the rest would be out by Dec. 31, adding that the IDB was studying how large the program would become.

"We are working on extending the program to over $5 billion … the total size could be 5, 6 or 8 billion dollars," he told Reuters in the Red Sea port city of Jeddah.

IDB issued a $750 million five-year sukuk, or Islamic bond, at par with a 2.35 percent semi-annual profit rate.

"We feel the appetite was good. We were offered more than we wanted and we took what we wanted," Hinai said.

Since the program began in 2005, IDB has made four private placement sukuks and issued four public sukuks all of which were ijara-based.

Ijara sukuk involves a transfer of tangible assets — most commonly real estate — from one party to the next, as Islamic law does not allow for debt or interest payments.

"We will not be limiting our future sukuk to the current structure and we will be developing it," he said. "There could be in the future mudaraba sukuk or other forms."

Under mudaraba, a bank provides capital for a project while an entrepreneur manages the deal. The profits are split according to a pre-determined ratio and the bank bears any monetary losses that arise.

"I believe 2011 will witness another flourishing year for sukuk issuance. There was a slowness in 2009 and 2010 due to the financial crisis," he said.

"By the end of this year we will have more sukuk issued than 2009 and 2010 combined, and that is because sukuk has started building confidence with investors," Hinai added.

Share This Article