Egypt prepares to sell $2B Islamic bonds

The Egyptian government, seeking to head off a funding crisis, is preparing to raise about $2 billion through its first issue of Islamic bonds, an Islamic scholar familiar with its planning said on Tuesday.
February 14, 2012 2:18 by Reuters
“The Egyptian government is convinced that a foreign currency sukuk will fund the country’s development projects and can also bridge the gap in its currency reserves,” Sheikh Hussein Hamid Hassan told Reuters.
“The sukuk will be in dollars or euros or maybe a combination. It will be around $2 billion, issued in several tranches targeting mainly Egyptians living outside Egypt.”
Sheikh Hussein is one of the leading scholars in the Islamic finance industry, which is built around religious principles such as the avoidance of interest payments. Based in Dubai, he chairs a series of boards which evaluate Islamic financial instruments.
He is not an official adviser to the Egyptian government but has been discussing the possibility of a sukuk issue with it. Sheikh Hussein said he had proposed four structures for the sukuk and the government would choose one.
Asked when the debt might be issued, he said: “The date of issue is not final yet but Egypt is in urgent need of funding.”
Hit by declines in foreign investment and tourism, the Egyptian central bank’s foreign reserves fell $1.77 billion to $16.35 billion in January and are down by more than half since the uprising which ousted Hosni Mubarak in February last year.
That threatens a sharp slide in the value of Egypt’s currency. The government is also grappling with a large budget deficit that it is financing at high cost by issuing short-term Treasury bills to local banks at yields above 15 percent.
Last month Egypt said it was asking the International Monetary Fund for $3.2 billion in emergency loans; a deal could encourage other foreign donors to aid Cairo. But the IMF said it expected talks on an agreement to take two or three months.
Islamic finance was not encouraged under Mubarak’s secular government but it is expected to grow in Egypt after Islamist parties won well over half of the seats in parliamentary elections last month. The government has drafted legislation that would facilitate issues of sukuk.
Because they attract pools of conservative Islamic investment money, sukuk have often proved to be more stable than conventional bonds during the global financial crisis, and they might be an effective way to attract some of the savings of millions of Egyptians living abroad. They might also be bought by Islamic investment funds in the wealthy Arab Gulf.
A Saudi Arabian newspaper, Asharq Al-Awsat, reported this week that Egypt’s finance ministry had asked National Bank of Egypt, the country’s largest bank, to study ways in which a sovereign sukuk could be issued in the near future. Marketing could start as soon as next week if the government approves, the newspaper said.
More on GCC
-
UAE Regulator Says Bourse Merger Would Have “Many Advantages”
-
Online Learning On The Rise
-
Saudi’s Sipchem picks HSBC as adviser for Sahara merger
-
KOHLER Raids Counterfeit Center, Destroys Over 700 Products
-
Saudi Arabia Says MERS Coronavirus Kills Four More
-
Qatar Airways expands fleet
-
Qatar tightens caps on banks’ securities investment
-
Abu Dhabi’s Waha Capital Buys Stake In Healthcare Firm
-
Saudi Arabia plans to block WhatsApp within weeks
-
MERS coronavirus claims another life
-
Back to pre-crisis peak
-
Nokia Lumia 720 launches ‘Man of Steel’ campaign
-
Dubai World unit sells UK asset to Brookfield
-
UAE banks ask to permit loan transfers for Emiratis
-
Indonesians protest at Jeddah consulate
-
UAE Regulator To Allow Trading In Share Offer Rights
-
Citigroup To Exit UAE Interbank Rate Setting Panel
-
World’s largest mall to get bigger
-
Mediaquest acquires AME Info and SME Info
-
Emaar Plans JV With Dubai Holding For New Project
Lately on Kipp
-
BlackBerry opens first regional store
-
Here’s something to ‘tweet’ about
-
Golden Systems Wins ‘Best Contribution’ Award from KINGMAX
-
Nabbesh.com appeals to the masses
-
UAE Regulator Says Bourse Merger Would Have “Many Advantages”
-
MenaITech participates in sponsoring Entrepreneurial Excellence in the Knowledge Economy Conference
Here’s something to ‘tweet’ about
Sharjah Police: ‘Don’t give money to beggars’
Fighting the world’s biggest killer
Twist and shout
“Your customers aren’t fools”
Behind the curtain of Simone Heng
Chatting with the man behind Dubai City Pass
A business discussion with the author of ‘Connect The Dots’






























