Dubai:
Morocco is drafting a law
to allow the sale of Islamic bonds, joining North African neighbours seeking to
lure more investors to their debt after global sukuk offerings surged to a
record.
The government, led by the Islamist Justice and
Development Party, will put the bill to parliament as soon as the draft is
completed, Budget Minister Driss Elazami Eldrissi said by phone on November 20.
He wouldn't say when that would happen. Tunisia and Egypt, two other North
African countries ruled by Islamist parties after last year's uprisings, are
also drafting laws to pave the way for possible sukuk sales in 2013.
Selling Islamic bonds helps issuers "reach
conventional debt investors and sukuk investors at the same time,"
Elhassan Eddez, deputy director of treasury at Morocco's Finance Ministry, said
by phone Nov. 20. "The sukuk market has a wider investor base."
Global sales of bonds that comply with Islam's
ban on interest soared 66 per cent this year to a record $43.4 billion as
nations such as Turkey and Qatar tapped the market for the first time, taking
advantage of falling borrowing costs. The average yield on sovereign sukuk
dropped 116 basis points, or 1.16 percentage points, this year to 2.74 per cent
on November 23, the lowest since 2009, according to the HSBC/Nasdaq Dubai
Sovereign US Dollar Sukuk Index.
IMF funding:
Unlike Tunisia, Libya and
Egypt, pro-democracy protests in Morocco didn't lead to regime change after
King Mohammed VI granted the government more powers. The kingdom, which is
preparing to sell its first dollar-denominated bonds, secured a $6.2 billion
funding line from the International Monetary Fund in August as a shield against
the repercussions of the debt crisis in Europe, Morocco's main trading partner.
Morocco has managed to keep its BBB-rating at Standard & Poor's, the
agency's lowest investment grade, throughout the unrest that swept through
North Africa. The ratings company stripped Tunisia of that status in May and has
lowered Egypt four times to B, the fifth-highest junk classification, since the
so-called Arab Spring started.
The yield on Morocco's 4.5 per cent
euro-denominated bonds due October 2020 has fallen 127 basis points this year
to 4.61 per cent on November 23, data compiledby Bloomberg show. That compares
with a 139 basis-point drop in the average yield of sukuk issued in the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC), which includes Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United
Arab Emirates, to a record 2.92 per cent, according to the HSBC/Nasdaq Dubai
GCC US Dollar Sukuk Index.
Tunisia, Egypt:
"A Morocco sukuk
bond will allow the government to potentially reduce its borrowing cost and tap
new frontier markets," Hakim Azaiez, the London-based head of investment
at GCA Asset Management, said by e-mail on November 23.
"The demand is there for sovereign sukuk
issues," he added.
Tunisia plans to raise as much as 1 billion
dinars ($636 million) next year and will use the proceeds to fund the budget
deficit, Finance Ministry Director General Chaker Soltani said this month.
Egypt said in October it received interest from foreign banks amounting to as
much as $1 billion for a possible sukuk sale after it passes the requisite law.
So far, Arab sovereign sukuk issuers have been
limited to Qatar, Dubai, the emirate of Ras Al-Khaimah and Bahrain, according
to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The yield on Dubai's 6.396 per cent Islamic
bonds due November 2014 fell 315 basis points this year to a record 2.42 per
cent on November 23, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The premium
investors demand to hold Dubai's notes over Malaysia's investment-grade 3.928
per cent sukuk narrowed 187 basis points this year to 100.
(Times Of Oman / 27 Nov 2012)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com
Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com
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