Sharjah Islamic Bank (SIB), a leading Islamic bank of the United Arab Emirates, successfully closed a USD 500 million sukuk in the international capital markets on Wednesday. The issuance received tremendous response from international investors, attracting orders that peaked at USD 1.5 billion meaning more than 3x over subscription.
The sukuk has maturity of 5 years and was priced at spread of 105 bps + 5 years US Treasuries. The sukuk will bear a profit rate of 5.25% per annum with maturity on 3rd July 2029. The bank was successfully able to tighten by 35 bps having announced IPTs at 140 bps area due to the strong demand from the International and the Middle East investors.
His Excellency Mohamed Abdalla, CEO of Sharjah Islamic Bankthanked all the investors for their vote of confidence in the bank and investing in the sukuk. He said "This is our ninth foray in the international capital markets, having issued a sukuk as early as 2006. The bank remains strong under prudent management and that reflects in the ratings and pricing of our transactions."
Sharjah Islamic Bank delegation was led by HE Ahmed Saad, the Deputy CEO along with Mr. Saeed Al Amiri, Head of Investments, Treasury and Financial Institutions and Mr. Ali Wahab, Head of Investment Banking. While presenting to international investors, HE Ahmed Saad highlighted the strengths of the UAE Banking system in general and SIB in particular. According to HE Ahmed Saad, "The Sukuk's diversegeographical distribution was a key target of the issue. We were able to allocate diversely with Middle East getting 80% while Asia and Europe getting 13%, 7% respectively. The interest in middle eastern credit story in general and Sharjah Islamic Bank in particular was very strong and heartening for us despite a volatile market background.”
The SIB was advised by ENBD Capital, HSBC and Standard Chartered as Joint Global Coordinators with Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, Bank ABC, Dubai Islamic Bank, ENBD Capital, First Abu Dhabi Bank, HSBC, Mashreq, QNB Capital and Standard Chartered Bank acting as Bookrunners.
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