Saudi sovereign wealth fund knocks on debt market doors for second time this year with sukuk offering

Saudi sovereign wealth fund knocks on debt market doors for second time this year with sukuk offering
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Updated 26 February 2024
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Saudi sovereign wealth fund knocks on debt market doors for second time this year with sukuk offering

Saudi sovereign wealth fund knocks on debt market doors for second time this year with sukuk offering

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund plans to tap the debt market for the second time this year with a seven-year dollar-denominated sukuk, a document showed on Monday, Reuters reported.

According to the document, the Kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, which manages more than $700 billion in assets, tasked Goldman Sachs, HSBC and Standard Chartered to arrange meetings with investors.

PIF, along with the government of Saudi Arabia, last month joined a wave of emerging market issuers seeking to take advantage of rising demand for debt before central banks are expected to lower interest rates later this year.

It raised $5 billion through the sale of a triple-tranche conventional bond in January and $3.5 billion from a sukuk deal in October. A sukuk is a financial offering that complies with Islamic religious rules regarding interest.

PIF accounted for about a quarter of the $124 billion spent by sovereign wealth funds worldwide last year, according to a report in January from industry specialist Global SWF.

The fund plans to ramp up its deployment of capital to $70 billion a year after 2025, from $40 billion to $50 billion currently, PIF Gov. Yasir Al-Rumayyan said last week in Miami.