News Coverage
Worst Malaysia sukuk drought since ’10 seen easing this quarter
Gulf Times, 27 October 2015
Traffic moves along a highway in Kuala Lumpur (file). Prime Minister Najib Razak is farming out infrastructure projects to the private sector as well as government-linked companies. He is seeking to transform Malaysia into a developed economy by 2020 and announced last October that the nation will start work on projects valued at 75bn ringgit this year.
Bloomberg
Kuala Lumpur
Malaysian companies building railways and power plants under Prime Minister Najib Razak’s $444bn development programme will help revive sukuk sales from the slowest quarter since 2010, said AmInvestment Bank Bhd.
Corporate issuance could rise to as much as 60bn ringgit ($13.6bn) for the full year, said Mohd Effendi Abdullah, head of Islamic markets at Kuala Lumpur-based AmInvestment Bank, after sales slumped to 7.2bn ringgit in the third quarter. While the forecast would mark a pickup from the 31.5bn ringgit sold so far this year, offerings would still remain below levels for the past three.
More Shariah-compliant bond sales are likely to be announced once the US goes ahead with an expected interest- rate increase, removing an uncertainty that’s stifled issuance, said Mohd Effendi. DanaInfra Nasional Bhd, which is financing a new subway system in Kuala Lumpur, is due to announce a 40bn ringgit programme in the fourth quarter, according to people familiar with the matter.
“The sukuk pipeline looks better now,” said Mohd Effendi at Malaysia’s third-biggest Islamic bond arranger of 2014. “If demand is healthy, this could encourage more issuers to tap the market.”
Islamic bond sales in the world’s biggest market for the debt dropped 56% in the third quarter from the previous three months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Issuance in the first nine months of 2015 declined 37% from a year earlier. Offerings totalled 65.1bn ringgit last year.
“It’s a challenging time for arrangers and issuers,” said Mohamed Azahari Kamil, Kuala Lumpur-based chief executive officer of Asian Finance Bank Bhd, the Malaysian unit of Qatar Islamic Bank. “So long as the ongoing uncertainty in the local and global markets persists, sukuk sales are unlikely to pick up substantially.”
The US refrained from increasing interest rates in September, keeping markets in limbo as to when it will tighten monetary policy. Fed officials have indicated they may make a move at either one of this year’s two remaining meetings, in October and December.
Prospects of higher US interest rates have drained capital from emerging markets and pushed up borrowing costs for bond issuers. In Malaysia, yields on top-rated, 10-year conventional corporate notes climbed 25 basis points to a four- year high of 4.87% in the third quarter, a central bank index shows. That was the biggest three-month increase since March 2014.
AmInvestment’s Mohd Effendi said sukuk issuers that need funds will still go ahead with sales even if market conditions are tough because they can structure longer-maturity debt to appeal to pension funds and insurers.
Prime Minister Najib is farming out infrastructure projects to the private sector as well as government-linked companies. He is seeking to transform Malaysia into a developed economy by 2020 and announced last October that the nation will start work on projects valued at 75bn ringgit this year.
(Web source: http://www.gulf-times.com/story/460620/Worst-Malaysia-sukuk-drought-since-10-seen-easing-)
