Dubai: Standard Chartered has sought a full commercial banking licence from the Saudi central bank as the UK lender aims to plug the biggest gap in its growing Gulf Arab business, two sources familiar with the matter said on Sunday.

With multi-billion dollar spending plans to beef up infrastructure, housing and education, Saudi Arabia tops the list of global institutions seeking to tap growth in the Gulf Arab region.

The kingdom is also on the verge of opening up its stock markets to foreign direct investors.

Services

Standard Chartered received a capital markets licence in the kingdom last year and has set up a team on the ground, but a full banking licence would enable the bank to offer a variety of services to the growing Saudi population.

The bank applied for a licence from the central bank more than a year ago but has yet to hear back, one of the sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity as the matter has not been made public yet.

A spokesman for the lender in Dubai declined to comment.

The London-headquartered bank, which makes more than three-quarters of its profit in Asia, posted its ninth consecutive year of record earnings in 2011 on the back of buoyant growth in Hong Kong and Singapore, although rising competition for staff pushed up its wage bill.

Higher revenue

The Saudi banking sector is expected to post higher revenue in 2012, fuelled by higher loan growth and fee income and falling provisions for bad loans, NCB Capital said in a report in December.

Standard Chartered was reportedly considering bids for Royal Bank of Scotland's 40 per cent stake in Saudi Hollandi Bank in 2008.

Foreign banks conducting commercial banking in the kingdom are required to partner with local institutions.

HSBC operates there mainly through its affiliate Saudi British Bank, while France's Credit Agricole partly owns Banque Saudi Fransi.

The bank's private equity arm bought a minority stake in a Saudi Binladin Group unit for $75 million (Dh275.40 million) last year.

Almarai succeeds

Saudi Arabia's Almarai Co, the Gulf's biggest dairy firm by market value, raised 1 billion riyals (Dh978.79 million) through a sukuk, or Islamic bond, issue on Wednesday, the firm said in a bourse statement on Sunday.

"Almarai successfully issued sukuk for 1 billion riyals on March 7. The orders reached 4.7 billion riyals, 4.7 times oversubscribed," the statement said. It is the first time that Almarai has issued public debt, having begun roadshows for the offering last month.