Riyadh: Saudi Arabia plans to tap international debt markets for the first time as early as September and set up a bond program amid an unprecedented economic shakeup.
The kingdom will prepare for a sale and set up a two or three-year program once it concludes a syndicated loan deal, Minister of State Mohammad Bin Abdul Malik Al Shaikh said during a meeting between Bloomberg News and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman and some of his top aides in Riyadh. The government is in talks with banks to raise about $10 billion through a syndicated loan, two people familiar with the matter said this year. Al Shaikh declined to confirm the details.
While the timing of the bond sale depends on market conditions, Al Shaikh hopes “to work with our financial institutions and our lawyers to prepare ourselves to tap into the markets as early as September,” he said. “We may have our inaugural deal as a one-off deal, but then start a program after that. Ultimately by 2017, we will have a program to borrow internationally.”
The kingdom has been financing its budget deficit by selling local debt and drawing down on foreign reserves. The central bank’s net foreign assets have tumbled by more than 500 billion riyals ($133 billion, Dh488.1 billion) since the start of 2015 to 2.19 trillion riyals in February. The plunge in oil prices prompted Standard & Poor’s to cut the kingdom’s credit worthiness twice in less than six months to A-, four levels above junk. The government plans to balance its budget by 2020.
Saudi Arabia is planning the debt sale even though it doesn’t need the cash, Al Shaikh said. “We want to prepare ourselves for the future to make sure that when we actually go to the markets and we really need the money, the markets, the investors and the financial institutions already know us,” he said.
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