Research Briefing | Jun 14, 2021

MENA | Bond sales; Bahrain in lockdown and Abu Dhabi invests

Bond sales; Bahrain in lockdown and Abu Dhabi invests

A series of bond sales across the GCC have taken place. Saudi Aramco is
selling its first dollar-dominated Islamic bonds in three tranches. The return to the market signals an attempt to raise funds to cover its cash commitment to a promised $75 billion in dividends after an oil-price driven surge in profits in the first quarter of the year. Elsewhere, Oman has raised $1.75 billion, a few months after raising $3.25 billion in January.

What you will learn:

  • Despite high vaccination rates, coronavirus cases in Bahrain continue to climb, forcing authorities to extend a strict lockdown by an additional two weeks in an attempt to curb the spread of the virus. Restaurants and cafes have shut for inperson dining and malls and other commercial activities remain closed.
  • As the UAE moves away from coronavirus restrictions, Abu Dhabi has
    announced plans to further diversify away from its heavy dependence on the oil sector, pledging an addition $6 billion to cultural and creative sector on top of $2.3 billion previously announced.
  • In a return to global capital markets, Saudi Aramco is selling around $6 billion in dollardenominated Islamic debt – its first offering since November when it raised $8 billion.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Services

Post

South Africa: Elections 2024 | ‘ANC & EFF’ election scenario

This briefing sets out the second of our four scenarios for South Africa's general election: the ANC wins only 40% of the vote and makes a coalition deal with the radical leftists of the EFF.

Find Out More

Post

Relative return index signals improving CRE attractiveness

Our latest global relative return index (RRI) signals that risk-adjusted investment opportunities in commercial real estate (CRE) should start to emerge this year before becoming more widespread in 2025. At this point, our baseline expected returns move higher than required returns, pushing the global all-property index above the 50 mark.

Find Out More