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Doha Bank CEO Says Saudi Arabia ‘Missed the Boat’ on Bond

Oct 4, 2016, 11:54 AM
News ID: 4234

EghtesadOnline: Saudi Arabia “missed the boat” by not selling its first international bond earlier to narrow a budget deficit caused by the slump in oil prices, Doha Bank Chief Executive Officer Raghavan Seetharaman said.

“They have been pronouncing for borrowing for nine months, and they have still not executed, I’m surprised,” Seetharaman said Tuesday in an interview on Bloomberg Markets Middle East. “They should have gone and borrowed when they knew they would have a budget deficit.”

The kingdom had planned to tap international debt markets as early as September, Minister of State Mohammed bin Abdulmalik Al-Sheikh said during a meeting between Bloomberg News and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in April. U.S. legislation that allows the families of 9/11 victims to sue the Arab country - passed by Congress last week - risks delaying the bond, people with knowledge of the matter said last month, reports Bloomberg.

The Saudi economy is straining, the banking sector is struggling with liquidity pressure and lending has slowed, Seetharaman said. As a result, the kingdom is undertaking austerity measures, including cuts to public-sector pay, that are “not really required,” he said.

Saudi officials haven’t made a decision yet on the timing of the bond and amount they plan to raise, Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf said in a statement to Bloomberg on Sept. 28.

Khalid Al Hussan, CEO of the Saudi Stock Exchange, and Capital Market Authority chairman Mohammed Al-Jadaan are due to meet investors in New York on Tuesday and Wednesday to explain changes to market rulesaimed at attracting more foreign investment. The CMA, as the market regulator is known, has lowered the amount qualified foreign financial institutions must have under management to access the Saudi market and increased the stake they can own in a company.

Representatives from the Ministry of Economy and Planning, the Saudi central bank, and listed companies including Saudi Telecom Co., Saudi Basic Industries Corp., and Samba Financial Group will also be at the meetings organized by JPMorgan Chase & Co.