Saudi poised to sell record $17.5b sovereign bonds

Business Wednesday 19/October/2016 17:15 PM
By: Times News Service
Saudi poised to sell record $17.5b sovereign bonds

Riyadh: Saudi Arabia is planning to raise as much as $17.5 billion in the biggest bond sale ever from an emerging-market nation, according to two people with knowledge of the offering, as it seeks to shore up finances battered by the slide in oil.
The government aims to sell dollar-denominated bonds due in five years yielding about 140 basis points more than similar-maturity United States Treasuries, 10-year notes at a spread of about 170 basis points and 30-year securities at 215 basis points, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private.
The sale would eclipse Argentina’s $16.5 billion offering in April as the largest from a developing nation, underlining the deepening strain on an oil-dependent country that has eschewed international debt markets until now. The nation clocked up a budget shortfall of $97 billion last year, equal to 15 per cent of its gross domestic product, prompting the government this year to cut subsidies, wages and spending.
“Boom, they went full scale,” said Angelo Rossetto, a trader at GMSA Investments in London, who is bidding for the bonds. They “probably want to take advantage of the window before elections and possible rate increase. Print a lot now and then see what unfolds,” he said.
The offering followed a week of presentations to prospective buyers, taking in London, Los Angeles, Boston and New York, at which officials emphasised the kingdom’s efforts to diversify the $650 billion economy away from oil.
Participants such as Gregory Saichin, chief investment officer for emerging-market bonds at Allianz Global Investors in London, were concerned the Saudi delegation avoided discussion of crude prices. Others simply decided the bonds were being touted at too high a price.
“I imagine they have enough sovereign wealth fund and cross-over investors sewn up to justify the expensive pricing,” Edwin Gutierrez, the head of emerging-market sovereign debt at Aberdeen Asset Management in London, which oversees more than $400 billion, said before the final pricing Wednesday. “I can find cheaper bonds elsewhere.”
Sales spree
Saudi Arabia had been expected to raise about $10 billion in the sale, people familiar with the matter said last month. Citigroup, HSBC and JPMorgan Chase were joint global coordinators for the deal. Bank of China, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial and NCB Capital also helped manage the issue.