Khaled Al-Aboodi, chief executive of
Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD),
says Nigeria and Ivory Coast are looking to emulate Senegal’s successful
move into the market for Islamic bonds.
Despite strong growth in the Middle East
and Southeast Asia, Islamic finance has lagged in Africa, home to a
quarter of the world’s Muslims, presenting an opportunity for ICD, the
private sector arm of the Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank .
“We are actually exploring with Nigeria
and Ivory Coast,” said Khaled Al-Aboodi said on the sidelines of the
Africa CEO Forum in Geneva. “The issuance by Senegal has opened up the
whole region. We will … hopefully support at least two countries in 2015
to issue a sukuk.”
Nigeria’s neighbour Niger has signed up
for a sukuk programme worth 150 billion CFA francs ($260 million),
although the timing has yet to be determined.
“Our preference and I think the
government’s intention is to try to do this before the end of the year,”
Al-Aboodi said, adding that the tenor depended on its structure and
investor appetite.
Niger’s sukuk may broaden the market
further as it is a project-financing format known as istisna, whereas
Senegal used a sale-and-lease-back structure known as ijara.
More sovereign sukuk could encourage
companies to use Islamic finance too, Al-Aboodi said, although only
deals of $200 million or more were economically viable. South Africa
also issued a sovereign sukuk last year, a $500 million, five-year bond.
ICD is planning its own sukuk this year
as part of its $1.2 billion borrowing programme and is obtaining a
second credit rating after Fitch Ratings gave it an AA rating in
November. [ID: nL6N0TG1S9]
“We will be announcing our MTN
(medium-term notes) programme for this, because we want to issue not
just one time, because we will have to come back again to the market.”
ICD is expanding in Africa via its
Tamweel Africa Holdings subsidiary, which has stakes in Islamic banks in
Senegal, Niger, Guinea and Mauritania, and plans to set up new banks
elsewhere.
“The board approved to expand to Mali
and Benin, so we are working now to go and establish this, and Ivory
Coast may be coming as well,” Al-Aboodi said.
Another avenue of expansion is a
partnership with Cairo-based African Export-Import Bank, which could
provide financing guarantees to Islamic banks and support new sectors
like renewable energy, he said.
ICD also plans to set up a small- and medium-sized enterprise investment fund and a regional leasing company.
Al-Aboodi said it is also trying to
expand its footprint with deals in Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad, but
didn’t specify what kind of deals, and may broaden out into south and
eastern Africa.
No comments:
Post a Comment