Issuance of Islamic bonds to drop sharply in 2015: S&P
The Islamic sukuk or bond market is set to drop sharply this year after Malaysia's central bank, one of the largest global issuers, stopped doing so, Standard & Poor's said Tuesday.
"In the first half of 2015, the Central Bank of Malaysia's pullback saw total sukuk issuance drop by 42.5 percent compared with the same period a year earlier," said S&P Global Head of Islamic Finance Mohamed Damak.
The country's central bank alone issued $45 billion of sukuk in 2014 out of a total issuance of $116.4 billion, he said.
The drop in sukuk comes after years of double-digit growth in the Islamic sharia-compliant bonds.
S&P said in a report that part of the reason behind the bank's decision was that its sukuk were subscribed to by a broad array of investors, preventing them from reaching their intended end-users, primarily Malaysian Islamic banks.
As a result, the central bank decided to switch to other instruments restricted to banks, it said.
Comments