THE global sukuk or Islamic bond market is recovering as investor confidence returns, and issuance this year will reach $16 billion, with Malaysia taking the lions share, the head of CIMB Islamic said.Badlisyah Abdul Ghani of Malaysias CIMB Islamic, the worlds leading sukuk arranger in the year to August, told Reuters the Sukuk market will grow slightly in 2009, after being hit by the liquidity drought and market crash of 2008.
Abdul Ghani said CIMB Islamic, part of CIMB Group Holdings Berhad, was on course to issue 19 sukuk by the end of the year and it had a very healthy pipeline for 2010. Sukuk issuance fell 56 percent in 2008 to $14.9 billion, ratings agency Standard & Poors says. Sukuk are underpinned by tangible assets and do not pay interest. Instead investors receive periodic returns from the assets that underpin the bond.
Abdul Ghani said sukuk was recovering in line with a global market rally but said buyers were more cautious about sukuk issued by companies in the Gulf, where confidence has been rocked by a scandal involving Saad, one of Saudi Arabias biggest private firms.
CIMB invested in Saads $650 million Golden Belt Sukuk. Saad is restructuring its debt, and in August the sukuks trustee, Citi, asked investors to vote on its dissolution. Abdul Ghani said CIMBs investment was a couple of million dollars and it would be very aggressive in recovering it.
In the Middle East, corporate conventional bonds have outpaced Islamic bonds in the year to June for the first time in three years, according to law firm Trowers and Hamlins.
Abdul Ghani said Malaysia, the worlds most developed sukuk market, will account for more than half of issuance in 2009.
Abdul Ghani said CIMB Islamic was in talks with European banks to deal Islamic-complaint money market transactions, which Islamic financiers hope will be a major growth area.
Last week, UK Islamic bank Gatehouse, a unit of Kuwaits The Securities House KSCC , transacted the first cross-border deal using Bursa Malaysias commodity trading platform Suq Al-Sila. ¬