17/08/2015 08:29 AST

Turmoil in the Saudi Arabian money markets suggests that financing the government's budget deficit in an era of cheap oil may not be smooth as banks worry about the risk of a liquidity squeeze.

The government sold SAR20 billion ($5.3 billion) of riyal bonds to banks last Tuesday to help cover a huge deficit caused by low oil prices. It was only the second sovereign bond issue since 2007; the first, placed with quasi-sovereign institutions, occurred in July.

Cash-rich Saudi banks easily absorbed last week's issue, but money market moves show concern about their ability to absorb the multi-year series of issues that may become necessary if oil prices remain low.

Adding to the jitters is officials' secrecy about their bond plans. Authorities have privately told banks no more than 40 percent of the deficit will be financed with bonds; the rest will be covered by running down fiscal reserves.

But authorities have not released a bond issuance calendar or detailed figures for the government's borrowing requirement.

This has left banks in the dark about how many more bonds they might be asked to buy in coming months and years.

Bankers, therefore, are scrambling to hedge against the risk of a liquidity crunch a year or two from now, causing the Saudi money curve to steepen even as the US curve flattens in anticipation of an interest rate rise this year - an unusual divergence.

The cost of two-year riyal deposits in the interbank market shot up to 1.53 per cent last week from as low as 1.05 per cent six weeks earlier. The cost of swapping fixed for floating payments with a one-year interest rate swap jumped 30 basis points from July.

US RATE PRESSURE

One-year US dollar/Saudi riyal forwards hit 290 points, their highest since March 2003. For most of 2015 they were between zero and 100 points.

The prospect of a US rate rise has added to upward pressure on Saudi market rates, said Anita Yadav, head of fixed income research at Emirates NBD, Dubai's biggest bank.

"I expect riyal spreads to go higher from here as liquidity in the system becomes tight due to lower oil revenue-related deposits, large local currency bond issuance by the Saudi government and increased demand for hedging from the corporates as US rates begin to rise."

With Brent oil priced at about $50 a barrel, Riyadh is running an annual state budget deficit estimated by analysts at between $130 billion and $150 billion.

The 40 per cent issuance ceiling suggests that Riyadh may sell SAR15 billion ($3.9 billion) to SAR20 billion ($5.3 billion) of bonds each month. In June commercial banks had SAR266 billion ($70.8 billion) in central bank bills and non-statutory central bank deposits, suggesting they could buy bonds for a year without cutting loans to private sector companies.

"Given the government's stated intention to finance 40 per cent of the deficit through issuances, we believe the banks in the kingdom have more than ample liquidity to support this endeavour," said Anirban Kundu, head of investment advisory services at Saudi Fransi Capital.

The prospect worrying bankers, however, is that unless oil prices rise sharply or the government commits to shrinking its deficit with spending cuts, which it has shown little sign of doing, heavy bond sales may continue indefinitely.

Some bankers think authorities may be reluctant to issue a public issuance calendar because, with oil prices volatile and long-term government spending plans uncertain, they have little clear idea of how many bonds they will ultimately have to sell.

DOLLAR PEG

Bankers said that the jump in dollar/riyal forwards was mostly because of changing interest rate differentials, but some attributed it partly to concern that if cheap oil forces Riyadh to keep drawing down its foreign reserves, it might eventually have to a


Trade Arabia

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
SAMBA 26.98 1,138,683
JARIR 177.89 111,251
STC 83.41 257,644
DARALARKAN 13.47 74,648,349
US Dollar 1.00
Saudi Riyal 3.75
Derham Emirati 3.67
Qatari Riyal 3.65
Kuwaiti Dinar 0.30
Bahraini Dinar 0.38
Omani Riyal 0.39
Euro 0.81
British Pound 0.71
Japanese Yen 104.70
Oman can defend its currency peg, central bank governor says

05/04/2018

Oman has the means to maintain its currency peg and has no plans to change it even though the decline in oil prices has hurt its finances, central bank Governor Tahir Al Amri said.

Oman’s g

Gulf News

China’s yuan to post biggest quarterly rise against dollar in a decade

02/04/2018

China’s yuan firmed against the dollar on Friday and is set to post its biggest quarterly gain in a decade, as the country attracts capital inflows and US trade frictions bolstered expectations of a

Gulf News

US dollar share of global currency reserves hits 4-year low — IMF

01/04/2018

The US dollar’s share of currency reserves reported to the International Monetary Fund declined in the final quarter of 2017 to a four-year low, as other currencies’ shares of reserves grew, data rel

Gulf News

US dollar weighed down by trade and interest rate policies

29/03/2018

The US Dollar Index, a measure of the value of the US dollar against a basket of currencies, teetered and dropped to quarterly lows in March, which also happen to be the lowest the index has been sin

The National

Turkish lira weakens beyond 4 against dollar as economy worries weigh

29/03/2018

Turkey’s lira weakened beyond the psychologically important level of 4.0 to the US dollar yesterday, bringing it close to a record low, as concerns about double-digit inflation, and politics, continu

Gulf Times