Login    
Saturday, Nov 21, 2009 Arabic
 GulfBase GCC Cap Indices
 Commodities
 Crude Oil
 Petrochemicals
 Precious Metals
 Subscribe Now
     • Free Membership
     • Premium Membership
 Research Reports  
GCC Stock Markets - Daily
Daily Market Review - Bahrain Stock Exchange
Daily Market Review - Dubai Financial Market
Daily Market Review - Abu Dhabi Stock Exchange
Daily Market Review - Kuwait Stock Exchange
more ... 
 Quick Links  
GCC Economy
GCC Industry Leaders
Earning Watch
Top Performing Funds
Market Data Screener
Stock Screener
Recommendations
Corporate Announcement
IPO Central
Technical Analysis
Download Price Data
Market Reports
Periodical Reports
My Market Watch
My Portfolio
GCC Brokers
RSS Channels
Q & A
Quick Start Guide
Sitemap
Most Viewed News
 •  Gulf monetary union well on track: Saudi
 •  Emaar India Unit Plans to Sell Shares: Alabbar
 •  Palestine Telecom cancels Zain deal
 •  Bahrain’s inflation remains flat in October
 •  Subscription of GSM services in Oman on the rise
 •  Qatar’s $7bn bond likely to trigger more debt issues
 Most Viewed Companies
TickerPriceVolume
APPC 24.90331,205
CHEMANOL 16.001,224,141
ATHEEB 17.20959,318
GFH 0.36316,900
QGTS 23.902,416,088
EYAS 310.00 
SECO 11.00980,537
Dollar recovery pushes up rates  Discuss




29/Oct/2009
Wayne Arnold - The National

The window for Dubai to climb back into the global credit markets is open, but it is may not be open very wide for very long.

Dubai managed to sell slightly more than US$1.9 billion (Dh6.97bn) in Islamic bonds, or sukuk, yesterday, drawing a surplus of orders by offering investors a risk premium to help it re-enter the bond market for the first time in more than a year.

The sukuk are part of a new, $6.5bn bond programme designed to help Dubai refinance an estimated $85bn in debt owed by the Government and the companies it controls. The new bonds come on top of $10bn Dubai has already borrowed from the Central Bank and another $10bn it hopes to borrow before the end of the year.

The money will go towards making about $6.8bn in loan payments before the end of this year and another $10.1bn next year.

Dubai is looking to sell up to $4bn in conventional bonds and $2.5bn of Islamic bonds so this week’s sale is only the first salvo. By issuing the sukuk before the conventional bonds, Dubai may have been hoping to tap pent-up demand for Sharia-compliant securities, of which there has been a paucity so far this year even as bond issuance has boomed.

But Dubai’s sale appears to have run into a bottleneck of issuance by similarly eager borrowers that helped push rates up this week. Worse, it comes during a slight recovery in the dollar as fresh concerns arise about the global recovery that are nudging yields on US treasuries higher, too.

For more on this:

http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091028/BUSINESS/710289846/1058&template=columnists

 

GulfBase GCC Index
Search By



Advanced Search
Send this page to a friend
Global Indices
Asia Europe Americas
NIKKEI 225 9,497.68 -0.54%
Hang Seng 22,455.84 -0.83%
Shanghai Composite 3,308.35 -0.37%
BSE SENSEX 17,021.85 1.49%
Seoul Composite 1,620.60 0.00%
Straits Times 2,761.54 0.02%
KLCI 1,274.36 -0.18%
FTSE 100 5,251.41 -0.31%
DAX 5,663.15 -0.68%
CAC 40 3,729.36 -0.82%
SMI 6,277.50 -0.15%
IGBM 1,223.99 -1.08%
DJIA 10,318.16 -0.14%
S&P 500 1,091.38 -0.32%
NASDAQ 2,146.04 -0.50%
IPC 30,666.51 -0.49%
Bovespa 66,327.28 -0.28%
TSX 11,579.33 -0.18%
VIX 22.19 -1.94%
All data at market close
 Poll

Copyright © 2001 - 2009, K. Zughaibi & B. Kabbani General Partnership. All Rights Reserved, GulfBase.com
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Advertise with us | Contact us | Sitemap
Screen is optimized for viewing at 1024 x 768 or higher, using Smaller text size