After its latest successful issuance of sovereign Islamic bonds, or sukuk, the Egyptian government has shifted its focus to financial planning for the next two years. These plans are expected to factor in the economic situation in Egypt and abroad, especially as the war rages on between Russia and Ukraine.
Despite a relatively high yield of 11%, the Ministry of Finance opted for this new type of financing to further the government’s efforts to diversify its sources of debt, bonds, and treasury bonds denominated in either local or foreign currency, which should help unlock new and diversified investor bases and secure budget needs.
On its part, the private sector, awaits the listing of 32 state-owned enterprises as promised in the State Ownership Policy Document. The policy will not only further strengthen the private sector, but also support public-private partnerships and competitive neutrality in the Egyptian economy.
Egypt’s $1.5 billion Sharia-compliant debt issuance was oversubscribed more than fourfold, peaking at $6.1 billion. The yield of the bonds was compressed to 11% due to high demand and appetite, with a flurry of over 250 investors from various global capital markets subscribing to the offering.
The issuance is part of a $5 billion three-year sukuk programme that the government set up last month.
Egypt’s last sale on the global bond market three years ago had a yield of 5.8%, but experts say the sukuk yield pricing is justified by the spike in the USD interest rate from 1% to 4.5%.
Samurai and Panda bonds
Mohamed Abu Basha, lead economist at EFG Hermes, says that the government’s issuance of sovereign sukuk was the fastest solution to repay a Eurobond of $1.25 billion that had reached maturity on the day of the offering, explaining the timing of its issuance.
Abu Basha tells Al Majalla that the country is working to diversify its sources of funding. After noticing significant appetite when it offered yen-denominated, or samurai, bonds equivalent to $500 million last year for this purpose, Egypt now plans to offer yuan-denominated or panda bonds in the Chinese market during the current fiscal year, also equivalent to $500 million.