Banking & Finance
Oman to open subscriptions for first sovereign sukuk
Oman will open subscriptions on Thursday for its first sovereign issue of Islamic bonds, taking a major step to develop its Islamic finance industry and giving the government a fresh channel to raise money.

Oman will open subscriptions on Thursday for its first sovereign issue of Islamic bonds, taking a major step to develop its Islamic finance industry and giving the government a fresh channel to raise money.
Subscriptions to the rial-denominated sukuk will run until Oct. 22, the Ministry of Finance said in an emailed statement on Sunday. The sukuk will have a tenor of five years, with their profit rate set through an auction, and use the ijara structure, a common lease-based Islamic format.
The issue will be open to sophisticated investors – usually taken to mean fund managers, banks and other institutions, as well as wealthy individuals – with a minimum subscription of 500,000 rials ($1.3 million), the ministry added.
The size of the issue will be decided on completion of a book-building exercise. Previously, Omani officials had said they expected the issue to be 200 million rials.
The issue is important for Oman’s fledgling Islamic finance industry because it will give sharia-compliant banks, insurance firms and funds a badly needed tool to manage their money more efficiently, which could help them to become more profitable.
Oman launched Islamic finance, which follows religious rules such as a ban on interest payments, later than other Gulf Arab countries, granting licences to two sharia-compliant banks, Al Izz Islamic and Bank Nizwa, in 2013.
There are also half a dozen Islamic windows of conventional institutions; together, the banks and windows account for about 5 percent of the country’s total banking assets.
The sovereign sukuk, which will be listed on the Muscat Securities Market, may provide a benchmark which encourages private Omani companies to begin issuing Islamic bonds.
It also allows the government to begin tapping a new source of funding at a time when low oil prices are slashing its export revenues and hurting its finances. The government has boosted domestic sales of conventional bonds this year to cover a big budget deficit.
Bank Muscat, its Islamic window Meethaq and Standard Chartered are lead-managing the sukuk sale.
-
Banking & Finance2 weeks ago
Oman Arab Bank Announces Increase of Authorised Capital to RO500mn and Paid‑In Capital Boost of RO50mn
-
Renewables2 months ago
Jindal Renewables and OQ Alternative Energy Sign Joint Development Agreement to Advance Integrated Renewable Power Projects in Oman
-
Bahrain1 week ago
SPIEF 2025 focused on global and regional economic processes, market transformation, new tech, investment climate, financial policy and people
-
Alamaliktistaad Magazines1 month ago
Al-Iktisaad, May 25
-
OER Magazines1 month ago
OER, May 2025
-
Leaders Speak2 months ago
OERLive SPOTLIGHT: Oman Sustainability Week 2025 and Oman Petroleum & Energy Show
-
Business2 months ago
St. Petersburg International Economic Forum 2025 unveils its Business Programme
-
Banking & Finance1 month ago
Central Bank of Oman Issues Regulatory Framework for Digital Banks
You must be logged in to post a comment Login