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Friday, 30 May 2025

#Saudi Aramco could tap debt markets again after $5 billion bond sale | Reuters

Saudi Aramco could tap debt markets again after $5 billion bond sale | Reuters

Saudi Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab has published a new prospectus for its issuance programme of Islamic bonds or sukuk, signalling the state oil major may soon tap the debt markets again after it raised $5 billion from a three-part bond sale this week.

The prospectus, submitted to the London Stock Exchange where the sukuk would be listed, is dated May 30. Aramco has a year to issue sukuk under its terms.

Aramco earlier this week raised $5 billion from a sale of conventional bonds. The borrowing comes after economic uncertainty and rising supply hit crude markets, denting the top oil exporter's profits.

"Aramco is likely looking to take advantage of a window of relative market calm to issue debt again," said Zeina Rizk, co-head of fixed income at Amwal Capital Partners.

Aramco in March said it expected to slash its dividend this year by nearly a third as profits and free cash flow decline.

Reuters reported last week that Aramco is exploring potential asset sales to free up funds as it pursues international expansion and weathers lower crude prices.

The Saudi government is heavily reliant on generous payouts from Aramco, its longtime cash cow, also including royalties and taxes. Oil receipts made up 62% of state revenue last year.

The government does not disclose at which crude price its books are balanced. The IMF estimates it needs oil at over $90 a barrel for a balanced budget. Brent crude was trading around $64.4 on Friday.

Citi, HSBC and JPMorgan are the arrangers of the sukuk programme and are joined as dealers by First Abu Dhabi Bank, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, SNB Capital and Standard Chartered.

#UAE markets fall but #Dubai index ends May at multi-year high | Reuters

UAE markets fall but Dubai index ends May at multi-year high | Reuters


Dubai's main share index ended May at its highest level since July 2008, even as global trade uncertainty and concern over an economic slowdown weighed on sentiment in Friday's session.

Oil prices - a catalyst for Gulf markets - were flat on Friday and heading for a second consecutive weekly loss, as investors weigh a potentially larger OPEC+ output hike for July, and uncertainty spreads around U.S. tariff policy after the latest courtroom twist.

United Arab Emirates' markets settled lower on Friday, with Dubai's index (.DFMGI), opens new tab retreating 0.22% and Abu Dhabi's benchmark index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab ending 0.62% lower, although the market ended the month at its highest level since March 2024.

Abu Dhabi's index also recorded a seventh consecutive weekly session of gains.

Ratings agency Fitch warned on Thursday that Dubai real estate prices are likely to face a double-digit fall in the second half of the year and in 2026.

The Gulf's business and tourism hub, Dubai has experienced a post-pandemic property boom, fuelled by foreign investment and government-led residency reforms, which have helped send real estate prices soaring.

Real estate development company Emaar Properties (EMAR.DU), opens new tab fell 1.13% on Friday. Healthcare and education investment company Amanat Holding (AMANT.DU), opens new tab was the biggest loser on the index, down 2.78%.

All other Gulf markets are closed on Friday.