Global outstanding sukuk cross $800bn for first time: Fitch Ratings

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According to the report, sukuk issuances are expected to range between US$160-170 billion in 2024, boosting sector assets' growth in 2024.
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  • Most Fitch-rated sukuk are senior unsecured obligations of the issuer and rank equally with other senior unsecured obligations, including bonds.
  • Most Fitch-rated sukuk continued to be investment-grade at 79%, with 12.6% of issuers having a Positive Outlook, and 77.5% having a Stable Outlook in Q2.

Dubai, UAE — The pricing of most sukuk and comparable bonds continued to be similar and highly correlated in the first half of 2023, with this trend likely to persist, Fitch Ratings said Wednesday.

This is despite macro developments such as rising interest rates and volatile oil prices and complexities in sukuk structures linked to sharia compliance.

Global outstanding sukuk volumes expanded 10 percent year-on-year (yoy) and for the first time crossed $800 billion, with sovereigns being the key issuers.

Most Fitch-rated sukuk are senior unsecured obligations of the issuer and rank equally with other senior unsecured obligations, including bonds.

Fitch analyzed the pricing of 38 sukuk and comparable bonds issued by the same obligors from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Indonesia and Turkiye (based on yield-to-maturity) with more than 60 percent being sovereign issuance.

Between 2018 and 1H23, sukuk and bonds had a high pricing correlation of 0.95 (out of 1) on average and low average spreads between them. The measures are a good gauge of investors’ credit risk perception for sukuk and bonds, Fitch Ratings said.

Fitch also noticed periods of global volatility or sukuk-specific developments where the correlation between sukuk and bond yields fell and average spreads expanded, albeit temporarily. This includes during the pandemic in 2020 where the liquidity of Islamic banks was affected for few months, and during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and the subsequent effect on global debt capital markets.

Spread differentials could also be explained by the buy-and-hold nature of most sukuk’s Islamic investors, mainly Islamic banks, with secondary-market liquidity of sukuk tending to be limited compared with bonds.

There remains a dearth of sukuk and comparable bonds in the market based on payment rank, date of issuance and maturity by the same issuer and in the same currency denomination.

As of H1, a US Dollar Sukuk Market Index analyzed by Fitch increased 2.7 percent yoy, while a broad Emerging Markets Bond Index expanded 5.8 percent in the same period. However, a MENA Sukuk Index analyzed by Fitch was up 1.3 percent yoy, while MENA Bond Index was up 0.03 percent only.

Issuing sukuk does not always entail a pricing advantage for issuers compared with bond issuance, with pricing swinging in both directions. Nevertheless, sukuk generally have a more diverse investor pool, in key issuing markets including Islamic investors from mainly the GCC and other key Islamic finance markets.

Sukuk are also a sizable part of emerging-market debt issuance (excluding China), with its share reaching 6 percent in 1H23 (compared to 6.6 percent in 2022).

Key sukuk-issuing jurisdictions of the GCC, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Turkiye are sizeable emerging markets, with their bonds and sukuk forming 20.5 percent of all emerging-market debt issuance (excluding China) in 1H23.

In the second quarter sukuk issuance from the core markets of the GCC, Malaysia, Indonesia, Turkiye and Pakistan (including multi-laterals) expanded 10 percent qoq to $49.1 billion, while bond issuance fell 4.8 percent.

Most Fitch-rated sukuk continued to be investment-grade at 79 percent, with 12.6 percent of issuers having a Positive Outlook, and 77.5 percent having a Stable Outlook at second quarter. Sukuk defaults continue to be low at only 0.21 percent of all issued sukuk.

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