Guide To Structurings Sukuk
Guide To Structurings Sukuk
Guide To Structurings Sukuk
SUKUK AL-IJARA................................................................................................................................ 9
SUKUK AL-WAKALA......................................................................................................................... 12
SUKUK AL-MUDARABA................................................................................................................... 15
SUKUK AL-MUSHARAKA................................................................................................................ 19
SUKUK AL-ISTITHMAR.................................................................................................................... 22
SUKUK AL-MANAFA’A..................................................................................................................... 25
SUKUK AL-ISTISNA’A...................................................................................................................... 28
SUKUK AL-MURABAHA................................................................................................................... 31
CASE STUDY: KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA ACTING THROUGH THE MINISTRY OF FINANCE
TRUST CERTIFICATE ISSUANCE PROGRAMME................................................................................ 32
CONTACTS US................................................................................................................................... 36
The Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) defines sukuk as “certificates
of equal value representing undivided shares in ownership of tangible assets, usufruct and services or (in the
ownership of) the assets of particular projects or special investment activity”. Accordingly, sukuk (while sometimes
referred to as ‘Islamic bonds’ because, like bonds, they are for the most part, tradable securities that can be easily
rated) can be described more accurately as ‘Islamic investment trust certificates’. Whereas bonds evidence a debt
the issuer owes to the bondholders, sukuk certificates evidence the investors’ ownership interest in the underlying
sukuk asset, business, enterprise or project which entitles them to receive a share of the income generated thereby.
The sukuk market has grown rapidly in prominence over the last decade as demand for Islamic financial products
and services has increased. According to Standard and Poor’s, approximately US$77.1 billion of sukuk were
issued by corporations, sovereign entities and government related entities (GREs) in 2016, amounting to more
than double the US$33.6 billion raised in 2006. As lower oil prices continue to reduce the capacity of banks to
finance the billions of dollars of investments and state budgets in the GCC continue to operate at a deficit the
sukuk market is likely to be a key financing source for many corporations for the next few years.
Origins of Sukuk
The origins of sukuk can be traced back to the classical Islamic period (700-1300AD) during which papers
representing financial obligations originating from trade and other commercial activities were issued in conformity
with verse 2:282 of the Holy Qur’an, which encourages fixing contracts in writing:
When ye deal with each other, in transactions involving future obligations in a fixed period of time, reduce them
to writing…It is more just in the sight of God, more suitable as evidence and more convenient to prevent doubts
among yourselves.
During the classical Islamic period, a sakk (singular of sukuk and literally meaning ‘deed’ or ‘instrument’) was
used to describe any document representing financial liability.
The Fiqh Academy’s decisions are highly influential on most Shari’ah-compliant financial institutions and their
Shari’ah committees. This statement in particular, which was seen to approve sukuk trading, was a milestone
in the evolution of Islamic finance, paving the way for the introduction of sukuk as capital markets instruments.
AAOIFI, established in 1991, also plays an important role in harmonising Shari’ah standards relating to finance.
AAOIFI’s Shari’ah Board consists of scholars representing various Muslim countries and it is therefore considered
as an industry-level representative body of Shari’ah scholars.
The first sukuk followed shortly after the Fiqh Academy issued the statement referred to above, with Shell MDS
Sdn Bhd’s 125 million Malaysian Ringgit bai bithaman ajil sukuk issued in 1990. Another 11 years passed before
the issue of the first international US dollar sukuk — the Malaysian plantation company Kumpulan Guthrie Bhd’s
US$150 million sukuk in 2001. The Bahrain Monetary Authority (now the Central Bank of Bahrain) was the first
GRE to issue sukuk in 2001. Several sovereign sukuk followed Malaysia, The State of Qatar, The Republic
of Pakistan and The Emirate of Dubai, which garnered international attention for sukuk and set the stage for
unprecedented international growth. In the Gulf Cooperation Council countries (GCC), for instance, sukuk
issuances almost doubled between 2005 and 2007, increasing from US$25.5 billion to US$48.2 billion.
The sukuk market faltered slightly between late 2007 and early 2009, mainly as a result of two distinct and
separate events: the debate surrounding the Shari’ah-compliance of some sukuk structures and the global
credit crisis, the latter of which resulted in increased borrowing costs and a lack of investor commitment to, and
confidence in, capital market securities.
In late 2007, Sheikh Muhammad Taqi Usmani, chairman of AAOIFI, issued a divisive statement questioning
whether the majority of sukuk instruments existing in the market were in fact compliant with Shari’ah principles.
The ensuing market uncertainty caused by Sheikh Usmani’s statement led AAOIFI’s scholars to hold meetings in
early 2008, following which AAOIFI issued an official statement (the AAOIFI Statement), which sought to provide
some guidance in relation to sukuk structures.
A number of sukuk issuances, particularly those utilising mudaraba and musharaka structures (described below),
had previously been structured to provide the issuer (typically a special purpose vehicle (SPV)) with a purchase
undertaking from the asset originator/obligor, pursuant to which the asset originator/obligor would buy back the
underlying assets from the issuer at the face value of the sukuk on maturity or in the event of a default. However
the AAOIFI Statement clarified that, in its view, this structure was not permissible under Shari’ah and that Shari’ah
required that such undertaking should only require the asset originator/obligor to purchase the underlying
assets based on its net asset value, market value, cash equivalent value or any price agreed upon at the time of
purchase.
The purpose and spirit behind the AAOIFI Statement was to ensure that future sukuk were structured more
closely within the guidelines set out in the AAOIFI Statement and according to the AAOIFI standards themselves.
Although the statement is silent on the subject, many participants in the Islamic finance market believe that
AAOIFI did not intend to retrospectively review those sukuk that had already been issued prior to the AAOIFI
Statement. However, the release of the AAOIFI Statement coincided with the onset of the global credit crunch
and a rapid fall in the number of sukuk issuances. Consequently, the issuance of corporate sukuk in the GCC
countries declined from US$13.5 billion in 2007 to US$5.5 billion in 2008.
Although determining the extent to which the relative decline in sukuk issuance was due to the credit crunch or
to the uncertainty resulting from the AAOIFI Statement remains difficult, the fact that the AAOIFI Statement, while
not binding, suppressed the market for a period of time is clear. The AAOIFI Statement also led many experts to
revisit sukuk structures and to realign them in accordance with the principles prescribed in the AAOIFI Statement,
while at the same time ensuring that sukuk maintained economic characteristics that are equivalent to those of
conventional bonds.
Largely as a result of the AAOIFI Statement, the sukuk market has become increasingly standardised around
three types of sukuk structures: ijara, murabaha and mudaraba-wakala. Nonetheless, this standardization has not
entirely eliminated the element of uncertainty with regard to Shari’ah-compliant structuring.
Unlike conventional bond offerings, sukuk offerings allow issuers to tap into both the growing Islamic investor
community as well as the Western institutional investor community. As the sukuk market has grown, it has
generated increasing interest from some of the most sophisticated European and US institutional investors. Sukuk
offerings are increasingly viewed by some European and US institutional investors as one of the best ways to
diversify their portfolios and achieve higher returns through investment in the fast growing emerging markets of
Southeast Asia, the Middle East and North Africa.
For example approximately 27 percent of the order book for the 30 year tranche of the Saudi Electricity
Company’s (SEC) 2014 sukuk issuance was sold directly to investors based in the US in compliance with Rule
144A of the US Securities Act 1933. The issuance demonstrated that US investors are becoming increasingly
willing to invest in longer term sukuk and are a potentially important investor base for sukuk.
The attractiveness of sukuk as an alternative source of funding now extends far beyond the Muslim world with a
number of landmark issuances having recently been witnessed. In June 2014, the UK became the first country
outside the Islamic world to issue sovereign sukuk. This sukuk issuance attracted orders of more than £2 billion
(US$3.05 billion) from global investors based in the UK, the Middle East and Asia. It was the UK Government’s
desire to secure London as a global hub of Islamic finance which largely drove this. The Government of the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China soon followed suit with an inaugural
sukuk issuance of US$1 billion in September 2014, as did Luxembourg, where a successful inaugural €2 billion
(US$2.54 billion) sukuk was issued in October 2014 (making Luxembourg the first ever European Monetary Union
sovereign to issue sukuk).
Sukuk issuances have also been gaining momentum in Africa, as African nations have turned to sukuk issuances
as a means of sustaining current aggressive economic growth through significant infrastructural development. On
19 September 2014, South Africa issued its inaugural Sukuk which was worth US$5 billion, and was the first dollar
denominated Sukuk in Africa. More recently, the Ivory Coast issued a five year 150 billion CFA Francs (US$2.63
billion) sukuk in December 2015 and Togo issued a 10 year debut sukuk worth CFA 150 billion (US$2.63 billion) in
August 2016.
In the past, the difficulties of structuring sukuk transactions caused many entities that might have otherwise been
logical sukuk issuers to continue to raise funds either through the bond market or through conventional bank
loans provided by European and US banks. However, investors’ increased acceptance of the use of asset light
structures, including the use of intangible assets, such as airtime vouchers, in sukuk structures, has provided
encouragement to other issuers whose principal asset base might not traditionally have been considered
appropriate for use in Islamic structuring. In addition, sukuk pricing was generally less favourable than that
available in the conventional loan and bond markets. However, the credit crunch in Europe and the US, along
with the Eurozone crisis, changed the landscape and caused many companies to increasingly turn to the liquid
sukuk market. Sukuk issuances, particularly by corporate issuers, are therefore likely to further proliferate over
the next two or three years, as innovative structures continue to expand the range of assets that can be used as
underlying sources of profit.
In recent years, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), particularly Dubai, have relied heavily on international funding.
Dubai will spend an estimated US$8.1 billion on roads, an airport, hotels and an extension to its rail network in
preparation for the World Expo 2020, which is likely to result in a surge of sukuk issuances in the Emirate. Even
countries like Qatar, which historically financed much of its growth from gas revenues, are expected to require
significant external funding to finance the air conditioned stadiums and substantial infrastructure needed to stage
the 2022 FIFA World Cup. Standard & Poor’s has estimated the funding needs of GCC countries (Saudi Arabia,
the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman and Bahrain), some of the prime issuing markets for sukuk — at $560 billion
between 2015 and 2019. These financing requirements are significantly larger than they have been historically
and as lower oil prices continue to reduce the capacity of banks to finance the billions of dollars of investments
and state budgets continue to operate at a deficit, issuers are increasingly being drawn to the sukuk market.
In terms of structures being adopted for sukuk issuances, the market has seen a revival of structures designed
to adhere more stringently to the AAOIFI principles and guidance and a shift towards hybrid structures to provide
more flexibility with respect to the types of assets that can be used. These structures, for example, often offer the
additional advantage of allowing a commodity murabaha transaction to form part of the underlying asset base,
up to a pre determined maximum percentage of the total asset value, rather than requiring the market value of
unencumbered tangible assets to equal or exceed, the principal amount of the sukuk being issued.
Dar Al Arkan Real Estate Development Company (Dar Al Arkan), despite having a non investment grade rating,
also successfully issued US$450 million of sukuk in 2010 in a first of its kind high yield sukuk offering. Dar Al
Arkan then successfully tapped the market again in May 2013, November 2013, May 2014 and April 2017, with
significantly lower pricing as international investors became more familiar with both the credit and the sukuk
structure. Following the trend in Malaysia, where the corporate sukuk market has traditionally been fairly strong,
the success of the Majid al Futtaim and Dar Al Arkan offerings may open the market to other privately owned
regional companies in the Middle East.
The increasing breadth and depth of the global sukuk market is also demonstrated by its ability to provide longer
term financing. While most sukuk have a maturity of three or five years, the market has shown a willingness to
fund longer maturities. In April 2013, SEC issued the first international 30 year sukuk. The success and volume
of interest global investors showed in this inaugural 30 year issuance (which was more than five times over
subscribed, with a total order book of over US$5 billion) represented a milestone in the development of Islamic
finance and which SEC followed with another successful international 30 year sukuk issuance in April 2014.
These issuances will no doubt set a benchmark to be replicated by other companies in the Middle East seeking
to obtain longer term financing. In April 2014, the Government of Dubai issued its first ever 15 year sukuk, the
longest tenor for a sukuk issuance by an unrated issuer to date. SEC, as well as other recent issuers of long term
paper, such as the Government of Dubai, opted for dual tranche structures, issuing both short- and long term
tranches in the same offering. The dual tranche structure allows issuers to take advantage of strong regional
demand for the shorter end of the maturity curve as well as the international demand for longer dated paper.
While the sukuk market’s support will continue to come primarily from investors based in the Muslim world, it
is expected that sukuk increasingly will attract the attention of some of the world’s largest and most important
institutional investors in the US, Europe and Asia — who may view sukuk as an effective way of investing in
strong companies located in some of the fastest growing regions of the world. The globalization of the sukuk
market will provide pricing benefits and other advantages to issuers of sukuk.
The expectation is to see more sukuk issuances from multi national corporations, especially those with significant
operations in the Muslim world. For example in November 2009, General Electric, a company ranked in the top
10 of the Fortune 500, became the first global multinational corporation to tap the sukuk market, with a US$500
million issuance to investors in the Middle East, Asia and Europe. The goal was to raise financing from alternative,
non Western sources and to diversify the company’s funding base. It is believed that more and more multi national
companies will follow General Electric’s lead now that the global market conditions have improved.
• Legal Regime: A sukuk often requires the creation of a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) and the transfer of
assets underlying the sukuk by the entity seeking to raise finance (the originator) to such SPV. This may give
rise to additional taxes and stamp duties, putting sukuk at a disadvantage as compared with conventional
bonds. One of the primary reasons that Malaysia continues to account for more than 60 percent of global
sukuk issuances is because its government enacted tax, land transfer and registration laws do not penalise
sukuk issuances in comparison with conventional bond issuances. A number of countries have been eager
to follow suit in their desire to develop an Islamic finance market and have been enacting legislation to
pave the way for sukuk issuances. For example, the UK’s Finance Act 2009, which received royal assent
on 21 July 2009, removed the tax barriers which had made Shari’ah-compliant financial products less
tax-efficient than their conventional counterparts. The enactment of this legislation has furthered the UK’s
ambition to be the leading international centre for Islamic finance. In July 2014, the UK Government issued
a £200 million sovereign sukuk, the first of its kind by a European sovereign state. The Government of the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China followed suit and issued a
US$16 billion sukuk in September 2014, following legislative changes made in July 2013, which provided
a taxation framework for sukuk issuances comparable to issuances of conventional bonds. Japan and
Singapore, amongst others, have also enacted similar reforms in attempts to eliminate asymmetries in the
tax treatment of sukuk and traditional bonds in order to level the playing field, so that sukuk can compete with
conventional debt products.
• Standardization: As part of a sukuk transaction, a fatwa (or legal pronouncement) is usually procured from
Shari’ah scholars to provide issuers and investors with comfort that a sukuk instrument is in fact Shari’ah-
compliant. However, these endorsements are subject to different interpretations; and differences in opinion
can create volatility in the market as seen with the impact of the AAOIFI Statement. Since doubts regarding
Shari’ah-compliance are likely to affect marketability, a guiding set of principles should be developed to which
the majority of Shari’ah advisors agree. The Malaysian government has attempted to address this problem at
a national level by establishing a centralised, Shari’ah supervisory board, to ensure that every sukuk issued in
Malaysia is in full compliance with nationally accepted Shari’ah principles. At the time of publication, the GCC
region has not developed a similar regional supervisory body or agreed on a set of Shari’ah principles, but
would arguably benefit from the establishment of a similar body in the near future.
• Mechanics for Default: The development of a mature market requires that sukuk investors understand
their rights and remedies in default scenarios. Many early investors viewed sukuk as secured instruments,
benefiting from security in the underlying sukuk assets. However, following some notable high-profile defaults,
investors learned the hard way that most sukuk instruments are not secured in the conventional sense. While
from a Shari’ah perspective, sukuk are considered to represent an undivided share in the ownership of a
pool of tangible assets, usufructs and/or services, whether investors have a claim against these assets upon
a default under the terms of the sukuk depends entirely on how the sukuk is structured. For example, sukuk
may be structured so that the asset originator conducts a nominal sale but not a true sale of the underlying
assets to the SPV. This sale may be accomplished by assigning rights without completing the necessary asset
registration formalities. Without a true sale, sukukholders are generally treated as unsecured creditors of the
SPV. Even in the case of a true sale of asset ownership to the SPV, there may be contractual arrangements to
ensure that sukukholders have no legitimate claim on the underlying assets. Typically a purchase undertaking
will be provided by the originator which provides that the SPV must transfer the assets back to that originator
upon the redemption of the sukuk or in the event of a default. This purchase undertaking provides the SPV
with a contractual claim against the originator for non-payment of the purchase price for the assets, equal
to the face amount of the sukuk, but with no claim against the assets, which places the sukukholders in a
position similar to that which they would be in as bondholders under a conventional unsecured bond. The
level of protection afforded to investors therefore depends on the particular sukuk’s structure. AAOIFI appears
to encourage a movement towards asset-backed structures, in which the investors have actual recourse to
the assets in the event of a default. However, most sukuk in the market are designed to treat sukukholders
the same as holders of conventional unsecured bonds would be treated in a restructuring or an insolvency.
Although asset-backed sukuk structures exist, they are comparatively rare.
The popularity of the musharaka and the mudaraba sukuk structures has declined disproportionately when
compared to other structures in recent years, as a consequence of the AAOIFI Statement, which placed
restrictions on the requirement that sukuk issuers buy back the sukuk at their face value and prohibited mandatory
interest-free loans or liquidity facilities that are typically used to make up for any shortfalls in income from the
underlying sukuk assets.
Regardless of the structure chosen, however, the entity seeking to raise finance (the originator) will typically
incorporate a wholly owned financial intermediary (an SPV) and transfer title to the underlying assets to the SPV.
The SPV will then issue sukuk and use the funds raised to pay the originator for those assets. In theory, the
sukuk assets are therefore separate from the originator’s remaining assets. In practice, however, the originator
continues to use the assets (for instance under a lease in the ijara), or to manage the assets (for instance under a
musharaka or mudaraba).
Typically, sukuk issuances are structured as corporate credit-risk instruments and in a default and redemption
scenario the sukukholders would not have recourse to the assets themselves. Redemption is typically effected
by the sukukholders exercising their rights against the originator under a purchase undertaking. While sukuk
certificates represent an underlying ownership interest in an asset from a Shari’ah perspective, the commercial
and economic reality is that most issued sukuk are unsecured and equivalent to conventional bonds
(i.e. corporate credit-risk instruments).
• Transfer of Title: Depending on the relevant jurisdiction, the nature of assets to be transferred and the
Shari’ah structure used, an issuer may need to consider local law issues pertaining to the transferability of title
to the assets underlying a sukuk. These issues may include formalities necessary for the transfer of title to be
effective, such as registration and the payment of any associated fees and taxes.
• Nature of the Assets: The assets which an issuer employs to underpin the sukuk structure must be used
by the obligor for Shari’ah-compliant purposes. Activities or businesses relating to, for example, alcohol,
pork-related products, conventional finance and gambling are prohibited. The relevant assets must be
unencumbered at the issue date of the relevant sukuk and their market value on the issue date must be equal
to, or exceed, the principal amount of the sukuk being issued. While, generally, a third-party valuation is not
required, the valuation methodology and timing must be carefully considered.
• Tax and Zakat: The acquisition or purchase of assets, or other transactions under Shari’ah-compliant
structures, may create exposure to VAT, income tax, capital gains tax, stamp duties or other forms of taxation.
The ownership of an asset may also be taxable or create tax residency issues. In some jurisdictions (for
example, Saudi Arabia) Zakat (a fixed portion of a Muslim’s wealth which must be donated to charity in
accordance with Islamic law) must also be paid and should be considered at the structuring phase of the sukuk
when obtaining tax advice.
• Tradability of Sukuk: In order to enable tradability of sukuk in the secondary market in accordance with
Shari’ah principles, sukuk must represent an interest in physical assets rather than simply representing
debts or obligations. Some Shari’ah scholars have been comfortable with physical assets underlying sukuk
structures representing at least 33 percent of the sukuk’s face value; other Shari’ah scholars require between
51 and 70 percent of the assets underlying sukuk structures to be physical assets.
• Regional Differences: Shari’ah-compliant financing structures adopted in the Middle East can differ
considerably from those adopted in Asia. Many reasons account for these distinctions, including the difference
in the interpretation of the Shari’ah between Middle Eastern and Asian scholars. In the past, Middle Eastern
investors have viewed the Asian interpretation of Islamic Shari’ah as less conservative than that in the Middle
Sukuk al-ijara
Some commentators regard the ijara sukuk as the classical sukuk structure and it has become the most
commonly used structure by issuance volume since 2008. This structure’s popularity stems from its uncontested
Shari’ah-compliance and investors’ familiarity with the sale and leaseback structure. Ijara’s nature as a sale and
leaseback agreement makes it suitable if the issuing company has unencumbered assets that are commercially
leasable, such as real estate, ships or aircraft. The rental payments can be either fixed or calculated with
reference to a market rate, such as LIBOR or EIBOR.
Sukuk al-wakala
The wakala structure is useful if the underlying assets available for use to support the issuance of the sukuk
comprise a portfolio of assets or investments — in contrast to a tangible asset or assets. Thus, provided that
the overall sukuk portfolio includes a minimum of 30 percent of tangible assets (or more, depending on Shari’ah
approvals), the originator may use assets that otherwise would be considered non-tradable debt arrangements —
such as murabaha or istisna’a contracts — as part of the portfolio of investments comprising the sukuk assets.
The structure is similar to the mudaraba structure (described below) in that the agent, or wakeel, selects and
manages the underlying businesses or investments on behalf of the investor to ensure an agreed profit rate.
However, in contrast to the mudaraba structure, pursuant to which the investor (rab al-maal) and the originator
(mudarib) share in the profit in pre-agreed ratios, the wakala structure allows the investor to receive only the
agreed upon profit return. The wakeel, on the other hand, may keep any profit in excess of this agreed upon profit
return as an incentive fee.
Sukuk al-mudaraba
The mudaraba structure similar to the musharaka structure (described below), is suitable if the originator does
not own an actual tangible asset or does not have sufficient funds to purchase such asset to permit an ijara to
be structured on a sale and leaseback arrangement. Sukuk al-mudaraba are particularly fitting for development
financing as this structure is connected to a project’s profitability. The mudaraba was the most frequently
employed structure prior to the AAOIFI Statement. However, like the sukuk al-musharaka structure, mudaraba has
decreased in popularity after the AAOIFI Statement’s criticism of purchase undertakings being used in this type of
structure. The mudaraba structure has been revived recently, as it has proved particularly useful for the issuance
of Tier 1/Tier 2 capital sukuk — which have become more prevalent as financial institutions prepare to implement
the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s revised rules relating to capital requirements, commonly known as
Basel III.
Sukuk al-musharaka
The musharaka structure is also suitable if the originator does not own an actual tangible asset or does not
have sufficient funds to purchase such asset to permit an ijara structured on a sale and leaseback arrangement.
Hence, the musharaka structure is used to mobilise funds for establishing or developing a project or financing a
business activity. Otherwise, the musharaka is similar to the other structures in that it requires the performance
of an underlying asset to generate profits for investors. It can be implemented to provide for regular payments
throughout the life of the financing arrangement and allow for a flexible tailoring of the payment profile and
method of calculation. The musharaka was among the most commonly used sukuk structures prior to the AAOIFI
Statement. The AAOIFI’s criticism of purchase undertakings at face value in musharaka, however, has led to a
decline in the usage of this structure.
Sukuk al-manafa’a
In the manafa’a structure, the underlying asset is the capacity of, or rights to commercial activities, allowing for
the use of intangibles in sukuk. In circumstances in which the issuer does not hold unencumbered tangible assets
or is commercially unable or unwilling to utilise them in a sukuk structure, the manafa’a structure may allow
issuances based on available intangible assets. Airtime vouchers (representing minutes of airtime) are one of a
number of intangible asset classes used as underlying assets for Islamic financing transactions which have been
introduced into the market over the last few years. Other such asset classes include intellectual property rights,
tariffs due on electricity meters and receivables due on petrochemical marketing contracts.
Sukuk al-istisna’a
The istina’a structure is a contractual agreement for the sale of goods or commodities to be produced in
the future. Hence, the istisna’a structure is especially suitable for financing large infrastructure projects. If a
subcontractor needs to be involved, the suitability of the istisna’a structure will depend on the permissibility for the
contractor to enter into an additional istisna’a agreement with the subcontractor.
Sukuk al-murabaha
The sukuk al-murabaha is an alternative structure that may be employed if no tangible underlying assets can
be identified in the originator’s business or operations. In a typical murabaha structure, the issuer acquires
commodities as trustee on behalf of the sukukholders and sells those commodities to the originator on deferred
payment terms. The murabaha structure does not enjoy great popularity because the sukuk do not constitute
negotiable instruments capable of being traded in the secondary market at a premium; Shari’ah considers the
underlying murabaha as representing a monetary debt receivable. The sukuk are constituted by entitlements to
shares in murabaha receivables due from the originator, as purchaser of the murabaha. Therefore, trading these
sukuk in the secondary market would amount to trading in debt, which the Shari’ah prohibits. This view is widely
shared in the GCC and in Pakistan. However, due to Malaysian jurists’ more liberal interpretation of Shari’ah on
the issue of trading in debts, Malaysia allows the trading of sukuk al-murabaha. Murabaha may also be tradable in
the GCC and Pakistan if they account for a small part of a larger portfolio of sukuk assets which includes tradable
instruments, such as ijara, musharaka or mudaraba.
Even though murabaha account for a small fraction of the total number of sukuk issued, the structure is favoured
for smaller deals involving buy-to-hold investors who are more likely to accept uncertainties with regards to the
negotiability of their certificates.
Ijara is the transfer of the usufruct of an asset to another person in exchange for a rent claimed from that person.
Sukuk al-ijara is the most commonly used sukuk structure (based on volume of issuances) and is regarded by
some commentators as the classical sukuk structure from which all other sukuk structures developed. Ijara is
popular because it is simple and widely accepted and understood by both conventional and sukuk investors as
well as by the international rating agencies.
Sukuk al-ijara involves the transfer of ownership or benefit/usufruct of tangible assets such as real estate, aircraft
or ships from an originator to an SPV, which then issues to investors sukuk certificates representing undivided
ownership interests in such assets. The asset is then leased back to the originator by the SPV for a specified
term, which is typically commensurate with the term of the certificates. Each sukukholder is entitled to receive the
rentals generated under the lease pro rata to its ownership interest in the underlying asset. The amount of these
rentals is equal to, and used by the SPV to pay, the periodic distribution amount payable under the sukuk at that
time. This amount therefore may be calculated by reference to a fixed rate or variable rate (e.g. LIBOR or EIBOR)
depending on the type of sukuk issued.
On the issuance date, the originator will enter into a purchase undertaking which gives the right to the SPV to
oblige the originator to purchase the assets following a sukuk dissolution event or on scheduled maturity, at an
exercise price equal to the principal amount plus any accrued but unpaid periodic distribution amounts. The
money received by the SPV will be used to pay the dissolution amount due to investors under the sukuk.
Since the payments under the sukuk are dependent on payments to the SPV by the originator under the relevant
ijara contract and purchase undertaking, in a similar manner to a corporate bond, the sukukholders are assuming
the credit risk of the originator. Unless the sukuk is asset-backed, the documentation will typically provide that the
only recourse available to the sukukholders in a default scenario is a contractual claim against the originator for
non-payment of the purchase price for the assets in accordance with the purchase undertaking, which puts the
sukukholders in a position similar to that of bondholders under a conventional unsecured bond.
• The lessor must have ownership of the asset or the usufruct right in that asset before entering into a lease
contract.
• The benefit from an ijara must be lawful under Shari’ah, e.g. leasing property to a shopkeeper selling alcohol
would be unlawful.
• The leased assets must continue to exist throughout the period of the lease and any assets which are
consumed during that period cease to be leasable.
• The period of the lease and amount payable therefor must be specified in advance.
• The lessee must use the leased asset only for the purpose specified in the lease, or, absent a specified
purpose, in conformity with common practice.
• The lessor must maintain and insure the leased assets during the lease period, provided that the lessor may, if
it so wishes, delegate such obligation to an agent.
• The liabilities arising from the ownership of the asset, such as any harm or loss, are borne by the SPV, as
lessor.
In April 2014, Latham & Watkins advised the Government of Dubai (the Government) on the update of its US$5
billion Trust Certificate Issuance Programme and the subsequent issuance of US$750 million sukuk al-ijara due
2029, the Government’s first 15-year issuance and the longest tenor for a sukuk issued by an unrated issuer to
date.
Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC, Emirates NBD PJSC, HSBC Bank plc, National Bank of Abu Dhabi P.J.S.C. and
Standard Chartered Bank acted as joint lead managers on the transaction. The issuer, trustee and lessor in
this case was Dubai DOF Sukuk Limited, a limited liability company incorporated under the laws of the Cayman
Islands for the sole purpose of issuing sukuk under the trust certificate issuance programme. The tangible asset
underlying the ijara was real estate located in the UAE.
Government
Government
Government Government pursuant to Purchase
as Servicing
as Seller as Lessee Undertaking and pursuant to
Agent
Sale Undertaking
Reimbursement of
Purchase
Sale of Lease of Sale of Exercise Appointment as Servicing Costs
Price Rentals
Assets Assets Assets Price Servicing Agent (set-off against
(of Assets)
Supplemental Rental)
Government
pursuant to Substitution
Sukuk Periodic
Dissolution Substitution Undertaking
(Trust) Cash Distribution
Amount
Certificates Amounts
Investors
• Incorporation of financial intermediary: The Government incorporated an SPV, Dubai DOF Sukuk Limited,
under the laws of the Cayman Islands, to act as issuer, trustee and lessor.
• Issuance of sukuk: The SPV, as issuer, issued the sukuk, representing an undivided ownership interest in the
underlying real estate and a right against the SPV for periodic distribution amounts and a dissolution amount.
• Subscription to sukuk and creation of a trust: The investors subscribed for the sukuk and paid the
proceeds to the SPV, as issuer. The total sum of the issuance proceeds made up the aggregate face amount
of the Trust Certificates. The SPV declared a trust over the proceeds and began acting as a trustee for the
investors.
• Ijara (Lease back) Arrangement: The SPV, as lessor, then leased the assets back to the Government under
ijara arrangements for a fixed term of 10 years.
• Rental Payments and Periodic Distribution Amounts: The Government, as lessee, agreed to make semi-
annual rental payments to the SPV, as lessor and trustee. The amount of a rental payment is equal to the
agreed periodic distribution amount due to the investors, in this case, a fixed rate of five percent, payable
semi-annually.
• Payment of Distribution Amount: The SPV, as issuer, uses the rental payments from the Government to pay
the periodic distribution amounts to the investors.
• Sale and Purchase Agreement of the Underlying Asset at Maturity: At maturity or upon an option call, the
SPV, as trustee, will sell and the Government will buy back, the underlying asset at the exercise price, which
will equal the face amount plus accrued but unpaid periodic distribution amounts owing to investors.
• Payment of the Dissolution Amount: The SPV, as issuer, will then use the exercise price it has received to
pay the dissolution amount due to the investors under the terms and conditions of sukuk Trust Certificates.
• Reimbursement of Servicing Costs: The SPV, as trustee, appointed the Government as its servicing agent
to carry out or procure performance of the lessor’s obligations under the ijara arrangement (since the SPV
itself is a shell company with no real assets or operations), such as undertaking, obtaining or paying any major
maintenance, insurance, and proprietorship taxes relating to the asset. In the event that the Government, as
Servicing Agent, claims reimbursements for servicing costs paid by it, the rental for the subsequent ijara period
will be increased by an amount equivalent to the servicing costs.
State of Qatar: In July 2012, Latham & Watkins advised the State of Qatar, acting through the Ministry of
Economy and Finance, on the issuance of US$2 billion sukuk al-ijara due 2018 and US$2 billion sukuk al-ijara
due 2023. The transaction was awarded “Qatari Deal of the Year” by Islamic Finance News and “Deal of the Year”
by Asian-MENA Counsel.
A wakala is an agreement between two parties whereby one party agrees to act on the other party’s behalf, in a
manner akin to an agency arrangement. The principal (investor) appoints an agent (the wakeel) to invest funds
in a pool of investments or assets that are purchased by the wakeel as agent and trustee of the sukukholders.
The wakeel then uses its expertise to manage the investments for an agreed period of time in order to generate
an agreed profit return. The principal (which is usually an SPV) will then use the profit return to fund the periodic
distribution amounts payable to the investors by the issuer. Any profit in excess of the periodic distribution
amounts is typically paid to the wakeel as an incentive fee. On the maturity date, the investment manager
liquidates the sukuk portfolio and pays the proceeds of the liquidation to the principal to fund the dissolution
amounts payable to the investors by the issuer.
• The principal may only require the wakeel to perform Shari’ah-compliant tasks.
• The principal can only receive the expected profit, any excess will be held by the wakeel for its benefit.
• The wakala agreement must be clear and unambiguous as to the duration of the wakala, the type of
investments to be entered into by the wakeel and the conditions for termination of the wakala agreement.
• The wakala assets must comply with certain eligibility criteria. For example, at least 30 percent of the
underlying assets must be tangible.
Latham & Watkins advised Dar Al Arkan in relation to its US$1.8 billion Sukuk Issuance Programme together with
the first issuance of US$450 million under such programme in May 2013 and subsequent issuances of US$300
million in November 2013, US$400 million in May 2014 and US$500 million in April 2017.
The structure of the issuances replicated Dar Al Arkan’s successful offering (on which Latham also advised) of
US$450 million in 2010 — which was the first transaction of its type to combine an innovative wakala structure
with a ‘high yield’ covenant package and has therefore been regarded as the first ever ‘high yield’ sukuk. This
‘high yield’ covenant package was designed to replicate features typically found in conventional high yield real
estate transactions in emerging markets. The success of the transaction encouraged Dar Al Arkan to utilise a
programme structure for its subsequent issuances, thus allowing for repeat issuances with minimal cost.
Dar Al Arkan incorporated an SPV, Dar Al Arkan Sukuk Company Ltd., under the laws of the Cayman Islands, for
the purpose of serving as the issuer of the sukuk and as the investors’ trustee. In addition, Dar Al Arkan Sukuk
International Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Dar Al Arkan incorporated under the laws of Saudi Arabia,
served as wakeel, or investment manager in connection with the sukuk. Alkhair Capital (Dubai) Limited and
Deutsche Bank AG, London Branch served as arrangers and dealers under the Programme.
Certificateholders
Guarantee
Dar Al-Arkan Sukuk Company
Ltd
Distribution Shortfall Restoration Amount (as Issuer and Trustee)
Value Restoration Amount
Mandatory Offers to
Purchase Certificates
Investment
Sukuk Periodic Distribution Amounts
Management
Sukuk Proceeds will be invested in Proceeds Dissolution Amounts
Agreement
a portfolio of Ijara Agreements and
Murabaha Agreements
Ijara Counterparty entered into with Restricted
Subsidiaries of Dar Al-Arkan
Dar Al-Arkan Sukuk
International Company
(as Investment Manager)
Profit Collection
Murabaha Counterparty
• Issuance of Sukuk: the SPV, as issuer, issued the sukuk, which represent an undivided ownership interest
in the underlying wakala assets or transactions and a right against the issuer for payment of the periodic
distribution amount and the dissolution distribution amount.
• Subscription to Sukuk: The certificateholders subscribed for sukuk and paid the sukuk proceeds to the
issuer.
• Investment Plan: The investment manager agreed to invest the sukuk proceeds into a portfolio of sukuk
contracts (which generate returns at least equal to the periodic distribution amount for a period which is equal
to or greater than the remaining duration of the certificates which are outstanding at the time of the relevant
investment) and to ensure the preservation of the value of the sukuk portfolio. The investment manager is not
entitled to commingle its own assets with the sukuk portfolio and must meet the certain investment conditions
contained in an investment management agreement.
• Profit Collections and Distribution to Certificateholders: Prior to each periodic distribution date, the
investment manager collects all sums due from the counterparties to the ijara agreements and murabaha
agreements and on the same date pays such collections to the principal paying agent on behalf of the
issuer. The principal paying agent in turn applies such amounts to pay the periodic distribution amount to the
certificateholders on the relevant periodic distribution date. Dar Al-Arkan, as guarantor, is under an obligation
to make up any shortfall between the profit collections and the periodic distribution amount due under the
sukuk, by paying a shortfall restoration amount.
• Liquidation: Prior to the maturity date, the investment manager shall liquidate the sukuk portfolio and pay the
proceeds to the principal paying agent. The principal paying agent will in turn apply such amount to pay the
dissolution distribution amount to the certificateholders. Dar Al-Arkan, as guarantor, is under an obligation to
make up any shortfall between the sukuk portfolio liquidation proceeds and the dissolution distribution amount
due under the sukuk by paying a shortfall restoration amount.
Mudaraba refers to a form of equity-based partnership in which one party (the rab al-maal) provides the other
party (the mudarib) with capital and the mudarib uses its expertise and labour to invest the capital in return for a
pre-agreed share of the profit generated.
In the context of sukuk, an SPV is usually established to issue the sukuk and contribute the proceeds raised from
the investors as mudaraba capital (and therefore the SPV issuer becomes the rab al-maal). The originator of the
sukuk contributes expertise, labour and possibly cash, serves as mudarib and manages the capital. Any profits
generated by the mudaraba are divided between the rab al-maal and the mudarib in accordance with agreed
profit-sharing ratios set out in the mudaraba agreement. The SPV uses the profits it receives from the mudaraba
to make payments of the periodic distribution amounts due under the sukuk.
Prior to the AAOIFI Statement, sukuk al-mudaraba structures typically included a purchase undertaking in favor
of the SPV, allowing for the purchase of the rab al-maal’s interest in the mudaraba for a pre-agreed exercise
price. This exercise price was structured to ensure that the rab al-maal received the amount required to pay the
dissolution distribution amount due to investors under the sukuk. Since the AAOIFI Statement, scholars have
taken the view that an originator may not grant a purchase undertaking for any amount other than the market
value of the rab al-maal’s interest in the mudaraba assets at the time of sale (on the basis that determining the
value by reference to the value of the sukuk is akin to a guarantee of profit and principal which, unless given by
an independent third party, is not permitted under Shari’ah).
While the inability to grant such a purchase undertaking has contributed to the decline of the mudaraba structure
for sukuk, the structure recently has experienced a revival with the introduction of the sukuk as a method of
increasing Tier 1 and Tier 2 regulatory capital for banks and financial institutions.
• A mudaraba contract may be unrestricted or restricted. Under an unrestricted mudaraba contract, the rab
al-maal, the issuer SPV, permits the mudarib, the originator, to administer the mudaraba capital without any
restrictions. The mudarib must exercise this freedom in accordance with the interests of the parties and the
business contract, hence, with a view to making profit. Under a restricted contract, the rab al-maal imposes
certain restrictions on the mudarib, however, not to the extent that the mudarib will be unduly constrained in his
operations.
• In principle, the capital for the mudaraba must be provided in cash; however, it may be provided in the form
of tangible assets with the value of such assets constituting the mudaraba capital. At least 33 percent of the
capital should be invested in actual tangible assets in accordance with Shari’ah.
• The mudarib must have free access to the capital for the mudaraba to be considered valid.
• The profit-sharing ratio should be determined in advance and must be a percentage of the actual profit, not a
percentage of the capital or a lump sum.
• However it is permissible to stipulate that if the profit is above a certain ceiling (up to which the profits are
shared according to pre-agreed ratios) one party may take that additional profit.
• Any losses of the mudaraba enterprise will be borne by the rab al-maal but the rab al-maal is liable only to the
extent of the proceeds invested. Sukuk investors will therefore be liable only for their invested proceeds.
In November 2012, Latham & Watkins advised Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank PJSC (ADIB) on the successful issuance
of US$1 billion Additional Tier 1 Capital Sukuk, the world’s first Basel III compliant Tier 1 sukuk issuance. The
sukuk, which was based on a mudaraba structure, was more than 15 times over-subscribed (with an order book
of US$15.5 billion) and was able to price with an expected profit rate of 6.375 percent, the lowest-ever coupon for
an instrument of this type. This sukuk was awarded “Mudaraba Deal of the Year” and “UAE Deal of the Year” by
Islamic Finance News, as well as “Middle East Deal of the Year” by The Banker.
ADIB, HSBC Bank plc, Morgan Stanley & Co. International plc, National Bank of Abu Dhabi P.J.S.C. and Standard
Chartered Bank acted as joint lead managers and Barwa Bank P.Q.S.C. and Sharjah Islamic Bank P.J.S.C. acted
as co-lead managers on the initial issuance.
While a number of conventional banks have issued Additional Tier 1 capital instruments, incorporating the
required characteristics of these instruments into a Shari’ah-compliant structure presents a number of additional
challenges, as the instrument must be structured in a way that allows it to be classified as (non-dilutive) ‘equity’
rather than ‘indebtedness’, so that the instrument can be booked as capital rather than a liability on the issuer’s
balance sheet.
A mudaraba sukuk provides an ideal Shari’ah-compliant structure to accommodate the features of Additional
Tier 1 capital, such as the discretionary profit payments. While the structure of the transaction follows closely the
structure of a typical mudaraba sukuk, a few key differences allow the sukuk to comply with Basel III.
ADIB
(as Mudarib)
Dissolution
Mudaraba
Mudaraba Mudaraba Capital and
Capital Agreement Mudaraba
Profit
Periodic Distribution
Amounts, Dissolution
Proceeds of Declaration Distribution Amount
Certificates of Trust and Mudaraba
Premium
(if applicable)
Certificateholders
• Issuance of Sukuk and Creation of a Trust: On the issue date, the certificateholders paid the issue price
to the SPV issuer. The issuer, in its capacity as trustee, declared a trust in favor of the certificateholders over
the proceeds of the issuance of the certificates, its rights, title, benefits and interests under the transaction
documents and certain related rights.
• Mudaraba Agreement: The issuer (as trustee) applied the proceeds of the issuance of the certificates towards
the capital of the mudaraba pursuant to the mudaraba agreement. ADIB (as mudarib) invested the mudaraba
capital into the business activities of ADIB in accordance with the agreed investment plan set out in the
mudaraba agreement.
• Mudarib’s Responsibilities: ADIB, as mudarib, agreed to contribute its expertise and labour to managing the
mudaraba enterprise, with responsibility for managing the rab al-maal’s cash contribution in accordance with
the mudaraba agreement with a view to generating profit on the principal amount.
• Distribution of the Profits Generated: Unlike on previous mudaraba sukuk issuances, payments of
mudaraba profit by ADIB (as mudarib) are made at the sole discretion of ADIB and may only be made if
ADIB meets certain conditions. On each periodic distribution date, ADIB (as mudarib) will distribute the profit
generated by the mudaraba to both the issuer and the mudarib in accordance with an agreed split (90 percent
to the issuer (as rab-al-maal) and 10 percent to ADIB (as mudarib)) only if neither a non-payment event1 or a
non-payment election2 has occurred. ADIB (as mudarib) has no obligation to make any subsequent payment
in respect of any mudaraba profit that is not paid in accordance with the mudaraba agreement. To the extent
that ADIB exercises its discretion not to distribute profits under the mudaraba, ADIB will not be able to declare
or pay any distribution or dividend on any ordinary shares issued by ADIB until two consecutive payments due
under the mudaraba have been paid in full (or equivalent amounts have been set aside for the benefit of the
issuer (as trustee)).
• Distribution to Certificateholders: The issuer applies its share of the profit (if any) generated by the
mudaraba on each periodic distribution date to pay the periodic distribution amount due to certificateholders on
such date.
• Maturity: The certificates are perpetual securities in respect of which there is no fixed redemption date and
accordingly, the mudaraba is a perpetual arrangement with no fixed end date. Subject to certain conditions set
out in the mudaraba agreement, ADIB (as mudarib) may, at its option, liquidate the mudaraba in whole, but not
in part, on the basis of an actual liquidation of the mudaraba in the following circumstances:
(a) on the first call date or any periodic distribution date after the first call date3; or
(b) on any date on or after the issue date (whether or not a periodic distribution date): (i) upon the occurrence
of a tax event4; or (ii) upon the occurrence of a capital event5.
ADIB (as mudarib) agreed that it will only liquidate the mudaraba to the extent that, on a dissolution, the
mudaraba capital would be equal to the nominal amount of the sukuk to be repaid. To the extent that ADIB (as
mudarib) breaches this obligation, it is required to indemnify the issuer in respect of this shortfall.
Saudi International Petrochemical Company: Latham & Watkins advised Deutsche Securities Saudi Arabia
LLC and Riyad Capital, as joint lead managers and joint bookrunners, in the issuance of an SAR1.8 billion
mudaraba by Saudi International Petrochemical Company’s (Sipchem). Established in 1999, Sipchem is one of
the largest petrochemical holding companies in Saudi Arabia. The deal involved an innovative mudaraba structure
that centred around the intangible rights that sit between a holding company and its subsidiaries.
Endnotes
1 A non-payment event would occur if: (i) the payments required to be made by ADIB under the mudaraba agreement, when aggregated
with any other obligations ranking senior to, or pari passu therewith, exceeds ADIB’s non-consolidated retained earnings and reserves; (ii)
on the date of payment, ADIB is in breach of its applicable regulatory capital requirements or the making of such payment would cause it
to be in breach thereof; (iii) the financial regulator requires ADIB not to make the relevant payment; or (iv) on the relevant date of payment
ADIB is not solvent, or would not be solvent if the relevant amount was paid.
2 A non-payment election would occur if ADIB, in its sole discretion, elects not to pay the mudaraba profit.
3 As a regulatory requirement, the first call date must be at least five years from the issue date.
4 A tax event would occur if there was a change in the tax laws which resulted in additional amounts becoming payable under the mudaraba
agreement and/or the certificates.
5 A capital event is deemed to have occurred if ADIB is notified in writing by the financial regulator that the notional amount of the certificates
would cease to qualify as Tier 1 Capital.
Musharaka is derived from the Arabic word Shirakah, which means partnership. A musharaka arrangement entails
the contribution of capital (either in cash or in kind) by two or more partners to the partnership. The musharaka
partners share the profits in prearranged ratios. Any profits generated in excess of the level of profits required
to enable the issuer to make the relevant payments to sukukholders are typically paid into a cash reserve for
disbursement to sukukholders in the event that profits for a period are insufficient to cover the periodic distribution
amount.
Shari’ah generally recognises two broad categories of partnerships; (i) sharikat al-’aqd (a contractual partnership)
and (ii) sharikat al-melk (a property partnership). In the context of sukuk issuances, the sharikat al-’aqd entails an
agreement between the originator and the trustee to combine their assets, labor or liabilities, while the sharikat al-
melk entails a transaction that results in the originator’s and the trustee’s joint ownership of an asset.
When deciding between structuring a sukuk based on sharikat al-’aqd or sharikat al-melk, it is necessary to
identify the nature of the originator’s business and whether any assets exist to support the issuance of a sukuk. If
no tangible asset exists that could be contributed to the partnership in compliance with Shari’ah, the sharikat al-
’aqd structure may be the better choice.
While sukuk al-musharaka was previously one of the more commonly used structures, use of the musharaka has
declined since the AAOIFI Statement, since Shari’ah scholars now take the view that it is not permissible for an
originator to grant a purchase undertaking to the trustee to purchase the musharaka assets for any amount other
than the market value of the trustee’s interest in the musharaka assets at the time of sale (on the basis that both
partners should take the risk of both profit and loss). This inability to guarantee the return of the sukukholders’
initial investment through an undertaking to redeem the sukuk at face value has reduced the popularity of the
structure.
• The profit-sharing ratios may be in proportion to the percentages of each partner’s capital contribution but
partners may also agree to share profits in a manner that is not proportionate to their capital contributions,
provided that an additional percentage of profit beyond the percentage of the contribution is not in favour of a
sleeping partner.
• Stipulations to the effect that any partner’s profit will constitute a lump sum or a percentage of the capital of the
partnership are void.
• It is permissible to set aside surplus profit in a reserve account to fund any shortfalls in future periodic
distribution amounts or in the exercise price.
• Any losses of the partners must be proportionate to their respective capital contributions.
• The musharaka assets must comprise between 33 percent and 50 percent tangible assets, depending on the
consulting Shari’ah scholars’ views.
• Any partner may terminate the musharaka by giving notice to the other partner.
• Upon termination, any tangible assets that form part of the musharaka will be liquidated and distributed
together with the intangible assets to the originator and the trustee in proportion to their respective capital
contributions, or units held in the musharaka.
In February 2016, Latham & Watkins advised Alinma Investment Company, GIB Capital L.L.C., Saudi Fransi
Capital Limited and Saudi Hollandi Capital, in their capacity as the joint lead managers and joint bookrunners on
the SAR1 billion sukuk al musharaka due in 2021 issued by Rawabi Vallianz. The proceeds of the sukuk issuance
were used by Rawabi Vallianz to repay amounts owing by Rawabi Vallianz under financing arrangements, with the
balance used for its general corporate purposes.
The amortising sukuk utilised an innovative combination of musharakah and ijara structures to meet the structural
requirements of RVOS (the desire to transfer the legal title of assets away from Rawabi Vallianz to Rawabi Vallianz
International Company, a limited liability company incorporated in the Kingdom to hold the assets as part of a larger
restructuring of the Rawabi Vallianz business model) and was one of the first Saudi sukuk issuances to be secured
by the sukuk assets that were utilised for the transaction (in this case, vessels). The success of the transaction
Rawabi Vallianz
demonstrates the ability to develop innovative structures tothe
(the “Obligor”, meet the specific requirements of the client.
“Lessee”
and the “Servicing Agent”)
Purchase Price
Lease Rentals
Lease Back of
Sale of Lease
Lease Assets
Assets
Musharakah Contribution
Rawabi Vallianz International Saudi Fransi Capital
Musharakah
Company (the “Originator”) (the “Sukukholders’ Agent)
Musharakah Profits
Musharakah
Musharakah
Contribution
Guarantee of
the Obligor’s
Obligations
Purchase Undertaking
Profits
Guarantee of the
Originator’s Obligations Issue Proceeds
Rawabi Holding & Vallianz RVOS Sukuk Limited
Sukukholders
Holdings (the “Guarantors”) (the “Issuer”)
Guarantee of the Periodic Distribution
Obligor’s Obligations Amounts & Fixed
Distribution Amounts
• Issuance of Sukuk: RVOS Sukuk Limited issued the sukuk, representing an undivided ownership interest in
the underlying sukuk assets and a right against RVOS Sukuk Limited for periodic distribution amounts and a
dissolution distribution amount. The certificateholders subscribed for sukuk and paid the proceeds to RVOS
Sukuk Limited, as issuer.
• Musharaka Agreement: RVOS Sukuk Limited entered into a musharaka arrangement with Rawabi Vallianz
International Company. RVOS Sukuk Limited contributed the proceeds of the sukuk issuance as an in cash
contribution to the musharaka. Simultaneously, Rawabi Vallianz International Company made an in cash
contribution in its capacity as the managing partner of the musharaka (such amount being the difference
between the proceeds and the amount required to be paid under the sale and purchase agreement and
servicing agency agreement).
• Lease Arrangements: The Rawabi Vallianz International Company and RVOS Sukuk Limited (as Co Lessors)
entered into the Ijara Agreement with Rawabi Vallianz (as Lessee), under which the Co Lessors agreed to
lease the Lease Assets to the Lessee, in return for payment of the floating rental payment and the fixed rental
payment on each rental payment date. The rental payments are deposited directly into the transaction account.
RVOS Sukuk Limited’s share of each floating rental payment is equal to the periodic distribution amount
payable for the corresponding period under the Sukuk which RVOS Sukuk Limited is required to pay to the
sukukholders on each periodic distribution date. RVOS Sukuk Limited’s share of each fixed rental payment
is equal to the fixed distribution amount payable for the corresponding period under the sukuk which RVOS
Sukuk Limited is required to pay to the sukukholders on each periodic distribution date.
• Guarantee: The obligations of Rawabi Vallianz to make payments under the ijara agreement, servicing agency
agreement and sale and purchase agreement and the obligations of Rawabi Vallianz International Company to
make payment under the purchase undertaking are guaranteed by the guarantors pursuant to the guarantee.
• Purchase Undertaking: On the occurrence of certain events of default or when the sukuk otherwise become
redeemable prior to the expiry date for tax reasons, RVOS Sukuk Limited may exercise its rights under the
Purchase Undertaking and require Rawabi Vallianz International Company to purchase from the Co Lessors all
of their rights, title, interests, benefits and other entitlements in and to the Lease Assets, for a Purchase Price
which will be the higher of: (i) the book value of the Lease Assets as recorded in the latest annual audited
financial statements of Rawabi Vallianz International Company; or (ii) the market value of the Lease Assets
as set out in the latest valuation report. The Purchase Price will be deposited by Rawabi Vallianz International
Company directly into the Transaction Account. RVOS Sukuk Limited’s share of the Purchase Price will be
utilised by RVOS Sukuk Limited to make payment of any and all amounts due and payable under the sukuk.
• Termination of Lease: On the occurrence of the remaining events of default or when the sukuk otherwise
becomes redeemable prior to the expiry date as a result of a total loss event, the Ijara Agreement will
terminate. Upon an early termination of the Ijara Agreement in such circumstances, the Lessee will be required
to pay: (i) all accrued and unpaid floating rental payment and fixed rental payment; (ii) the aggregate of all
fixed rental payments payable and unpaid from, and including, the date of termination to, and including, the
expiry date, being the scheduled termination date for the lease; (iii) any and all other amounts outstanding and
due and payable under the sukuk; and (iv) any other amount due and payable by Rawabi Vallianz (in whatever
capacity) to RVOS Sukuk Limited under any sukuk document (in each case, without double counting).
• Payments under the Sukuk to Sukukholders: The rental payments made by Rawabi Vallianz to the issuer
under the ijara agreement will fund: (i) the payment by the issuer to sukukholders of the periodic distribution
amounts due on the sukuk; and (ii) the payment by the issuer to sukukholders of the fixed distribution amounts
due under the sukuk under Condition 8(c)(Partial Redemption).
• Redemption of the Sukuk on the Expiry Date: Upon payment of the final rental payment to the Issuer, on
the expiry date, the sukuk will be redeemed in full at their applicable sukuk dissolution amount by the Issuer.
Upon redemption of the sukuk in full, the Issuer will have no further rights and/or entitlements in and to the
musharakah assets, and the musharakah assets then in existence will then vest in the originator without
further formality and the musharakah will be dissolved.
The term Istithmar is understood to mean broadly “investment” and the sukuk al-istithmar is therefore sometimes
referred to as an investment agency sukuk. Under a sukuk al-istithmar structure, rights under Islamic contracts
(including rights under ijara contracts and murabaha or istisna’a receivables) can be packaged together and sold
to form the underlying assets for a sukuk issuance. The income generated from such an investment package
can then be utilised to make the relevant payments to the investors under the sukuk. On the issuance date, the
originator enters into a purchase undertaking which gives the right to the entity acting as sukukholders’ agent to
oblige the originator to purchase the investment package following a sukuk dissolution event or on scheduled
maturity at an exercise price that is equal to the principal amount plus any accrued but unpaid periodic distribution
amounts. The money received by the SPV will be used to pay the dissolution amount due to investors under the
sukuk.
• To ensure that the sukuk are not debt instruments and therefore tradable, the net asset value of ijara contracts,
shares and asset-based sukuk comprised in the sukuk assets as at any given date may not be less than 30
percent of the net asset value of the sukuk assets taken as a whole as at the closing date.
• A custodian may need to be involved to ensure sufficient separation of the originator’s assets from the sukuk
assets.
• Principal amounts from the underlying assets must not be used to service coupon payments under the sukuk.
In January 2014, Latham & Watkins advised HSBC Saudi Arabia, Limited and Saudi Fransi Capital Company —
in their capacity as the joint lead managers, joint bookrunners and joint underwriters — in connection with the
Saudi Electricity Company’s (SEC) issuance of a SAR4.5 billion sukuk al-istithmar expiring 2054G. This was the
only public sukuk issued in Saudi Arabia in 2014.
Reserve
Collection Account Balance
Periodic Distribution Amount (4)
Net Income
Collection
Saudi Electricity Periodic
Saudi Electricity Account
Company Distribution
Company Amount
(as Issuer and
(as Issuer and Seller)
Saudi Electricity Purchaser)
Company
(as Issuer and Sukuk Saudi Electricity
Assets Manager) Company
Sukuk Assets
Purchase Undertaking/ Sukuk Assets Transfer (as Sukuk
Net Income (2)
Sole Undertaking Agreement Administrator)
Original
Sukuk Assets Purchase Sukuk
Sukuk
Ijara
Substitution Undertaking Price Proceeds Sukuk Assets Management
Assets (1) Assets
Agreement
Substituted Ijara Assets
Sukukholders’ Agent
Periodic
New Ijara Assets (1) Distribution
Amounts
Sukuk Periodic
Redemption Distribution Sukuk
Amount Amounts Proceeds
Sukukholders
1 Sukuk Assets to consist of the “Original Ijara Assets” and the “New Ijara Assets”
2 “Net Income” equals (All monies accumulated from the Sukuk Assets) less (Sukuk Assets Management Administration Fee and Agency Fees)
3 If any Reinvestment Income is not applied to interest in New Ijara Assets, then the Excess Reinvestment Income shall be credited to the Collection Account
4 If the Retained Income received from the Sukuk Assets in any Periodic Distribution Period, together with any Excess Reinvestment Income, which has been credited
to the Collection Account (as per 3 above), exceeds the Periodic Distribution Amount, the surplus shall be retained as a Reserve
• Issuance of Sukuk: The certificateholders paid the issue price in respect of the relevant certificates to SEC as
issuer.
• Purchase of Assets: Pursuant to the sukuk assets transfer agreement, upon payment of the proceeds of the
sale of the sukuk, the issuer sold and transferred to a custodian, for a period of 40 years, certain of SEC’s
specified rights and entitlements to provide metering services. The custodian received a fee in relation to such
services from SEC’s residential and commercial customers.
• Accrual of Income: Pursuant to the sukuk assets administration agreement, SEC as the sukuk administrator
agreed to provide certain services in respect of the sukuk assets. The sukuk administrator’s responsibilities
include accumulating all monies (net of certain fees) accruing under the sukuk assets (the net income). The
sukuk administrator pays into the sukukholders’ agent’s account, which the payments administrator maintains
(the transaction account), the lesser of (a) such accumulated amount and (b) the periodic distribution
amount. If the net income received under the sukuk assets in any periodic distribution period exceeds the
periodic distribution amount, the sukuk administrator retains any surplus as a reserve for the benefit of the
If, in relation to any periodic distribution period or other period, the net income received in relation to the sukuk
assets (the actual income) is less than the amount of net income which should otherwise have been received
(the specified income) as a result of, amongst other things: (a) the tariff charged for metering services being
reduced or amended, or (b) any of the customers changing its electricity supplier to an entity other than the
issuer, then the issuer shall add to the reserve an amount equal to the difference between the actual income
and the specified income.
• Purchase Undertaking: Under a purchase undertaking, the issuer agreed to purchase the custodian’s
ownership interests, rights, title and other entitlements in and to the sukuk assets at a specified purchase
price, plus any applicable extra amount, on the periodic distribution dates falling in January 2024, January
2034 and January 2044, on the expiry date or following the occurrence of a dissolution event.
The purchase price is specified to be 100 percent of the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk outstanding
if the sukuk assets are purchased before the periodic distribution date falling in January 2024, 95 percent of
the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk outstanding if purchased on the periodic distribution date falling
in January 2024, 60 percent of the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk outstanding if purchased on the
periodic distribution date falling in January 2034 and 30 percent of the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk
outstanding if purchased on the periodic distribution date falling in January 2044.
In addition, an extra amount equal to five percent of the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk, funded from
the reserve, will be payable on the purchase dates falling in January 2024, January 2034 and January 2044.
This therefore ensures that the sukukholders’ agent receives 100 percent of the aggregate nominal amount of
the sukuk outstanding if the sukuk is redeemed, as intended, on the periodic distribution date in January 2024.
Given that the applicable extra amount is payable from the reserve, the sukukholders may request the early
purchase of the sukuk assets by the issuer pursuant to the purchase undertaking if, by the date falling 60
days immediately prior to the periodic distribution date falling in October 2023, the sukuk administrator notifies
the sukukholders’ agent that the amount allocated to the reserve (as at the date of such notification) is less
than five percent of the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk as are current on such date in the reserve.
Since this purchase will take place prior to the periodic distribution date falling in January 2024, in such a
situation, the sukukholders’ agent will still receive 100 percent of the aggregate nominal amount of the sukuk
outstanding.
In the investor application form signed when subscribing for the sukuk, the investors give an irrevocable
instruction directing the sukukholders’ agent to request the purchase of the asset in January 2024 or earlier, in
the event that the relevant reserve requirement is not met.
Saudi Electricity Company: Latham & Watkins also advised HSBC Saudi Arabia Limited and Samba Capital
& Investment Management Company, as joint lead managers and joint bookrunners, in relation to the private
placement of a SAR7 billion sukuk al-istithmar due in 2030 (with an early redemption right in 2017, 2020 and
2025).
Saudi Orix: In 2012, Latham & Watkins advised Samba Capital & Investment Management Company, in its
capacity as the lead manager and bookrunner, in connection with the issuance of a SAR240 million sukuk al-
istithmar expiring 2015 issued by Saudi ORIX. This was the only public sukuk issued in Saudi Arabia in 2012.
The ‘airtime’ structure was first used in 2007 by the Saudi Arabian telecommunications company, Etithad Etisalat
Company (Mobily), for the purpose of a syndicated financing. At that time, the airtime structure represented
a novel Islamic finance instrument specifically designed for telecommunications operators, which often have
limited physical assets, but significant value in their telecommunications license. Then, in 2010, Emirates
Telecommunications Corporation (Etisalat), Mobily’s principal shareholder, adopted the airtime structure for its
sukuk programme, although no issuance has yet taken place under Etisalat’s programme. In December 2013,
Ooredoo, the Qatari telecommunications company, issued a five-year US$1.25 billion ‘airtime’ sukuk under its
US$2 billion trust certificate issuance programme, the first time a sukuk utilising the airtime structure had been
issued in the Middle East.
In addition, during the course of 2013, UAE-based air carrier, Emirates Airlines, utilised passenger revenues as
the underlying asset for its US$1 billion, 10-year amortising sukuk, while the Saudi Arabian General Authority of
Civil Aviation issued a SAR15 billion (US$4 billion) sukuk which was partly based on a sale of its rights to charge
and collect fees from airlines. The use of the manafa’a structure indicates growing innovation in structuring sukuk
and the increasing flexibility of Shari’ah advisers in recognising the legitimate use of those assets.
In December 2013, Latham & Watkins acted for Ooredoo Q.S.C. in connection with its inaugural US$1.25 billion
sukuk al-manafa’a. The five-year instrument was issued under Ooredoo Tamweel Limited’s US$2 billion trust
certificate issuance programme, established in November 2013. This issuance represented the first time a sukuk
utilising the airtime structure was issued in the Middle East.
The airtime structure enables a telecommunications operator, such as Ooredoo, to utilise minutes of airtime as
the underlying asset for the purposes of a sukuk issuance. Most telecommunications operators are tangible-asset
poor but have significant value residing in intangible assets, such as a mobile license and the right to sell airtime.
A key advantage of the airtime structure is that it allows the telecommunications operator to release the value of
its most abundant (though intangible) asset, the airtime on its network.
The structural development of Ooredoo’s airtime sukuk required close collaboration between Ooredoo, its
Shari’ah advisers, the arranger banks and their respective legal counsels, in order to meet the challenge of
accommodating Shari’ah requirements without compromising the structure’s robustness from an English law
perspective. Given Qatar’s heavily regulated telecommunications sector, the development of the sukuk structure,
based on airtime minutes as the underlying asset, also required cooperation and interaction with Qatar’s
telecommunications regulator, ictQATAR. Ooredoo and its advisors devoted significant time and effort to refine
and simplify the sukuk structure, in order to chart a smoother course through the required Shari’ah, shareholder
and regulatory approvals and to maximise the sukuk’s appeal to local, regional and international investors.
Customers Certificateholders
Purchase Price
Payments
Purchase/Sale/Airtime Undertakings
• Issuance of Sukuk: On the issue date of the sukuk, the investors paid the issue price to the trustee, an SPV
established for the purposes of the sukuk. The trustee then issued the sukuk to the investors.
• Declaration of Trust: The trustee declared a trust in favour of the investors over the proceeds of the issuance
of the sukuk and certain other rights. The trustee then applied the proceeds of the issuance of the sukuk for
the purchase of airtime vouchers from Ooredoo. Each airtime voucher represents an entitlement to a specified
number of minutes of airtime on Ooredoo’s mobile telecommunications network.
• Appointment of Distributor: Ooredoo was appointed to act as the distributor on behalf of the trustee to sell
the minutes of airtime to its customers. The airtime vouchers cannot be redeemed for airtime minutes unless
sold by a duly licensed provider of mobile telecommunications services in Qatar.
• Distribution and Sale of Vouchers: A specified number of airtime vouchers are designated for distribution
and sale by Ooredoo (in its capacity as distributor) on behalf of the trustee in respect of each periodic
distribution period, for a minimum sale price, which will be sufficient to allow the trustee to pay the periodic
distribution amount due under the sukuk on each periodic distribution date.
• Purchase of Surplus Vouchers and Indemnity: If less than the specified number of airtime vouchers are
sold during a periodic distribution period, Ooredoo will, pursuant to the exercise of a purchase undertaking
provided by the trustee, purchase the surplus airtime vouchers from the trustee at the price at which such
airtime vouchers should have been sold under the relevant distribution agreement (which incorporates both
a cost element and a profit element). Or, if airtime vouchers are sold for less than the minimum-agreed
price, the distributor will indemnify the trustee for the shortfall amount, so that the proceeds of the sale of
airtime vouchers during each periodic distribution period will always be sufficient to pay the relevant periodic
distribution amounts due under the sukuk.
• Airtime Voucher Sale Undertaking: Pursuant to an airtime voucher sale undertaking, Ooredoo has
undertaken, upon exercise thereof, to sell additional airtime vouchers to the trustee (at the cost price) on each
periodic distribution date.
• Purchase Undertaking: Pursuant to a purchase undertaking, Ooredoo has irrevocably granted to the trustee
the right to require Ooredoo to purchase and accept the transfer of all of the trustee’s interest in the airtime
vouchers, on maturity of the relevant series, or prior thereto following the occurrence of a dissolution event.
The word istisna’a is derived from the Arabic term sina’a, meaning to manufacture a specific commodity, and is
a financing method used for the production of specific goods. The structure has thus become particularly useful
for raising funds for the construction phase of a project, with the proceeds from the sukuk issuance being used to
pay the contractor, who will deliver the project in the future. Upon issuance of the sukuk, the originator enters into
an istisna’a contract with the trustee, pursuant to which the originator agrees to manufacture or construct certain
assets and undertakes to deliver those assets at a future date in return for which the trustee makes a payment of
the sukuk proceeds. The trustee undertakes to lease the assets to the originator under a forward lease (known
as an ijara mawsufah fi al-dimmah) for an overall term that reflects the maturity of the sukuk. The trustee uses the
rental received from this advance rental (or actual rental following the delivery of the asset) to pay the periodic
distribution amounts to investors under the sukuk.
On the issuance date, the originator enters into a purchase undertaking which gives the right to the trustee to
oblige the originator to purchase the assets following a sukuk dissolution event or on scheduled maturity at an
exercise price that is equal to the principal amount plus any accrued but unpaid periodic distribution amounts. In
the event that the sukuk dissolution event happens prior to the delivery of the assets to the issuer, a refund and
compensation amount will be paid in order to leave the trustee with an amount sufficient to cover the face values
of the certificates plus any accrued but unpaid periodic distribution amounts. The money received by the trustee
will be used to pay the dissolution amount due to investors under the sukuk.
• The subject matter of the istisna’a contract must be items that can be transformed by manufacture or
construction. Items such as products of nature, such as animals, fruits and vegetables are not included.
• The price and features of the item to be manufactured need to be specified in advance.
• The purchaser may split the purchase price into staged payments that correspond to certain milestones in the
building process, as long as these are agreed upon with the contractor in advance.
• The purchaser may fix a maximum time for delivery, even though specifying the delivery time is not necessary
under the istisna’a agreement. Specifying the time in the contract allows the purchaser to decline accepting the
goods and paying the purchase price.
• Liquidated damages provisions are also permissible and can help to ensure that the contractor delivers on
time.
• A majority of Shari’ah scholars hold that forward leasing, ijara mawsufa al-dimma, is permissible. Under this
view, advance rentals must be taken into account and refunded in full in case the asset is never actually
delivered for leasing.
Despite these apparent advantages of the istisna structure, it is rarely used because market participants widely
hold that istisna’a are not tradable during the construction phase. Additionally, Shari’ah scholars differ greatly in
their opinions on advance rentals and istisna’a termination payments. Therefore, this structure is less attractive
than other more flexible structures, such as the musharaka structure.
Latham & Watkins lawyers (while at a previous firm) were involved in advising on the structuring of a US$18.3
million issue of a wakala sukuk with an istisna/ijara sukuk by Kingdom Installment Company LLC (KIC), a private
finance company in Saudi Arabia. KIC issued the sukuk through KSA MBS I International Sukuk Company
Limited, a special purpose vehicle (SPV) incorporated in the Cayman Islands. Unicorn Investment Bank served as
lead arranger, Shari’ah advisor and, together with Standard Bank Plc, as joint bookrunner to the transaction. The
sukuk, which attracted investors mainly from Europe and Asia, was backed by real estate lease contracts entered
into by Dar Al-Arkan. It was the first mortgage-backed sukuk issued by a GCC company in the international capital
markets. The sukuk’s purpose was to leverage the company’s financing capabilities to provide home-buyers in
Saudi Arabia with funds to purchase their homes, in return for affordable monthly instalments.
Appointment of Servicer
Issuer’s KSA
Custodian
Agent
Issuer
KSA SPV Investors
(Cayman SPV)
RERT Upfront Sukuk
Payment proceeds
Sale of
Assets Sale Proceeds
Servicing Tawarruq
Facility Guarantee
Agreements
Originator DAAR
Agent’s Fees
Underlying IFC
Agreements
Underlying
Obligors
• Issuance of Sukuk: The SPV, as issuer, issued the sukuk, representing an undivided ownership interest in the
underlying assets and a right against the SPV for periodic distribution amounts and a dissolution amount.
• Subscription to Sukuk and Creation of a Trust: The investors subscribed for the sukuk and paid the
proceeds to the SPV. The entirety of the proceeds made up the principal amount. The SPV declared a trust
over the proceeds and acted as a trustee for the investors.
• Istisna’a Arrangement: KIC, as originator, entered into an istisna’a arrangement with the SPV, as trustee. The
SPV, as trustee, commissioned certain assets to be delivered at a future date and KIC, as originator, agreed
to manufacture or construct certain assets and deliver them. The trustee paid the contract price in phase
payments set against certain milestones, in return for the assets. These phase payments in the aggregate
made up the principal amount.
• Periodic Distribution to Investors: On September 30, December 30, March 30 and June 30 of each year up
to the maturity date, the SPV used the rental payments received to pay periodic distribution amounts to the
investors.
• Sale and Purchase Agreement of Assets: Upon an optional call and after delivering the asset, the SPV as
trustee, sold, and KIC as obligor, purchased, the assets at the exercise price, which equalled the principal
amount plus any accrued but unpaid distribution amounts.
• Payment of the Dissolution Amount: The SPV, as issuer, used the exercise price it received to pay the
dissolution amount to the investors.
• Servicing Agreement: The SPV, as trustee, appointed KIC as its servicing agent to administer the underlying
assets under the ijara mawsufa fi al-dimma agreement, including maintenance, insurance and payment of
taxes in connection with the underlying assets. KIC, as servicing agent, was entitled to the reimbursement of
servicing costs.
A murabaha contract is an agreement between a buyer and seller for the delivery of an asset; the price includes
the cost of the asset plus an agreed upon profit margin for the seller. The buyer can pay the price on the spot or
establish deferred payment terms (paying either in instalments or in one future lump sum payment).
Under a murabaha sukuk, the issuer of the sukuk will utilise the proceeds of the sukuk issuance to purchase
commodities from a commodity supplier. The trustee will then on-sell the commodities to the originator of the
sukuk at a deferred price, which reflects the purchase price plus profit for the trustee as compensation for its
involvement in the transaction. The period for the deferred payments reflects the maturity of the sukuk. The
instalments of the deferred price received from the originator are then used to make payment of the periodic
distribution amount due to investors under the sukuk.
Although the sukuk al-murabaha is less commonly used as a stand-alone sukuk structure in comparison to
some other sukuk structures described in this handbook, it has proved to be popular in the hybrid sukuk market,
with an increasing number of sukuk being issued with mudaraba-murabaha structures. The al-murabaha is also
commonly used as investments underlying a sukuk al-wakala structure, as utilised on the Dar Al-Arkan US$1.8
billion sukuk issuance programme described in more detail in the Dar-Al Arkan case study above.
• The rate and time period of the deferred price must be fixed in advance and agreed upon by both parties.
• The trustee’s profit must be clearly stated and agreed upon by both parties in advance. Mention of the total
selling price is not sufficient.
• The trustee, as seller, must acquire title to the commodities before it may sell them on to the purchaser. A sale
by a seller who has not acquired title will be void.
• Commodities must be in the physical or constructive possession of the seller. The seller is considered to have
constructive possession when control, rights and liabilities have passed on to it from the supplier. For instance,
such passing may arise when the seller appoints an agent to take the delivery of the goods.
• The seller must assume the risks of ownership before selling the commodities to the purchaser, including the
transportation risks. The point when the risk of the commodities is passed on from the SPV to the purchaser
must be clearly identified.
• The trustee may appoint the purchaser as its agent in the purchase of the commodities from the supplier.
However, all documents and contracts relating to the sale of the commodities must be in the name of the
trustee, not that of the purchaser.
• The commodities purchased must exist. Non-existent commodities make the murabaha contract void. In
addition, the commodities must be Shari’ah-compliant, e.g. not an item, such as alcohol or pork, that could be
used for an un-Islamic purpose.
In April 2017, Latham & Watkins advised the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia acting through the Ministry of Finance
(the “Kingdom”) on the establishment of a programme for the issuance of mudaraba murabaha sukuk and the
successful issuance of US$9 billion under that programme, the world’s largest ever sukuk issuance. The order
book from investors for the sukuk was over US$33 billion.
Citigroup, HSBC and J.P. Morgan acted as arrangers and dealers on the programme and BNP Paribas, Deutsche
Bank and NCB Capital acted as dealers.
KSA Sukuk Limited was incorporated under the laws of the Cayman Islands as a financial intermediary to issue
the sukuk and act as trustee for the investors.
Commodities
KSA Sukuk Limited as Issuer, Commodities
Trustee and Primary Broker
Rab ul Maal 49% of Issuance
Proceeds
Periodic Distribution
Issuance
Certificates Amounts/Dissolution
Proceeds
Amount
Investors as
Certificateholders
• Issuance of Sukuk: On the issue date of the sukuk, the investors paid the issue price to KSA Sukuk Limited,
an SPV established for the purposes of the sukuk. KSA Sukuk Limited declared a trust in favour of the
investors over the proceeds of the issuance of the sukuk and certain other rights and, in its capacity as the
trustee, then issued the sukuk to the investors.
• Murabaha: An amount equal to no more than 49 percent of the proceeds from the issuance of the sukuk was
used by the trustee to purchase certain Shari’ah compliant commodities through a commodity broker and
the trustee, in its capacity as seller, sold these commodities to the Kingdom in its capacity as purchaser, on a
deferred payment basis pursuant to an initial murabaha transaction and a subsequent murabaha transaction.
• Mudaraba: an amount equal to no less than 51 percent of the proceeds from the issuance of the sukuk
was provided by the trustee, in its capacity as rab al-maal, to Onshore Saudi Arabian Sukuk Company, a
limited liability company established by the Kingdom in Saudi Arabia, acting as the primary mudareb. The
primary mudarib applied the mudaraba investment amount into a primary mudaraba constituted by a primary
mudaraba agreement, under which such amounts will be invested by the Onshore Saudi Arabian Sukuk
Company in a further mudaraba to be managed by the Kingdom, acting in its capacity as infrastructure
mudarib, pursuant to which the infrastructure mudarib invested such amounts in various infrastructure projects
being undertaken by the Kingdom. On each periodic distribution date and/or dissolution date (as applicable),
to the extent that the monies already standing to the credit of the relevant transaction account (as a result of
payments of the relevant deferred sale price(s) or otherwise) are insufficient to fund in full all amounts payable
by the trustee under the trust certificates on the relevant periodic distribution date and/or dissolution date to the
extent funds are available, the Kingdom, in its capacity as infrastructure mudaraba, shall make payment to the
Onshore Saudi Arabian Sukuk Company, in its capacity as infrastructure rab al-maal, of an amount necessary
to allow Onshore Saudi Arabian Sukuk Company, in its capacity as primary mudarib, to make payment of the
required amount to the trustee, in its capacity as the primary rab al-maal, to allow it to make such a payment
to investors.
Bank Aljazira: Latham & Watkins advised GIB Capital L.L.C. and Al Jazira Capital, as joint lead managers and
bookrunners, in relation to Bank Aljazira’s private placement of a SAR2 billion sukuk due in 2026 issued in June
2016. The transaction was based on a hybrid mudaraba murabaha structure under which 49 percent of the
proceeds from the sukuk issuance are applied towards profit generating murabaha agreements and 51 percent
of the sukuk proceeds are invested in assets constituting the originator’s business under a mudaraba agreement.
The sukuk was structured to classify as Tier 2 Capital and was issued in order to further increase the bank’s
capital adequacy ratio.
Arab National Bank: Latham & Watkins advised Arab National Investment Company JSC, Deutsche Securities
Saudi Arabia LLC, HSBC Saudi Arabia Limited and J.P. Morgan Saudi Arabia Limited, as joint lead managers
and bookrunners, in relation to the Arab National Bank’s private placement of a SAR2 billion sukuk due in 2025
issued in October 2015. The transaction was based on a hybrid mudaraba murabaha structure under which 49
percent of the proceeds from the sukuk issuance are applied towards profit generating murabaha agreements and
51 percent of the sukuk proceeds are invested in assets constituting the originator’s business under a mudaraba
agreement. The sukuk was structured to classify as Tier 2 Capital and was issued in order to further increase the
bank’s capital adequacy ratio.
Almarai Company: Latham & Watkins advised HSBC Saudi Arabia Limited and Samba Capital & Investment
Management Company, as joint lead managers and bookrunners, in relation to Almarai Company’s private
placement of a SAR1.6 billion sukuk due in 2022 issued in September 2015. The transaction was based on a
hybrid mudaraba murabaha structure under which 49 percent. of the proceeds from the sukuk issuance are
applied towards profit generating murabaha agreements and 51 percent. of the sukuk proceeds are invested in
assets constituting the originator’s business under a mudaraba agreement.
The Saudi British Bank: Latham & Watkins advised HSBC Saudi Arabia Limited, as lead manager and
bookrunner, in relation to the Saudi British Bank’s private placement of a SAR1.5 billion sukuk due in 2025.
The transaction was based on a hybrid mudaraba murabaha structure under which 49 percent of the proceeds
from the sukuk issuance are applied towards profit generating murabaha agreements and 51 percent of the
sukuk proceeds are invested in assets constituting the originator’s business under a mudaraba agreement. The
sukuk was structured to classify as Tier 2 Capital and was issued in order to further increase the bank’s capital
adequacy ratio.
Banque Saudi Fransi: Latham & Watkins advised Saudi Fransi Capital, as lead manager and bookrunner,
in relation to Banque Saudi Fransi’s private placement of a SAR2 billion sukuk due in 2024. The transaction
was based on a hybrid mudaraba murabaha structure under which 49 percent of the proceeds from the sukuk
issuance are applied towards profit generating murabaha agreements and 51 percent of the sukuk proceeds are
invested in assets constituting the originator’s business under a mudaraba agreement. The sukuk was structured
to classify as Tier 2 Capital and was issued in order to further increase the bank’s capital adequacy ratio.
National Industrialization Company (TASNEE): Latham & Watkins advised Riyadh based National
Industrialization Company, or Tasnee, in its issuance of a SAR2 billion mudaraba/al murabaha due in 2020 under
an SAR5.575 billion programme. The sukuk was privately placed with investors resident in Saudi Arabia and was
solely arranged by HSBC Saudi Arabia, which acted as the Shari’ah advisor as well.
Advanced Petrochemicals Company: In November 2014, Latham & Watkins advised Riyad Capital Company
and HSBC Saudi Arabia Limited on the debt issuance of Advanced Petrochemical Company’s SAR1 billion sukuk
due 2019. The sukuk was privately placed with investors in Saudi Arabia.
Another very rarely employed structure, the salam structure comprises the sale of a commodity to be delivered
to the purchaser in the future. The purchaser, however, pays the full purchase price immediately. To avoid the
prohibition on uncertainty, the commodity must be a standardised one and its quality, quantity, place, date and
time of delivery must be well defined and agreed upon by both parties in advance.
The purchase price paid upfront is also referred to as the salam capital. The commodities to be delivered in
the future are referred to as al-muslam fihi. The originator of sukuk is the seller of al-muslam fihi and the issuer
SPV purchases al-muslam fihi on behalf of the investors. The funds realised from the sale constitutes the salam
capital.
Because re-selling commodities before actual possession would amount to selling debt, salam cannot be traded,
rendering the salam instrument illiquid, which in turn means that this structure is used infrequently. In addition,
the requirement that the originator delivers certain ‘standardised’ assets to the issuer is very difficult for many
originator companies to satisfy.
DUBAI RIYADH
Dubai International Financial Centre Al-Tatweer Towers, 7th Floor, Tower 1
Precinct Building 1, Level 3 King Fahad Highway
P.O. Box 506698 P.O. Box 17411
Dubai Riyadh 11484
United Arab Emirates Saudi Arabia
T +971.4.704.6300 T +966.11.207.2500
F +971.4.704.6499 F +966.11.207.2577
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