Sukuk documentation adapts to AAOIFI standards

Fitch Ratings says that however, it is uncertain if additional changes will be seen in the near term and issuers have exhibited varying degrees of adaptation, while the practical effect of the new documentation has yet to be tested

Changes in global sukuk documentation linked to UAE Central Bank’s adoption of the Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions’ (AAOIFI) sharia norms have become standardised to some extent.

Fitch Ratings says that however, it is uncertain if additional changes will be seen in the near term and issuers have exhibited varying degrees of adaptation, while the practical effect of the new documentation has yet to be tested.

A majority of Fitch-rated sukuk issued in 2021-9M22 have new clauses embedded in the documents, including defined tangibility events and the associated put options.

Need for compliance

The changes have been seen across sovereigns, financial institutions and corporate issuers. Non-compliance with AAOIFI sharia standards and Higher Sharia Authority (HSA) guidelines could reduce sukuk demand, as a sizeable share of global sukuk investors, arrangers and issuers are based in the UAE and fall under UAE Central Bank’s remit. In June 2022, Fitch updated its Sukuk Rating Criteria to take account of these developments.

Fitch commented on the potential impact of the adoption of AAOIFI standards when new clauses and revised terms began to appear in documentation last year. These included stricter tangibility ratio requirements with new dissolution triggers. While gaps remain, some standardisation has been achieved in language relating to tangibility events, delisting events, indemnity payments and partial-loss events.

Tangibility events

Several Fitch-rated sukuk across sectors issued in 2021-9M22 have sufficient unencumbered sharia-compliant assets to provide headroom against tangibility events. However, the risk of tangibility event is present for sukuk issuers (mainly non-sovereigns) with limited tangible assets and low headroom. This could expose issuers to rising liquidity risk upon exercise of put options by investors, which could have implications for their Issuer Default Ratings.

The amount that can be raised through sukuk issuance could also be capped by the value of an obligor’s tangible assets. This built-in cap on leverage could be credit positive, but may be neutral or negative for issuers with limited tangible assets, asset-light firms and highly indebted issuers, for whom it could restrict access to funding.

Sukuk investors may have an advantage over conventional bond investors in their contractual right to exercise a put option following a tangibility event and accelerate repayment prior to maturity. However, this remains untested in practice since no dissolution triggers have been hit, or puts exercised. This compounds uncertainty over potential differences in sukuk and bondholder treatment in many Islamic finance markets. Most Fitch-rated sukuk are senior unsecured obligations of the issuer and rank pari passu with other senior unsecured obligations, including bonds.

Sukuk issuance slows

Global sukuk issuance slowed in Q121, due to complexities relating to AAOIFI, before normalising. Annual global growth in 2021 was 42.3%, driven by sizeable issuances by sovereigns, Islamic banks and large corporates.

However, the impact was greater in the UAE, where sukuk volumes fell by 54.1% in 2021, while issuance of conventional bonds, which are simpler, more standardised and unaffected by AAOIFI standards, jumped by 239.3%. This shift from sukuk to bonds partly retraced in H122, when sukuk issued by UAE-based entities rose by 88.4% compared to 2H21, while bond issuance increased by 9.2%.

Issuance for the remainder of 2022 will depend on various factors, including how far high oil prices reduce oil-exporting sovereigns’ funding needs and global investor appetite for emerging market debt as well as sharia complexities. However, intact Islamic investor appetite, upcoming debt maturities, Islamic-finance development plans from several governments, and issuers’ funding diversification strategies should support issuance over the longer term.

Secondary market liquidity

Secondary market liquidity remains limited for sukuk as the market is dominated by buy-and-hold investors. UAE-based Islamic banks may face regulatory restrictions on investing in sukuk issued before 2021 that do not comply with AAOIFI sharia standards and HSA guidelines, further reducing secondary market liquidity.

A lack of standardisation is a long-standing challenge for sukuk, including in product structuring, documentation, sharia-interpretation and dispute resolution.

Copyright 2022 Al Hilal Publishing and Marketing Group Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info). Zawya 2022

 

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