Saudi largest lender SNB announces the issuance of SR-denominated sukuk offering

Saudi National Bank has announced the commencement of its additional sukuk offering on Aug. 28. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 29 August 2022
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Saudi largest lender SNB announces the issuance of SR-denominated sukuk offering

RIYADH: Saudi National Bank has announced the issuance of its additional sukuk offering on Aug. 28, in a bid to strengthen the bank’s capital base.

Denominated in Saudi riyals, the size and offer price of the issuance are still undetermined and subject to market conditions, SNB said in a stock exchange filing.

The expected end date of the offering is Dec. 31, 2022. Investors shall subscribe to a minimum of SR1 million ($266,000), with a return rate yet to be determined.

SNB Capital will act as the sole book-runner, lead arranger, and lead manager of the offer.

This comes after the bank reported strong earnings for the first half of 2022, posting a 59 percent profit surge to SR9 billion.

This is against the SR5.7 billion profit the Saudi-listed bank had reported in the corresponding period last year.

The profit hike came as total operating profit surged 24 percent to SR16.4 billion from SR13.3 billion during the same period a year ago.

SNB also attributed the figures to a drop in expenses of 12.5 percent, mainly due to lower impairment charges for credit losses. 

Along with the robust financial performance, the bank declared a half-year dividend payout of SR4.48 billion, representing SR1.1 per share.

Shares of SNB have surged nearly 11 percent to date this year, reaching SR70.6 in early trading on Sunday following the sukuk announcement.

The massive lender currently holds a market capitalization of almost SR316 billion.

Earlier this year in January, SNB completed the issuance of $750 million worth of sukuk to qualified investors through private placement.

With a maturity period of five years, the dollar-denominated sukuk is listed on the London Stock Exchange’s international securities market.

Citigroup Global Markets Ltd., Emirates NBD, Goldman Sachs International, HSBC Bank, Mizuho International, and SNB Capital jointly managed the offering.

On a wider scale, the Kingdom’s domestic market has recorded $14.4 billion worth of sukuk sales this year, registering a growth of 185 percent over the last year, an analysis done by Bloomberg revealed.

This amount represents more than half of global domestic sukuk sales, and the Saudi government alone has sold more than 60 percent of it.

“There are a lot of projects going on in Saudi Arabia driven by their Vision 2030 to diversify their economy away from oil. These all need funding,” Doug Bitcon, the Dubai-based head of credit strategies at Rasmala Investment Bank, told Bloomberg. 

“Local investors are familiar with the local companies, and they can often raise liquidity at fine spreads,” he added.


Lower funding costs driving credit growth in Saudi banks

Updated 11 January 2026
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Lower funding costs driving credit growth in Saudi banks

The operating environment for Saudi banks has turned increasingly supportive of credit expansion, reflecting a broad-based decline in key interest-rate benchmarks, including the repurchase and reverse repurchase agreement rates and the Saudi Interbank Offered Rate. 

This easing cycle, evident by November 2025, has reshaped funding conditions across the banking system and reinforced the sector’s capacity to support economic activity.

Policy rate reductions by the Saudi Central Bank have lowered short-term funding costs and contributed to a marked softening in interbank rates. This trend is clearly illustrated by the movement in three-month SAIBOR, which declined to 4.97 percent in November 2025, down from 5.53 percent in the same month a year earlier. The decline signals not only improved liquidity conditions but also strengthening confidence within the interbank market.

In parallel, cuts to repurchase and reverse repurchase agreement rates have further enhanced system-wide liquidity, enabling banks to deploy capital more efficiently. Improved funding affordability has encouraged lenders to continue extending credit, particularly to the corporate sector, while the decline in SAIBOR has translated directly into lower pricing for floating-rate loans. Together, these factors have eased borrowing conditions and strengthened demand for bank financing.

Against this backdrop, the reduction in banks’ cost of funds is expected to incentivize clients—especially small and medium-sized enterprises—to expand their financing needs. 

For SMEs, lower borrowing costs can be pivotal in unlocking investment, supporting working capital requirements, and facilitating business expansion. For banks, stronger credit demand helps offset some of the pressure on net interest margins typically associated with a lower interest-rate environment.

More broadly, declining interest rates are supporting sustained growth in bank lending to the private sector. Saudi banks have demonstrated financial resilience in this environment, adapting effectively to the lower-rate backdrop while maintaining their central role in financing economic activity. Their ability to balance margin management with credit expansion underscores the sector’s operational flexibility.

Saudi banks have responded positively to the reduction in funding costs, as evidenced by the continued and steady expansion of private-sector lending. Total bank credit to the private sector rose by 10.6 percent year on year in November 2025, reaching SR3.1 trillion ($838 billion). This growth reflects both stronger demand and banks’ willingness to lend amid improved funding conditions.

The expansion in credit has been broad-based, with notable gains across segments that are particularly sensitive to interest-rate movements. Lending to SMEs has shown especially strong momentum. Total bank credit to SMEs reached SR427.7 billion in the third quarter of 2025, accounting for 11 percent of total private-sector lending, compared with SR311.8 billion in the same period of 2024, when SMEs represented 9.1 percent of the lending portfolio. This shift highlights the growing role of SMEs in the Kingdom’s economic landscape.

Mortgage lending has also maintained its upward trajectory, increasing by 10.8 percent to around SR938 billion in the third quarter of 2025. Lower financing costs, combined with ongoing housing initiatives, have continued to support demand for residential mortgages, reinforcing the banking sector’s contribution to higher homeownership rates.

Household credit demand strengthened further in the third quarter of 2025. Consumer loans totaled SR476.6 billion, while credit card lending reached SR33.4 billion. These segments recorded year-on-year growth of 3.1 percent and 10.3 percent, respectively, reflecting both improved consumer confidence and more favorable borrowing conditions.

Islamic banking has remained a key driver of sectoral growth, supported by rising demand for Shariah-compliant products. Total Islamic financing reached SR2.7 trillion in the third quarter of 2025, representing a year-on-year increase of 13.5 percent. This expansion underscores the depth and maturity of Islamic finance within the Saudi banking system.

Importantly, the growth in credit has been underpinned by the sector’s strong capital position, ample reserves, and solid profitability metrics, all of which reinforce financial soundness. In November 2025, capital and reserves accounted for 18.76 percent of total deposits, comfortably exceeding regulatory requirements.

Aggregate net income before zakat and taxes rose to SR93.7 billion, up 16.7 percent from SR80.3 billion a year earlier, highlighting banks’ ability to generate earnings despite a lower-rate environment.

In sum, the easing of monetary conditions has created a favorable operating environment for Saudi banks, supporting robust credit growth across corporate, SME, mortgage, household, and Islamic banking segments. This expansion, driven by a lower cost of funds, aligns closely with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030, particularly in fostering private-sector development, expanding SME participation, increasing homeownership, and deepening the Islamic finance ecosystem.

While lending growth has outpaced deposit growth, Saudi banks have maintained prudent liquidity positions and financial resilience. Diversified funding sources, effective balance-sheet management, and improved funding affordability have enabled the sector to navigate this phase of the cycle.

Within the framework of the Kingdom’s countercyclical economic policy approach, sustained credit expansion alongside declining funding costs is expected to support non-oil economic activity, enhance financial intermediation, and help banks manage profitability pressures while contributing to overall macroeconomic stability.

 

Talat Zaki Hafiz is an economist and financial analyst.

X: @TalatHafiz