Saudi oil giant Aramco raises $3 billion from Islamic bonds
Friday, 12 September 2025
DUBAI, Sept 11 (Reuters): Saudi Aramco, the world's biggest oil company, raised $3 billion from a sale of Islamic bonds, a term sheet showed on Thursday, as investors appeared unperturbed by an Israeli attack on neighbouring Qatar this week.
Aramco priced $1.5 billion in five-year Islamic bonds, or sukuk, at a profit rate of 4.125 per cent and $1.5 billion in 10-year sukuk at a profit rate of 4.625 per cent, the term sheet seen by Reuters showed.
Solid demand helped Aramco tighten both tranches' spreads to US Treasuries by 35 basis points from initial price guidance, the term sheet showed, signalling investors shrugged off Tuesday's attack on Qatar.
Final order books for both tranches topped $16.85 billion, a separate bank document seen by Reuters showed. Demand had peaked at over $20 billion, according to fixed income news service IFR.
"I don't see much reaction (from the attack on Qatar)," a Saudi-based investment banker said as the sale kicked off, requesting not to be named.
Saudi Aramco did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters on the transaction.
Aramco's debt sale follows a surge in bond issuance from the Gulf region this month, including Saudi Arabia's $5.5 billion sukuk sale, driven by strong investor demand and heavy inflows into bond funds.
But it was also a test of investor appetite for regional deals a day after Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with airstrikes on Qatar, escalating its military action in the Middle East.
Reuters reported last week that Aramco,
in which the Saudi government is
the majority shareholder, could raise
between $2 billion and $4 billion from
the sukuk sale amid weaker oil
prices. The debt will be used for
general corporate purposes, the term
sheet said.