Arab News
Arab News,
Mon, Dec 08, 2025 | Jumada Al-Thani 17, 1447
Saudi Arabia opens December ‘Sah’ sukuk sale at 4.68% return
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia has opened subscriptions for its December issuance of the
government-backed “Sah” savings sukuk, offering investors an annual return of
4.68 percent, slightly lower than the 4.71 percent provided in the previous
month.
In a post on X, the National Debt Management Center announced that the
subscription window opened at 10:00 a.m. Saudi time on Dec. 7 and will close at
3:00 p.m. on Dec. 9.
Part of the 2025 issuance calendar managed by the NDMC, the sukuk reflects the
Kingdom’s continued efforts to promote financial inclusion and encourage
personal savings.
Launched under the Financial Sector Development Program — a key component of the
Vision 2030 agenda — Sah aims to raise the national savings rate to 10 percent
by 2030, up from about 6 percent currently.
According to NDMC, the minimum subscription amount is SR1,000 ($266.56), while
the maximum is capped at SR200,000 per investor. The sukuk carries a one-year
maturity and offers fixed returns paid at redemption.
Subscriptions are available exclusively to Saudi nationals aged 18 and above
through approved investment platforms, including SNB Capital, Aljazira Capital,
Alinma Investment, SAB Invest and Al-Rajhi Capital.
Sukuk are Shariah-compliant financial instruments that grant investors partial
ownership in an issuer’s underlying assets, serving as a popular alternative to
conventional bonds.
Last month, NDMC announced that it raised SR5.83 billion through its
riyal-denominated sukuk program.
The November issuance was divided into five tranches, with the first one valued
at SR700 million, set to mature in 2027.
The second tranche amounted to SR1.37 billion, maturing in 2029, while the third
tranche, worth SR180 million, will expire in 2032.
The fourth tranche, valued at SR197 million, is due in 2036, while the last
tranche, due in 2039, was valued at SR3.38 billion.
Saudi Arabia’s debt market has seen robust growth in recent years, drawing
strong investor interest in fixed-income instruments amid a global environment
of rising interest rates.
In October, Kuwait Financial Center, also known as Markaz, reported that Saudi
Arabia dominated the Gulf Cooperation Council’s primary debt market in the third
quarter of 2025, raising $20.32 billion through 36 issuances — a 62.7 percent
year-on-year increase in value.