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Bargain Hunters Zero in on Saudi Bonds 

Published 11/19/2018, 03:01 PM
Updated 11/19/2018, 03:20 PM
© Bloomberg. The Kingdom Tower, center rear, stands as automobile traffic moves along the King Fahd highway, left and Olaya Street, right, in Riyadh. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- As if the fallout over the killing of columnist Jamal Khashoggi wasn’t enough, oil’s decline has helped make Saudi bonds the worst performers among Gulf peers in the second half of this year. But all this panic has created buying opportunities.

“There are times when risks get overpriced,” said New York-based Shamaila Khan, director of developing-nation debt at AllianceBernstein. “We like to take advantage of that when it happens.”

The nation’s bonds have been roiled by the international outrage over the murder of Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Turkey. Meanwhile, the price of oil, the kingdom’s main source of income, plummeted into a bear market as the U.S. granted surprise waivers for sanctioned Iranian crude, spurring the yield on Saudi Arabia’s $5 billion bonds due 2028 to a record last week.

The kingdom’s five-year credit default swaps jumped 37 percent this quarter, the most among 40 contracts tracked by Bloomberg globally, to 94 basis points on Friday, according to CMA prices.

Not Just Saudi

Oman and Bahrain, which have the weakest finances in the region, have also seen their bonds decline with crude. The yield on Oman’s 2028 bonds have risen almost everyday this month to 6.6 percent on Friday, near the highest since the notes were issued this year, and the rate on similar maturity Bahraini securities climbed every day last week.

For Brett Rowley the Los Angeles-based managing director for emerging markets at TCW Group Inc., the short-term outlook for debt in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation council is being clouded by oil, and the selloff could provide an opportunity to gain “exposure to the energy producers at more attractive levels,” he said. “A 2014-style collapse is not our base case scenario.”

The economies of the six-member GCC are set to grow 2.4 percent this year and 3 percent in 2019, after contracting in 2017, the International Monetary Fund said last week.

Most of the countries in the region are “fairly strong credits” and will be able to withstand the recent drop in oil, said Khan at AllianceBernstein.

© Bloomberg. The Kingdom Tower, center rear, stands as automobile traffic moves along the King Fahd highway, left and Olaya Street, right, in Riyadh. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

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