DUBAI, March 3 (Reuters) - Ras Al Khaimah, one of seven
city-states of the United Arab Emirates and likely location of
its first casino, has mandated banks to arrange investor
meetings ahead of issuing sukuk, or an Islamic bond, issue, a
document showed on Monday.
The government plans to issue 10-year benchmark-sized sukuk
following the meetings, which begin on March 3, dependent on
market conditions, the document from one of the arranging banks
said.
Benchmark-sized is generally understood to mean at least
$500 million.
Citi, Emirates NBD Capital, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank,
First Abu Dhabi Bank, the National Bank of Ras Al Khaimah and
Standard Chartered ( SCBFF ) are mandated joint global coordinators and
lead managers.
Proceeds from the planned issue will be used for general
government and budgetary purposes. The government has gross
outstanding debt of 3.67 billion dirhams ($999.37 million), a
sukuk due to mature in 2025, a bond prospectus showed.
Hotel and casino operator Wynn Resorts ( WYNN ) is
developing a luxury resort, the Wynn Al Marjan Island in the
city-state, and was last year awarded the UAE's first commercial
gaming operator's licence.
The resort is expected to open in the first quarter of 2027.
The UAE, which wants to diversify its economy away from
hydrocarbons, in 2023 established a new gaming regulator, ending
years of speculation on whether the country would allow gambling
- illegal across the conservative Gulf region.
Ras Al Khaimah's government had, at the end of last year,
contributed 2.1 billion dirhams ($571.83 million) as equity to
the Wynn joint venture, according to the prospectus.
It expects to add 1.4 billion dirhams and 1.6 billion
dirhams in 2025 and 2026, respectively, and estimates an
additional 8.8 billion dirhams will be raised through debt
financing.
The UAE's bigger emirates include Dubai and Abu Dhabi, which
have both accelerated efforts to develop sectors such as
tourism, manufacturing and financial services.
($1 = 3.6723 UAE dirham)