Announcement for the nomination of Mobile Telecommunications Company- 'ZAIN' Board of Directors membership

Mobile Telecommunication Company Saudi Arabia (Zain), a unit of Kuwait’s Zain, has signed a long-term commercial facility agreement for a loan with a two-year tenor, which can be extended by a year.
Zain's deal is for a $600 million loan from Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd., replacing a facility of it signed with regional banks two months ago, the Riyadh-based telecom company said in a statement posted on Tadawul website.
This new facility will have a lower financing cost compared to the existing facilities based on the terms.
The new move also highlights the fact that China’s largest bank is boosting lending in Saudi Arabia, increasing its foothold in the biggest Arab economy as growth slows in its home market.
The deal was signed on Aug. 15 for a total loan amount of $599,808,061.42 (SR2,249,280,230.33).

Financing cost

The initial loan duration is from Aug. 29, 2016, to Aug. 15, 2018, which can be extended till Aug. 8, 2019.
The proceeds of this facility will be used for repaying an existing facility with syndicate indicated in the company’s announcement on Tadawul website on June 5, 2016.
The objective also is to improve terms and reduce financing cost by approximately SR175 million over the three-year period, by reducing the margin and converting from Saudi riyals to dollars.
Zain Group offers an unconditional and irrevocable loan guarantee.
Chinese banks are boosting lending in the Kingdom. ICBC also lent Saudi Electricity Co. $1.5 billion in June to fund projects and provided $950 million to the Saudi government as part of the country’s $10 billion loan in May.
China’s broadest measure of new credit and another key gauge of lending increased at the slowest pace in two years in July, suggesting monetary authorities are more concerned about swelling financial risks than giving a boost to old growth engines. Curbing financial risks has increasingly become a policy priority after economic growth stabilized in the second quarter.
Loan growth in China will slow from double-digit levels, which means that banks are looking at international markets for growth, according to Anita Yadav, head of fixed-income research at Emirates NBD PJSC, Dubai’s biggest bank, by phone from Dubai.
“Telecoms are like a utility business and investing in the industry in Saudi Arabia will be reasonably safe,” he added.
Syndicated loans in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, which includes Saudi Arabia and the UAE, have surged in 2016 as governments seek to bridge deficits caused by oil’s decline. They’ve risen 26 percent to $74.8 billion, the highest since at least 2005.
ICBC has jumped to be the ninth-biggest provider of syndicated loans in the GCC this year, while it was ranked 54th in 2015, according to the data. It was also a lender to Kuwait’s Equate Petrochemical Co. KSC’s $5 billion syndicated loan in June and a 2.25 billion-euro loan ($2.54 billion) to Qatar National Bank in May.
Zain Saudi had raised the riyal facility from Arab National Bank, Banque Saudi Fransi, Gulf International Bank and Samba Financial Group in June, replacing a similar loan from the same group.

Source: Arab News