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As Oil Prices Fall, Saudi Arabia Borrows $10 Billion to Stay Afloat

© AP Photo / Hassan Ammar, FileThis May. 3, 2009 file photo shows an oil facility in Jubeil, about 600 km from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
This May. 3, 2009 file photo shows an oil facility in Jubeil, about 600 km from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - Sputnik International
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Saudi Arabia is borrowing $10 billion from a range of US, European and Asian banks, as the kingdom attempts to fill a record $98 billion budget deficit amid dropping oil revenues.

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The loan is Saudi Arabia's first international debt issuance in 25 years, which came as the country's main source of revenue fell 23% last year. The lead arrangers, each contributing around $1.3 billion, include the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, HSBC and JPMorgan. The loan has been provided despite a sharp downgrade recently in Saudi Arabia's creditworthiness.

The continuous slump in crude oil prices pushed the world's top oil exporter to turn to foreign capital, alongside neighboring oil-based economies, including Qatar, a country that also sharply increased overseas borrowing.

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The Saudi government initially planned to raise some $6-$8 billion through a five-year loan, but that amount was raised by the Saudi Finance Ministry to $10 billion.

The loan is expected to be signed before the end of April.

The strategy of raising overseas debt aims to reduce reliance on domestic banks, which have been buying Saudi domestic bonds for almost a year, opening the way for the debut issue of an international bond by the kingdom.

"The loan is a way for Saudi Arabia to test the waters and set up an international borrowing profile," said Ewen Cameron Watt, chief investment strategist at BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager.

"This is paving the way for the kingdom to transform from a creditor nation into a debtor nation. It's a significant moment of change in debt markets."

Bankers claim that Saudi Arabia's first global bond issue is a step closer now in the wake of the loan deal, the Financial Times reported. Institutions that participated the most would be set to benefit from a mandate to help Riyadh raise the bond.

On April 25 Prince Mohammed bin Salman, one of the current king's sons, and the man responsible for the country's economic reform, is expected to bring out his "vision for Saudi Arabia," a template for shifting the state into a post-oil era.

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