Saudi Arabia taps BlackRock to build mortgage-backed securities market
The country hopes this will allow banks to offer borrowers lower interest rates and improve the cost of home ownership
SAUDI Arabia is turning to the world’s biggest fund manager to help it develop a market for mortgage-backed securities as the kingdom looks to improve the affordability of its housing stock.
The country hopes developing a secondary market for mortgages would allow banks to offer borrowers lower interest rates and improve the cost of home ownership, BlackRock chief executive officer Larry Fink said at a conference in Johannesburg.
In August, BlackRock signed an agreement with Saudi Real Estate Refinance Company – the state-owned equivalent of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the US – to develop the real estate finance market in the kingdom.
As part of the deal, the two agreed to look for ways to diversify funding sources through fixed income markets.
“Spreads are much wider than if there was a securitisation market,” Fink said. “It would be much narrower and the homeowners would benefit, so the cost of home ownership would go down.”
The agreement with BlackRock is part of Saudi Arabia’s plans to try to raise home ownership rates to 70% by 2030, a key part of Crown Prince Mohammed Salman’s plans to boost the kingdom’s economy by easing its dependence on crude oil and instead become a hub for everything from entertainment to tourism to manufacturing.
The Public Investment Fund, the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, established the Saudi Real Estate Refinance Company in 2017. The company has a licence from the Saudi Central Bank to offer real estate refinancing. BLOOMBERG
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