Bahrain-based Islamic investment bank Gulf Finance House (GFH) said on Monday it has restructured $45 million in debt which it will pay back over the next six years.
The cash is part of a $100 million wakala-structured facility, compliant with Islamic law, that is led by the Bahrain-based Liquidity Management Centre (LMC), GFH said in a statement.
It is the second time that GFH has restructured the facility. In March 2010, ahead of a $50 million repayment, the firm said it had scheduled payments so $20 million was paid immediately and the remainder in equal half-yearly instalments until 2012.
“GFH has already paid $55 million of the total amount in the past and now has restructured the remainder,” it said in the statement.
Under the restructuring terms, GFH gets a two-year grace period for 2012 and 2013, meaning repayment will start in 2014, with the final instalment due in September 2018, it said.
Under a wakala structure, certificates are issued through a special purpose vehicle which purchases specific assets which are then given to an agent, usually the originator, to manage.
Institutions involved in the facility include Emirates NBD’s ‘s Islamic unit, Bahrain Islamic Bank, Liquidity Management Centre and Liquidity Management House, it said.
The bank was repeatedly forced into restructuring obligations in 2010 as the firm struggled with its debt burden in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
Reuters