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Business / Middle East Business

Saudi to launch Fannie Mae-style firm

Published: 20 Mar 2013 - 03:45 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 02:42 pm

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s central bank plans to launch a real estate refinancing company with SR5bn ($1.3bn) of capital to help develop the kingdom’s mortgage market, local media quoted its governor as saying.

The company will be launched through the Saudi government’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) or its subsidiaries, local daily Iqtissadeya cited Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency Governor Fahad Al Mubarak as saying. 

The PIF was established in 1971 to provide financing support to important development projects that cannot be implemented by the private sector alone.

Last November, the Saudi central bank said it was studying draft regulations that could see the creation of a company similar to collapsed US firm Fannie Mae, established by the Washington in the 1930s to finance the US mortgage market.

“We studied the successful experience in other countries in terms of mortgage,” Arab News yesterday quoted Mubarak as telling an economic forum in the western port city of Jeddah.

Central bank officials were not immediately available to comment. November’s draft said the new firm, with a minimum registered capital of SR2bn would have to stay majority state-owned but real estate financing firms would be allowed to acquire stakes up to a combined total of 30 percent.

 After over a decade of study, the government last June approved a law allowing home mortgages to help reduce a housing shortage in the world’s top oil exporter, one of the main drivers of inflation in recent years.

The law followed the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz’s decision in 2011 to build 500,000 housing units for Saudis over several years as part of a $110bn fiscal package aimed at soothing social tensions at home as unrest spread through the Arab world. Earlier this month, Mubarak said he expected a large but gradual growth in mortgage finance activity in the kingdom, adding it would be based on studying risks. Reuters