Sectors — IFC Oman

Capital Markets

Sukuk, debt, equity, and structured finance for issuers across the Islamic world and the Indian Ocean.

Capital markets at IFC Oman

A regulated origination, listing, and trading platform.

IFC Oman’s capital markets framework is designed to serve three growing pools of demand: the Islamic world’s appetite for Sukuk, the Gulf’s expanding private credit market, and the cross-border equity issuance needs of companies operating across the Indian Ocean region.

The framework is hosted under common law. Bond indentures, trust deeds, security documents, and subscription agreements are governed and enforceable inside the jurisdiction without re-characterisation. For institutional investors and issuers already accustomed to English law capital markets documentation, IFC Oman requires no adaptation.

platform-indenture

Origination, listing, and settlement

Proposition

Why IFC Oman for capital markets.

01

Common-law documentation

A regulated address and a team on the ground, close to GCC sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and institutional investors that expect a genuine regional presence from their managers.

02

Sukuk-native framework

Regulatory and legal infrastructure for the full range of Sukuk structures, Ijara, Murabaha, Musharaka, and Wakala, familiar to international Islamic investors and Shari’a scholars.

03

Regulated exchange and listing authority

The framework provides for a regulated securities exchange and listing authority for debt and equity securities issued in and through IFC Oman.

04

GCC Islamic investor access

A regulated bridge to sovereign wealth, Islamic banks, and takaful operators across the Gulf, and to institutional Islamic demand in Southeast and South Asia.

05

Indian Ocean corridor reach

A regulated address for issuers and originators serving the Gulf, South Asia, and East Africa trade and investment corridors.

06

Sovereign anchor

Oman is itself an active sovereign Sukuk issuer, with Omani corporates and quasi-sovereigns increasingly present in the market.

07

Independent regulation

Authorisation and supervision by the IFC Oman Regulatory Authority, operating on international standards for capital markets conduct and disclosure.

08

Full activity licence set

Seven regulated capital markets activities, from equity underwriting through listing and exchange services, available under a single authorisation regime.

What you can do here

Seven regulated activities.

IFC Oman’s regulatory framework supports the following capital markets activities, subject to authorisation by the IFC Oman Regulatory Authority.

At a glance

The fund platform in numbers.

Outstanding global Sukuk issuance
$ 0 B+
Recognised Sukuk structures (Ijara, Murabaha, Musharaka, Wakala)
0
Regulated capital markets activities at IFC Oman
0
Maximum corporate income tax exemption on eligible activities
0 yr

The Sukuk opportunity

The Sukuk opportunity.

Sukuk issuance is one of the highest-growth areas in global fixed income. The depth of Islamic investor appetite sits in the GCC, Southeast Asia, and South Asia, and is increasingly matched by the willingness of non-Muslim-majority sovereigns and corporates to access this investor base. Outstanding global Sukuk issuance has grown past USD 800 billion.

The Sultanate of Oman is itself an active sovereign Sukuk issuer, and Omani corporates and quasi-sovereigns are increasingly active in the market. IFC Oman provides the regulatory and legal infrastructure for Sukuk issuance vehicles to be constituted under a common law framework that is familiar to international Islamic investors and their Shari’a scholars.

For non-Omani issuers, African sovereigns, South Asian corporates, Asian infrastructure companies, IFC Oman can serve as the issuance jurisdiction of choice for accessing GCC Islamic investor demand.

Outstanding global Sukuk issuance

$800B+

Ijara

Lease-based. The most widely used structure for sovereign and corporate issuances.

Murabaha

Cost-plus sale structures, common in shorter-tenor issuance.

Musharaka

Equity-partnership structures for project finance and longer-tenor instruments.

Wakala

Agency-based structures used for hybrid and corporate Sukuk.

Outstanding global Sukuk issuance

GCC

Sovereign wealth, Islamic banks, takaful operators.

Southeast Asia

Malaysian and Indonesian institutional Islamic demand.

South Asia

Growing Sukuk issuance and investor appetite across Pakistan and the Gulf-South Asia corridor.

The Sukuk opportunity

Private credit and regional debt.

The Gulf private credit market is in an early but accelerating growth phase. Regional family offices, sovereign-adjacent investment vehicles, and international private credit managers are building allocations to direct lending, trade finance, and real asset debt across the GCC and the wider region. IFC Oman provides a regulated platform for the vehicles that house that capital.

Private credit fund structures

Private credit fund structures and their managers, investing in Omani and regional debt opportunities.

Collateralised financing vehicles

Collateralised financing vehicles and structured finance SPVs for specific asset portfolios.

Trade finance vehicles

Trade finance vehicles providing working capital financing to Gulf, South Asia, and Africa trade flows.

Real estate debt vehicles

Real estate debt vehicles providing mezzanine and senior financing to Omani and regional property projects.

The Sukuk opportunity

The common-law advantage.

Capital markets transactions, bond indentures, trust deeds, security documents, subscription agreements, are almost universally documented under English law. IFC Oman’s common law framework means those documents are directly governed and enforceable within the jurisdiction. For investors and issuers accustomed to English law capital markets documentation, IFC Oman requires no adaptation.

01

Bond indentures and trust deeds.

Indentures, trust deeds, and inter-creditor agreements drafted under English law are recognised and enforceable inside IFC Oman without re-characterisation under civil law principles.

02

Bond indentures and trust deeds.

Indentures, trust deeds, and inter-creditor agreements drafted under English law are recognised and enforceable inside IFC Oman without re-characterisation under civil law principles.

03

Bond indentures and trust deeds.

Indentures, trust deeds, and inter-creditor agreements drafted under English law are recognised and enforceable inside IFC Oman without re-characterisation under civil law principles.

Continue exploring

The eight pillars of IFC Oman.

Move between the sectors of IFC Oman’s regulated platform.

01

Regulated fund management for the Gulf, South Asia, and Africa.

02

Trade finance, corporate banking, investment banking, and private wealth.

03

Capital Markets

Debt and equity issuance, Sukuk, structured finance.

You are here

04

Digital payments, open banking, digital assets, and RegTech.

05

Captive insurance, treaty reinsurance, and specialty lines.

06

Shari’a-compliant banking, Sukuk, Islamic asset management, and takaful.

07

Law, accounting, audit, compliance, and management consulting.

08

Cross-border holding vehicles, PE and VC platforms, family offices, joint ventures.

Issue from Oman.

Speak to the IFC Oman desk for a single point of contact across origination, documentation, listing, and settlement of your issuance.

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