Sukuk al-Salam
Introduction
Generally, in order for a sale to be valid under
Shari’a the object forming the subject matter
of the sale must be in existence and in the
physical or constructive possession of the
seller. The exceptions to this general position
are sales effected pursuant to salam and istisna
contracts.
In its simplest form, a salam contract involves
the purchase of assets by one party from
another party on immediate payment and
deferred delivery terms. The purchase price of
the assets is typically referred to as the salam
capital and is paid at the time of entering into
the salam contract. The assets sold under the
salam contract are referred to as al-muslam
fhi, delivery of which is deferred until a future
date.
A salam contract may be construed as being
synonymous with the objective of a forward
sale contract. Forward sale contracts are
generally forbidden under Shari’a unless the
element of uncertainty (gharar) inherent in
such contracts is effectively eradicated. For this
reason, certain criteria must be met in order
for a salam contract to be Shari’a compliant.
These requirements are discussed in more detail
below under the heading “Key Features of the
Underlying Structure”.
Although the use of salam has been, and is,
utilised by some institutions for short-term
liquidity purposes, its use as the platform for
issuing sukuk, as an alternative to conventional
bonds, is rare in comparison to some of the
more prevalent structures like sukuk al-ijara. The
limited use of this structure can be attributed to
a number of factors, namely the non-tradability
of the sukuk and the requirement that the
Originator must be able to deliver certain
‘standardised’ assets to the Issuer at certain
future dates which may be diffcult where the
Originator’s business model does not provide
for this.
When structuring a sukuk issuance as a sukuk
al-salam, the frst step will involve analysing
what exactly the business of the Originator
entails and what ‘standardised’ assets (if any)
the Originator is able to deliver to support the
issuance of the sukuk. At the outset, if it is not
possible to identify any such assets, it will be
necessary to consider other possible structures
(including those outlined in the other parts of
this Chapter 2 (Sukuk Structures)).
As with the other sukuk structures, it is possible
to structure a sukuk al-salam in a manner that
provides for regular payments throughout the
life of a fnancing arrangement, together with
the fexibility to tailor the payment profle - and
method of calculation - in order to generate a
proft. The AAOIFI Shari’a Standards perceive
debt securitisation and tradability as non-Shari’a
compliant. As such, although the characteristics
of salam make it relatively straightforward to
adapt for use in the underlying structure for a
sukuk issuance, its use remains rare in practice
as the salam contract creates indebtedness on
the part of the seller thereby rendering these
sukuk non-tradable in nature.
As at the date of this Guide no sukuk al-salam
issuances have been listed by originators on
NASDAQ Dubai.
Set out on the following page is an example of
a sukuk al-salam structure.
Figure 1: Structure of Sukuk al-Salam
- Issuer SPV issues sukuk, which represent
an undivided ownership interest in
certain assets (the “Salam Assets”) to
be delivered by Originator. They also
represent a right against Issuer SPV to
payment of the Periodic Distribution
Amount and the Dissolution Amount.
-
The Investors subscribe for sukuk and
pay the proceeds to Issuer SPV (the
“Principal Amount”). Issuer SPV declares
a trust over the proceeds (and any assets
acquired using the proceeds – see
paragraph 3 below) and thereby acts as
Trustee on behalf of the Investors.
-
Originator enters into a sale and purchase
arrangement with Trustee, pursuant
to which Originator agrees to sell, and
Trustee agrees to purchase, the Salam
Assets from Originator on immediate
payment and deferred delivery terms.
The quantity of the Salam Assets sold
will typically be engineered at the outset
to be an amount that is suffcient to
make periodic deliveries of a proportion of the Salam Assets during the life of the
sukuk (in order to allow for payments
of Periodic Distribution Amounts, see
below for further information) and to
make a single delivery of the remaining
proportion of Salam Assets on maturity
or an early redemption of the sukuk
(in order to allow for payments of the
Exercise Price, see below for further
information).
-
Trustee pays the sale price to Originator
as consideration for its purchase of the
Salam Assets in an amount equal to the
Principal Amount.
-
Prior to each date on which Periodic
Distribution Amounts are due to the
Investors, Originator delivers a proportion
of the Salam Assets to Trustee.
Originator (as Obligor) purchases a
proportion of the Salam Assets from
Trustee for an agreed Purchase Price.
-
Originator pays the Purchase Price as
consideration for purchasing a proportion
of the Salam Assets. The amount of each
Purchase Price is equal to the Periodic
Distribution Amount payable under the
sukuk at that time.
-
This amount will be
calculated by reference to a fxed rate
or variable rate (e.g. LIBOR or EIBOR)
depending on the denomination of sukuk issued and subject to mutual agreement
of the parties in advance.
-
Issuer SPV pays each Periodic Distribution
Amount to the Investors using the Purchase
Price it has received from Originator.
- Upon
- An event of default or at maturity
(at the option of Trustee under the
Purchase Undertaking); or
- The exercise of an optional call (if
applicable to the sukuk) or the
occurrence of a tax event (both at
the option of Originator under the
Sale Undertaking),
Originator will be obliged to deliver all
of the Salam Assets (which have not yet
been delivered) to Trustee and Trustee
will sell, and Originator will buy, the
Salam Assets at the applicable Exercise
Price which will be equal to the Principal
Amount plus any accrued but unpaid
Periodic Distribution Amounts owing to
the Investors
-
Payment of Exercise Price by Originator
(as Obligor).
-
Issuer SPV pays the Dissolution Amount
to the Investors using the Exercise Price it
has received from Originator.
Key Features of the Underlying Structure
Set out below is a summary of the basic
requirements based on established principles
and the AAOIFI Shari’a Standards No.10 (Salam
and Parallel Salam), which should be considered
when using salam as the underlying structure
for the issuance of sukuk:
- There must be no uncertainty between the Originator and the Issuer as to th
currency, amount and manner of paymen
of the salam capital;
-
Payment of the salam capital must be
made immediately at the time of entry into
the salam contract;
-
The Salam Assets can only be (i) fungible
goods that can be weighed, measured or
counted and the individual articles of which
do not differ signifcantly, or (ii) assets
manufactured by companies that can be
identifed by standardised specifcations
and are regularly and commonly available
at any time;
-
The Salam Assets cannot be (i) a specifc
asset; (ii) gold, silver or any currency if the
salam capital was paid in gold, silver or any
currency; (iii) any asset or item for which the
Originator may not be held responsible (e.g.
land or trees); and (iv) any asset or item whose
value can change according to subjective
assessment (e.g. precious stones);
-
The Salam Assets must be assets for which
a specifcation can be drawn up at the
time of sale so that the Originator can be
held to that specifcation;
-
The quality, quantity and time of delivery of
the Salam Assets must be clearly known to
the Originator and the Trustee in a manner at removes any uncertainty or ambiguity
which may lead to a dispute;
-
Provided that the salam capital is paid at
the time the salam contract is entered into,
the delivery of the Salam Assets can occur
periodically by way of instalments;
-
The Trustee cannot sell the Salam Assets
before it has taken delivery of the Salam
Assets as this would amount to the sale of
a debt, which is forbidden under Shari’a.
However, delivery of the Salam Assets prior
to the agreed delivery date is permissible;
-
The sukuk certifcates held by the Investors
are generally non-tradable as they represent
a debt (the debt being the future delivery
of the Salam Assets). This is, however,
the general position. In principle, once
the Salam Assets (or a proportion thereof)
have been delivered and provided that as
a result of such delivery the tangibility of
the pool of sukuk assets at that time (i.e.
the Salam Assets delivered) is suffcient to
satisfy Shari’a requirements (which can
vary between 33% and 50%) the sukuk
can be traded at that time; and
-
The liabilities associated with the Salam
Assets remain with the Originator and only
once the Salam Assets have been delivered
to the Trustee do the liabilities pass to the
Trustee
Required Documentation
The following
documentation is typically required for a sukuk
al-istithmar transaction:
- Document
Parties
Summary / Purpose
- Salam Agreement
Originator (as Seller) and
Trustee (as Purchaser)
From the Trustee›s (and the Investors’) perspective,
this is the document which gives the right to receive
delivery of the Salam Assets, which once delivered
to the Trustee will be sold by the Trustee in order to
generate revenue to service the sukuk.
From the Originator’s perspective, this is the document
under which it receives the funding
- Purchase Undertaking
(Wa’d)
Granted by Originator (as
Obligor) in favour of Trustee
Allows the Trustee to sell the Salam Assets back to th
Originator*:
(i) periodically, prior to the date on which a Periodic
Distribution Amount is due in return for which the
Originator is required to pay an amount equal to the
Periodic Distribution Amount (through the Purchase
Price) so that the Trustee can pay the Periodic
Distribution Amount to the Investors; and
(ii) if an event of default occurs or at maturity, in
return for which the Originator is required to pay all
outstanding amounts (through an Exercise Price) so
that Trustee can pay the Investors.
- Sale Undertaking (Wa’d)
Granted by Trustee in favour
of Originator (as Obligor)
Allows the Originator to buy the Salam Assets back
from the Trustee* in limited circumstances (e.g., the
occurrence of a tax event), in return for which the
Originator is required to pay all outstanding amounts
(through an Exercise Price) so that Trustee can pay the
Investors.
Structural Developments/AAOIFI’s Statement of 2008
Before the AAOIFI Statement it was possible for
the Originator to grant a purchase undertaking
in favour of the Trustee whereby the exercise
price would be a fxed amount determined in
accordance with a formula that would ensure
that the exercise price would:
- n the event of a default or on maturity
of the sukuk, be equal to the par value
of the sukuk plus any accrued but unpaid
Mudaraba profts;
- n the event of a shortfall between any
amount actually received by the Trustee
from the Mudaraba enterprise and the
profts received by the Trustee and the
distribution amount due to the Investors,
be equal to the shortfall
rather than a formula would reference the
market value of the assets of the Mudaraba
enterprise. The use of such purchase
undertakings, in effect, ensured that the
Investors were almost certain to receive their
principal sukuk investment and proft (subject
to the usual risks such as insolvency present in
any sukuk or conventional bond structure).
However, under the AAOIFI Statement, Shari’a
scholars have taken the view that it is not
permissible for an Originator to grant a purchase
undertaking to the Trustee to purchase the
Mudaraba assets for any amount other than
the Trustee’s share of the market value of the
Mudaraba assets at the time of sale. The premise
for this ruling has been that sukuk al-mudaraba
are analogous to equity-based instruments and therefore the partners in the Mudaraba must
take the risk of both proft and loss. Determining
the value of the Mudaraba assets by reference
to the par value of the sukuk (or by reference
to a shortfall amount) is akin to a guarantee of
proft and principal which, unless given by an
independent third party (a party other than the
Originator), is not permitted under Shari’a. This
ruling is another reason why the sukuk market
has not seen a revival of the sukuk al-mudaraba
structure.
Source: Dubai International Financial Centre Sukuk Guidebook