MarketWatchInfoV2Portlet
Sukuk/Bond Market Watch
View a summary of the latest trading activity in the Sukuk & Bonds Market.
- Today's Activity
- Today's Indices Heatmap
- Market Watch Today
- FAQs
Compare Indices
Select A Maximum Of 5 Indices
LoginPortletPopupv2
AddtoWatchlistv2
MarketWatchHeatmapV2Portlet
Today's Indices Heatmap
951.53
-0.09%
|
1,000.40
0.25%
|
961.21
-0.10%
|
MarketWatchTodaywatchV2Portlet
Market Watch Today
Sukuk/Bond Types
Tadawul Code | Name | ISIN | Coupon Type | Coupon Rate (%) | Maturity Date | Bid Yield | Ask Yield | Par Value | Last Traded Price | Bid Price | Ask Price | Issuance Amount(Outstanding) | Issuance Currency | Coupon Frequency | Day Count Convention | Watchlist |
---|
- Note: Prices are delayed minimum 5 minutes. Click on desired Sukuk/Bonds for historical data.
- The prices displayed shall not be distributed, transferred, sub-licensed, transmitted, sold, re-circulated, repackaged, assigned, or used to create and innovate any financial instruments or products.
- MO: Market Order
Web Content Viewer
Frequently Asked Questions
-
WHAT IS A BOND?
Bonds are fixed income instruments that provide an investor with returns, paid by the issuer, for an agreed period of time, in effect acting like a loan with repayments. Bonds are used by a range of businesses and governments to provide capital for their activities.
-
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF INVESTING IN A SUKUK?
Sukuk can provide returns in a manner similar to returns, whilst remaining in compliance with Sharia law. The International market for Sukuk has grown considerably in recent years and they are now a widely available and popularly traded financial instrument.
-
HOW ARE SUKUK TRADED?
Sukuk are traded Over the Counter (OTC), which means this occurs outside the formal exchange environment and without overview by the regulator.
-
WHAT IS A SUKUK?
A sukuk is an Islamic financial certificate, similar to a bond, that complies with Islamic Sharia law. Since the traditional interest-paying bond structure is not permissible under Sharia, the issuer of a sukuk essentially sells an investor group a certificate, and then uses the proceeds to purchase an asset that the investor group has direct partial ownership interest in. The issuer must also make a contractual promise to buy back the bond at a future date at par value.