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Turkcell secures Murabaha facilities from UAE banks for data centers expansions

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What we're tracking today

TODAY: Turkcell secures data centers backing + Updates on Al Khaldi Logistics Nomu IPO

Good morning, folks. We’re inching closer to the weekend with a significantly reduced newscycle. Still, today’s issue has a few debt and IPO updates from Saudi and UAE, as well as the latest on Egypt’s textile exports push. Shall we?

HAPPENING TODAY-

The Saudi Warehousing & Logistics Expo is on its second day and will run through Thursday, 29 May in Riyadh. The second edition of the expo will host over 18k supply chain industry professionals and more than 400 exhibitors to explore over 3.5k solutions.

The International Conference on Logistics and Supply Chain Management will kick off today and run until Friday, 30 May in Casablanca. The conference will cover scientific research, technologies, and environmentally friendly digital solutions in the logistics, transport, and supply chain sectors.

WATCH THIS SPACE-

#1- Jordan + Syria eye ramped up trade, economic collab: Jordanian and Syrian Chambers of Commerce have agreed on working on a roadmap to chart joint future investments with a focus on key sectors, including transport, shipping, trade, agriculture, food, and construction, Syrian public news agency Sana reported. The announcement came during the Jordanian-Syrian Economic Forum and Exhibition, which took place in Damascus this week with the attendance of 42 representatives from different sectors in Jordan, Zawya reports, citing President of the Jordanian Chamber of Commerce (JCC) Fathi Jaghbir. The forum marked the first meeting between both countries' chambers of commerce in over 14 years.

REMEMBER- Jordan took a few steps to resume trade and economic ties to Syria in the last few months, including through resumed operations of the Syrian-Jordanian Freezone and the reactivation of their bilateral freetrade agreement. Jordan also resumed agriculture trade with Syria last month following a 13-year hiatus due to civil unrest.

The bigger context: Other regional backers of Syrian reconstruction efforts include Turkey and Qatar — both pitching in with energy exports — and Saudi Arabia, which led a lobbying push to lift sanctions. Saudi-based Al Jouf Cement Company and Mohammed Shahi Al Ruwaili Contracting were among the first private sector players supporting early reconstruction efforts after inking a SAR 38 mn (c. USD 10.1 mn) contract last January to export cement and clinker goods to Syria.

You can read more about what the recent lifting of sanctions means for investors in our explainer from yesterday.

IN OTHER TRADE DIPLOMACY NEWS- The UAE and the Philippines plan to sign a trade and economic partnership agreement next month, Philippine news agency PNA reports, citing officials. An agreement would mark the Philippines’ first trade pact in the Middle East, officials confirmed last week.

#2- DoE taps Presight, AIQ to advance Abu Dhabi’s digital energy infrastructure: The Abu Dhabi Energy Department (DoE) signed an MoU with Presight and AIQ to boost AI integration and digital transformation in the UAE’s energy sector, according to a press release. The agreement includes the development of a new AI-powered control center platform that will provide live data analytics for energy and utility operations across Abu Dhabi. The platform will enable real-time insights and sector-wide performance monitoring, according to a separate filing (pdf).

An “AI Lab-as-a-Service” model will also be developed under the agreement, enabling local energy firms to test, validate, and implement AI solutions across various applications, tailored to use across the energy value chain. The agreement also mandates the creation of the AD e-data hub — a sovereign data infrastructure that will serve as the central repository for all data governed by the DoE and affiliated sector companies.

Presight is tapped for multi-sector push: The UAE’s National Media Office (NMO) awarded a contract to Presight last week to develop an AI-powered platform, consisting of a cloud-based data lake that consolidates media insights across institutions into a unified data hub. Adnoc signed a USD 340 mn agreement with AIQ last March to deploy AI solutions across Adnoc’s value chain.

#3- DAE’s USD 2 bn Nordic Aviation takeover gets Philippines thumbs up: The Philippine Competition Commission cleared Dubai Aerospace Enterprise’s (DAE) takeover of Irish aircraft leasing company Nordic Aviation Capital (NAC), concluding that the move won’t harm competition in the local aircraft leasing market, it said in a news release. The USD 2 bn transaction, backed by the Government of Dubai and Nordic parent company NAC Holdings, wrapped up earlier this month.

MARKET WATCH-

#1- Oil prices went up this morning after the US license for Chevron to export Venezuelan oil expired on Tuesday, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures rose by USD 0.25 to reach USD 64.34 a barrel, while the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) rose by USD 0.24 to hit USD 61.13 a barrel by 03.45 GMT.

Some context: The US extended an authorization for Chevron allowing it to keep ownership of its assets in Venezuela, but the authorization did not include an export license. The company’s license to export Venezuelan crude — issued by former US President Joe Biden over two years ago — expired on Tuesday, Reuters reports.

Meanwhile, Opec+ advanced its key meeting for deciding July oil production levels by one day to 31 May, Bloomberg reports. The date change was simply a reflection of scheduling issues, not a policy shift, an unnamed delegate told the business news service. The oil cartel is also due to hold a set of virtual meetings today to review group-wide output quotas.

Expectations are all pointing to a hike: The cartel could approve a further 411k bbl/d increase in July for the third consecutive time, after announcements for increasing May and June’s outputs. The predictions for a production surge have weighed on oil prices market over the last few days.

#2- Baltic index on a downward spiral: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk sea freight index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segments — was down 3.3% to 1,296 points on Tuesday. The capesize index fell 4.8% to 1,809 points, while the panamax index decreased 3% to 1,208 points. The smaller supramax index slipped nine points to 974.

DATA POINTS-

#1- Oman saw its non-oil exports rise by 8.6% y-o-y to OMR 1.6 bn (USD 4.2 bn) in 1Q 2025, accounting for 28.6% of the country’s total exports, BNA reported on Saturday. The growth came on the back of private sector engagement, growing domestic sectors, and foreign investments.

#2- The UAE’s federal export credit company Etihad Credit Ins. (ECI) saw its insured turnover reach AED 16.2 bn in 2024, up 15.7% y-o-y, according to a press release citing its annual report. The federal insurer saw strong demand from UAE exporters across 17 sectors, with over 60% of beneficiaries being SMEs. Key destinations for ECI-backed exports included Saudi Arabia, which accounted for 7% of total exports, alongside MENA countries, India, and Singapore.

PSA-

CMA CGM to roll out new PSS: French giant CMA CGM will implement a Peak Season Surcharge (PSS) of USD 500 for every 20 ft container and USD 1k per 40 ft and 45 ft ones — to be applied for all cargo incoming from China, North East Asia, and South East Asia to the Mediterranean and North Africa, according to a statement. The PSS is applicable starting 7 June 2025.

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***

CIRCLE YOUR CALENDAR-

Egypt will host the Propak MENA from Monday, 2 June to Wednesday, 4 June in Cairo. The event will feature solutions, talks and workshops for F&B and consumer goods manufacturers to source global packaging, processing and logistic solutions.

Turkey will host the Eurasia Rail from Wednesday, 18 June to Thursday, 19 June in Istanbul. The event will host 7.7k visitors interested in Turkey’s railway sector or are railway technology buyers, and will feature engineering, products and services from both private and public sectors.

The UAE will host Middle East Rail from Tuesday, 24 June to Thursday, 25 June in Dubai. The conference at Dubai World Trade Center will host over 250 speakers and a multi-brand exhibition for transport solutions.

Check out our full calendar at the bottom of this email for a comprehensive listing of upcoming news events and news triggers.

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Debt Watch

UAE banks back Turkcell data center expansion plans

DIB loans USD 150 mn to Turkcell for digital infrastructure: Dubai Islamic Bank has signed a USD 150 mn shariah-compliant Murabaha facility with Turkish telecoms and technology services provider Turkcell, according to a statement. The five-year facility will support investments in data centers, cloud services, and renewable energy, and help expand the telco’s digital infrastructure.

Not the first UAE backer: This comes one week after Emirates NBD extended a EUR 100 mn Murabaha facility to Turkcell’s data centers subsidiary TDC Veri Hizmetleri to support growth in environment-friendly data centers, according to a statement released last week. The facility will also have a five-year tenor and is set to support eco-friendly data centers and cloud services infrastructure.

DATA POINT- The Turkish data centers market is set to grow at a 5% annual rate through 2032, to hit a USD 5 bn valuation, up from USD 3 bn in 2023, AGBI reported, citing data from Arizton Advisory & Intelligence.

About Turkcell: Founded in 1994, the NYSE-listed Turkish telecom company provides a range of telecom and tech services. Turkcell provides hosting and data center services to local and international players, and currently operates eight data centers with 41.5 MW capacity across Turkey, including the Gebze data center — dubbed as one of Turkey’s largest.

IN OTHER DEBT UPDATES-

Aramco issued a fresh USD-denominated bond yesterday under its global medium-term note program, raising USD 5 bn over three tranches, Reuters reported, citing fixed income news service IFR. Proceeds will go to general corporate purposes, and the Reg-S compliant paper will be listed on the London Stock Exchange, according to a Tadawul disclosure.

The breakdown: The oil giant priced the USD 1.5 bn five-year tranche at 80 bps over US treasuries, compared to an initial price point of 115 bps. The 10-year notes raised USD 1.25 bn and were priced at 95 bps, down from 130 bps. Finally, the longest-dated 30-year tranche — valued at USD 2.25 b — was priced at 155 bps over US treasuries, compared to the initial 185 bps.

REFRESHER- The move, which is subject to market conditions and regulatory approvals, comes nearly a year after Aramco last tapped the debt market with a USD 6 bn international bond sale.

Why now? Aramco’s return to the debt market comes as the oil giant navigates a dip in earnings, posting a 4.6% y-o-y drop in its 1Q net income. Aramco was also said to be weighing asset sales to unlock capital amid plans for international expansion.

ADVISORS- Aramco tapped our friends at HSBC, alongside Citi, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan as active joint bookrunners. Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Bank of China, BofA Securities, Emirates NBD Capital, First Abu Dhabi Bank, Mizuho, MUFG, NATIXIS, Riyad Capital, SMBC, SNB Capital and Standard Chartered Bank served as passive joint bookrunners.

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IPO Watch

Subscriptions for Al Khaldi Logistics Nomu IPO close on 1 June

Subscription to Al Khaldi Logistics Nomu offering is live: Qualified investors have until Sunday, 1 June, to subscribe to the Nomu IPO of Al Khaldi Logistics. Each investor can book up to 750k shares, and a minimum of 10 shares at a price range of SAR 44-47 apiece. The final allocation of shares is slated for Tuesday, 3 June.

REMEMBER- Al Khaldi is taking a 7% stake to market in a secondary share sale where selling shareholders will rake in net proceeds. Some c. 1.1 mn shares are up for grabs.

Proceeds + market cap: At the top of the range, the selling shareholders could rake in up to SAR 49.4 mn in proceeds, and it would give the company a market cap of SAR 705 mn at listing. Some SAR 1.3 mn will be deducted from total proceeds to cover IPO-related expenses.

ADVISORS- Yaqeen Capital is quarterbacking the transaction as financial advisor and lead manager. Baker Tilly is serving as an accountant. Receiving agents include Alisthmar Capital, Alinma Capital, SNB Capital, Al Jazira Capital, Riyad Capital, ANB Capital, and Albilad Capital, among others.

Key logistics sector listings to watch out for in 2025:

  • Saudi Global Ports (SGP) reportedly tapped banks in December, including Goldman Sachs and HSBC, to arrange an upcoming IPO;
  • Saudi e-commerce platform Salla raised USD 130 mn in a pre-IPO investment round led by Bahrain-based Investcorp and others. Salla is yet to announce a timeline;
  • Israel’s Ashdod Port Company plans to float up to 49%, and has published a tender to select an IPO adviser in January;
  • Etihad Airways could be gearing up for a listing on ADX. A final decision on the move is yet to be made by shareholders, but the airline is ready for it anyway, CEO Antonoaldo Neves told Reuters late last April;
  • Malaysia’s largest port operator MMC Port Holdings has hired local banks CIMB and Maybank to work on its planned initial public offering (IPO) that is projected to reel in over USD 1.34 bn. The IPO — possibly Malaysia’s largest in over a decade — is expected to move forward between 2H 2025 and 2026;
  • E-commerce and B2B firm Silq Group — the result of a recent merger between Saudi e-commerce platform Sary and Bangladesh’s ShopUp — is eying an IPO in 2027;
  • Adnoc is reportedly weighing an IPO for its recently set up USD 80 bn low-carbon and chemicals arm XRG on an international exchange. Any future floatation will take effect in five-odd years, Reuters reported in May, citing an unnamed source.
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Investment Watch

China’s Shaoxing to set up USD 7 mn textile factory in Qantara West

Another textile factory lands in Egypt’s Qantara West: Shaoxing Beiqi Textile inking a contract with the Suez Canal Economic Zone (SCZone) to establish a USD 7 mn readymade garments factory in Qantara West Industrial zone, according to a statement. The Chinese company will fully self-finance the project.

Export is the name of the game, with 90% of the 10 mn pieces of annual output earmarked for export and only 10% destined for the local market.

This brings Qantara West’s total number of contracted projects to 21, with a combined investment cost of USD 603.5 mn and the expectation that 30.6k new jobs will be created.

A textile hub for Chinese investors: A long list of Chinese players have inked agreements to set up textile factories in the Qantara West Industrial Zone, including Hightex Co., Ltd Hangzhou, GS Global Sourcing, Guangdong Hongxin Textile, Top New Garment Group, Jiangsu Guotai, and Di Seta.

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Also on Our Radar

Updates on ports and maritime from UAE and Qatar

PORTS-

DP World to set up two data centers in Australia: The UAE’s DP World Australia has tapped data center manufacturer DXN to set up two modular data centers in New South Wales’ Port Botany, AUManufacturing reports. The contract earmarks USD 2 mn for the project, with the centers slated to be delivered in 3Q 2025. DXN will be responsible for the design, engineering, and prefabrication of the data centers and their backup systems.

UAE is boosting its regional foothold: The UAE inked a freetrade agreement in November with Australia — the latter’s first in the region — removing tariffs and trade barriers. Under the agreement, tariffs will be eliminated on over 99% of Australian exports to the UAE. The DP World-operated Botany Port stands out as a key trade access point between the two nations, especially relevant as the FTA looks to increase non-oil bilateral trade to over USD 15 bn by 2032.

SHIPPING + MARITIME-

Construction on 17 LNG carriers commissioned by Qatar Gas Transport Company (Nakilat) has kicked off at South Korea’s Hyundai Heavy Industries Shipyard, according to a statement. The vessels — whose capacities stand at 174k cbm each — were commissioned by QatarEnergy to expand its LNG-moving fleet and replace older vessels. The carriers will be chartered to QatarEnergy’s affiliates under a long-term arrangement for 25 vessels.

REMEMBER- Construction on another eight LNG vessels for Nakilat — also commissioned by QatarEnergy under the same long-term arrangement — began last March at South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean Shipyard.

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Around the World

CMA CGM inks USD 600 mn agreement for deep-sea terminal in Vietnam

CMA CGM to develop deep-sea terminal in Vietnam: French shipping giant CMA CGM has inked a USD 600 mn agreement with Vietnamese port operator Saigon Newport Corporation (SNP) for the design, construction, and operation of the Lach Huyen port’s terminals seven and eight, according to a statement. The development has a capacity of 1.9 mn TEU and is scheduled for operations in 2028.

CMA CGM is booked and busy: The company is witnessing a sharp rise in demand for freight transport out of China this month after the French firm saw its US-China freight bookings drop by almost half. Earlier this month, Syria’s Land and Sea Ports Authority and CMA CGM finalized a 30-year agreement with a USD 230 mn investment ticket for the operation of Latakia Port.


MAY

27-29 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Saudi Warehousing & Logistics Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

28-30 (Wednesday-Friday): International Conference on Logistics and Supply Chain Management, Casablanca, Morocco.

JUNE

1 Jun (Sunday): Flynas IPO retail subscription period ends.

1-3 June (Sunday-Tuesday): Annual General Meeting & World Air Transport Summit 2025, Delhi, India.

2-4 June (Monday-Wednesday): Propak MENA, Cairo, Egypt.

5-6 June (Thursday-Friday): Supply Chain & Logistics Innovation Summit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

11-13 June (Wednesday-Friday): Sustainability World Summit, Frankfurt, Germany.

17-18 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): Abu Dhabi Infrastructure Summit, Abu Dhabi Energy Centre.

17-19 June (Tuesday-Thursday): Terminal Operations Conference & Exhibition, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

18-19 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Eurasia Rail, Istanbul, Turkey.

19 June (Thursday): East Med Maritime Conference, Athens, Greece.

24-25 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): Middle East Rail, Dubai World Trade Center.

25-26 June (Wednesday-Friday): Decarbonizing Shipping Forum, Hamburg, Germany.

JULY

1-3 July (Tuesday-Thursday): ASEAN Ports and Logistics, Jakarta, Indonesia.

22-24 July (Tuesday-Thursday): Intermodal Africa, Beira, Mozambique.

SEPTEMBER

1-3 September (Monday-Wednesday): Transport Middle East 2025, Salalah, Oman.

4-10 September (Thursday-Wednesday): Intra-African Trade Fair, Algiers, Algeria.

7-10 September (Sunday-Wednesday): Comex Global Technology Show, Muscat, Oman.

24-26 September (Wednesday-Friday): Routes World, Hong Kong.

30 September - 2 October (Monday-Thursday): Global Rail Transport Infrastructure Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

OCTOBER

1-2 October (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Maritime & Logistics Congress, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

7-8 October (Tuesday-Wednesday): Global EV & Mobility Technology (GEMTECH) Forum, Riyadh.

14-15 October (Tuesday-Wednesday): Investing in Africa Conference and Expo, London, UK.

28-30 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Borneo International Maritime Week, Sarawak, Malaysia.

NOVEMBER

3-6 November (Monday-Thursday): ADIPEC Maritime and Logistics Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

4-6 November (Tuesday-Thursday): Air Cargo Forum, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

17-21 November (Monday-Friday): Dubai Airshow, Dubai, UAE.

24-26 November (Monday-Wednesday) The World Advanced Manufacturing & Logistics Saudi Expo, Riyadh.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

Mid-2025: Iraq will complete phase one of the construction of the Grand Faw Port.

DHL and Aramco’s logistics and procurement hub in Saudi Arabia will commence operations.

AD Ports-operated Safaga Port’s multi-purpose terminal will become operational.

Phase 3 of APM Terminals Tangier MedPort to be complete and operational.

1Q 2025: Sadr Park’s Logistics Center in Riyadh to be completed.

1Q 2025: Phase two of Jafza Logistics Park to be completed.

2026

27-29 January (Tuesday-Thursday) Transport Middle East 2026, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

28-30 April (Tuesday-Thursday) Mediterranean Ports and Logistics, Porto, Portugal.

24-26 June (Wednesday-Friday) Transport Logistic & Air Cargo 2026, Shanghai, China.

7-9 July (Tuesday-Thursday) Asean Ports and Logistics, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

17-19 November (Tuesday-Thursday) Intermodal Africa 2026, Luanda, Angola.

UN Trade and Development Global Supply Chain Forum to take place in Saudi Arabia.

2027

4Q 2027: Oman’s Musandam Airport construction to be completed.

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