Arabian Post Staff -Dubai
The Ministry of Finance has introduced the “Retail Sukuk” programme enabling citizens and residents to purchase government-backed Treasury Sukuk via participating banks with a minimum investment of AED 4,000. The first bank partner will be announced on 3 November 2025.
The move directly expands access to sovereign Islamic finance instruments previously reserved for institutional investors. According to the announcement, the scheme permits investment in Shariah-compliant Islamic treasury securities through fractionalised digital platforms operated by the banks. Leader Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum described the initiative as “translating our leadership’s vision of empowering individuals, promoting a culture of saving and developing government investment instruments that enhance individual participation in economic growth and provide a direct opportunity to contribute to the national development journey.”
The initiative aligns with the nation’s financial-inclusion agenda and the strategy to deepen local capital markets. By lowering the threshold to AED 4,000, the scheme reduces entry barriers for retail investors and broadens the investor base for the domestic sovereign debt market. Analysts point out that universal access to such instruments represents a structural shift in how governments engage with individual savers.
Industry experts say this development reflects emerging trends in the Gulf’s Islamic finance sector, particularly the fractionalisation and tokenisation of Sukuk products. A legal-advisory report on the Gulf Cooperation Council’s Sukuk market noted that digital platforms and smaller tickets are “redefining how Sharia-compliant capital is structured, distributed and accessed.” The Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank earlier launched a “Smart Sukuk” platform allowing retail investment from about USD 1,000 in fractionalised Sukuk.
Governance stakeholders emphasise that the retail programme remains denominated in dirhams and linked to sovereign-backed Sukuk already traded in the market, ensuring exposure to high-quality government assets rather than untested structures. The Ministry reaffirmed that the rollout will follow the “highest standards of transparency and quality.”
Financial institutions stand to benefit from expanded customer-base growth and increased assets under management, while retail investors gain a compliant savings vehicle offering diversification beyond deposits and conventional investments. Yet risks remain. While sovereign-backed, Sukuk carry credit, liquidity and market-risk dimensions; beginners may require enhanced education around profit-sharing-based returns, Shariah-compliance nuances and secondary-market liquidity.
Some market participants caution that the success of the scheme will depend on the secondary-market functioning and investor confidence in digital platforms. Previous fractional-Sukuk roll-outs in the region flagged the need for robust regulatory oversight, clear smart-contract frameworks, and standardised product terms to build long-term participation.
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