News
Bank of Maldives has completed a week-long international roadshow, meeting institutional investors across four financial centres as it moves toward raising external financing for the first time.
Mohamed Hilmy
08 May 2026, 11:25
Bank of Maldives has completed a week-long series of meetings with institutional investors across Singapore, Hong Kong, the UAE, and London, signalling a clear intent to raise external financing from international debt capital markets for the first time in the bank's history.
The non-deal roadshow ran from 29 April to 7 May 2026. The meetings were exploratory rather than transactional. BML used the trip to gauge investor appetite before formally committing to a market entry, which is standard practice for institutions considering their first international raise.
The proposed funding has a specific focus. BML wants to scale its lending to the Maldives tourism sector, which it already backs at significant volume. The bank's tourism loan book stood at USD 594 million as of end-April 2026, with around USD 35 million disbursed in the first four months of the year alone.
Tourism is the dominant driver of the Maldivian economy, and the resorts, guesthouses, and hospitality businesses that BML finances are among the most capital-intensive borrowers in the country. Accessing international funding could allow the bank to lend more, or on more competitive terms, than its current domestic funding base supports.
BML's timing reflects a position of strength. The bank recorded its strongest financial performance in its 43-year history in 2025, with high liquidity and capital adequacy well above regulatory requirements. Crucially, it carries no existing external borrowings, which gives it a clean balance sheet to bring to foreign investors.
CEO and Managing Director Mohamed Shareef said the response from global investors had been positive. "Our engagements with global investors have been highly encouraging and reflect strong confidence in the Maldives' economic outlook and the Bank's solid fundamentals," he said. "Accessing international debt markets represents a strategic step to diversify our funding base and scale up our support to key sectors, particularly tourism."
No deal has been announced. BML has not confirmed a timeline, a target raise, or the specific instrument it would use. But the groundwork with international investors has been laid, and the bank's intent is now clearly on the record.
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