Mortgage & Structured Lending
Mortgage and structured real estate lending designs the financing architectures that enable property acquisition, development, and investment across conventional and Sharia-compliant frameworks. Gulf mortgage markets are growing dramatically: Saudi Arabia’s mortgage market expanded from $25 billion to over $150 billion in outstanding loans following the implementation of the Real Estate Financing Law and the Saudi Real Estate Refinance Company (SRC). The UAE mortgage market — serving both national and expatriate homebuyers — is similarly expanding as golden visa programmes and permanent residency rights increase long-term property ownership appeal.
Lending Advisory
Kaelo advises on: mortgage product design (fixed rate, variable rate, offset, and the Islamic equivalents — ijara, diminishing musharaka), structured real estate lending (development finance, bridge loans, mezzanine debt for property), securitisation of mortgage portfolios (RMBS, covered bonds — emerging in the Gulf as mortgage markets achieve critical mass), and the regulatory compliance that mortgage lending requires across Gulf jurisdictions. Our real estate and capital advisory practices combine for comprehensive real estate finance capability.
Islamic Mortgage Products
Islamic mortgage products — ijara (lease-to-own, where the bank purchases the property and leases it to the customer with title transferring upon final payment), diminishing musharaka (partnership where the bank and customer jointly own the property, with the customer gradually purchasing the bank’s share), and murabaha (cost-plus financing for property purchase) — serve the 80%+ of Saudi mortgages and 50%+ of UAE mortgages that are structured in Sharia-compliant form. Product design, pricing, and the regulatory requirements specific to Islamic mortgages create specialised advisory mandates.
Gulf mortgage markets are at an inflection point — growing from nascent to institutional-scale, creating advisory mandates in product design, securitisation, regulatory compliance, and the Sharia structuring that the majority of Gulf mortgages require.