File picture shows the Etihad Airways headquarters in the Emirati capital Abu Dhabi. Etihad Airways plans to issue a debut US dollar-denominated benchmark sukuk and will meet investors over the coming days to determine its size, maturity or interest rate, sources told Reuters on Monday. Investors said the planned Islamic bond, known as a sukuk, could be as large as $1bn, although one banker involved in the transaction said Etihad has given no specific indication of the size, maturity or timing of the Islamic bond sale. HSBC, JP Morgan, National Bank of Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, Dubai Islamic Bank and First Gulf Bank are the deal underwriters, according to an investor presentation dated on November 3 which was seen by Reuters. Etihad Airways, owned by the Government of Abu Dhabi, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on what would be its first Islamic bond targeted at international investors. The airline, whose credit is rated A by Fitch, reported total revenues of about $9bn in 2015, according to the presentation. At the end of last year it had 121 aircraft and it plans to take delivery of a further 188 by 2026, it added.