Malaysian energy company Petronas began roadshows on Mar. 5 to raise up to $17 billion from conventional and Islamic bonds, or sukuk, for working capital.

State-owned Petronas met potential investors for a $15 billion multi-currency conventional bond programme and a one-off dollar-denominated sukuk issuance of $2 billion, two sources told Reuters.

A spokesman from Petronas confirmed the plans.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch, CIMB Group Holdings, Morgan Stanley MUFG, JP Morgan and Citibank are lead arrangers, while HSBC and Deutsche Bank are playing smaller supporting roles, the sources said.

Petronas will conduct roadshows in Kuala Lumpur, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, London, Hong Kong, Boston, Los Angeles and New York from March 5 to March 10, they added.

Ratings agency Standard & Poor's on Mar. 5 assigned a preliminary rating of A- to the Petronas sukuk.

The move by Petronas comes after the company announced its first quarterly loss in at least five years on Feb. 27 because of the global slump in oil prices. It stated plans to cut capital expenditure by 10 percent and operating expenses by up to 30 percent this year.

Malaysia, a net energy exporter, relies heavily on Petronas for most of its oil and gas revenue. But weaker global oil prices have dented its income and left the Southeast Asian nation with a devalued currency and risk of a sovereign downgrade because of mounting debt from its 1MDB state investment fund.

The company said it will provide 26 billion ringgit ($7.13 billion) in dividends to the government this year. ($1 = 3.6480 ringgit)