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Friday, 12 February 2010
Dubai CDS jump to 627 bps; highest since Nov 2009-CMA
Dubai's debt insurance costs jumped on Friday, with five year credit default swaps rising above 600 basis points for the first time since November 2009, CMA DataVision said.
BONDS
The CDS were quoted at 627 bps by 1345 GMT, a rise of 43 bps since Thursday's close. This means it costs over $600,000 to insure $10 million of Dubai sovereign risk for a five-year period.
Dubai CDS have been steadily rising since the end of January and are up more than 130 bps this month.
Dubai shocked world markets last November when it asked creditors for a multi-billion dollar standstill on the debt owed by subsidiaries of state-run conglomerate Dubai World.
"Basically it is a continuation of the Dubai World saga. They are yet to come out with any restructuring plan so people are starting to get worried," said Elisabeth Gruie, emerging debt strategist at BNP Paribas.
She said the postponement of several corporate bond issues this week was impacting sentiment on Dubai, seen as vulnerable to the downturn in global sentiment.
"There is a bit of a liquidity crunch in the making so that's reflecting on the Dubai sovereign," Gruie said.END
The Lessons of Dubai
* username: rupertbu
When construction began on the Burj Dubai — as the record-breaking tower was originally called — Dubai was in the midst of an epic boom, fueled by foreign speculators and one luxury development project after another. By the time the tower opened on Jan. 4 with a lavish fireworks display, though, the showmanship had faded. Weeks earlier, Dubai's biggest state-owned development company had declared it was unable to pay its debts. Officially, Dubai owes its creditors $80 billion, though a recent report by regional investment bank EFG-Hermes estimates that the city may be in the hole for as much as $170 billion. After Sheik Khalifa al-Nahyan, the oil-rich ruler of neighboring Abu Dhabi, stepped in with $10 billion to stave off an embarrassing default, the skyscraper's owners changed the building's name to Burj Khalifa. For a city used to grand statements, it was a remarkable comedown.
(See pictures of the world's tallest building.)
In all the panic, finger-pointing and schadenfreude that has ensued, though, it's easy to forget that the gulf is more than just Dubai. Neighborhood rivals — some of them much wealthier than Dubai thanks to much bigger oil and gas deposits — have emerged from the financial crisis in better shape than their badly bruised neighbor. The gulf region is poised not only to recover from the global slump this year, but could become the second most important center of world economic growth after the economies of east and south Asia, according to John Sfakianakis, chief economist for Banque Saudi Fransi in Riyadh and Crédit Agricole in Paris. "The world has always been too focused on Dubai, but Dubai is not the GCC," he says, referring to the Gulf Cooperation Council, a loose political and economic union of gulf nations. "In the short term, Dubai's problems may impact how the world sees the region. But over the long term, the region has and will show a tremendous amount of growth."
ANALYSIS - GFH woes offer glimpse into Bahrain offshore banks
* username: rupertbu
GFH, hit hard by a property market crash in the Gulf region, escaped default on Wednesday when lenders agreed to postpone repayment of a third of a $300 million loan.
But analysts say the group is not yet off the hook as it needs to raise cash through asset sales or receive some outside assistance if it is to avoid further funding difficulties.
Shipper sees signs of rebound
* username: rupertbu
Last year was one of the worst on record for seaborne trade as demand fell and shipping firms continued to take new vessels ordered during the boom years of last decade.
Industrywide losses have been forecast at between US$12 billion (Dh44.04bn) and $15bn last year, said Jorn Hinge, the president and chief executive of UASC, based in Dubai.
Another News Corp tie-up for ADMC
* username: rupertbu
It marks the second time in less than a year that ADMC has partnered with a News Corp subsidiary. The first was the launch of the National Geographic Abu Dhabi channel, a partnership between ADMC's television arm and National Geographic Channels International, a joint venture between the National Geographic Society and News Corp.
It's certainly hard to swing a cat these days in the media world without hitting something owned by News Corp, but there may me more to the story that that. Rupert Murdoch is co-chairing the Abu Dhabi Media Summit in March, which ADMC is sponsoring. If more of these partnerships happen to emerge from that conference, this reporter -- who, I have to emphasize, has no inside knowledge of any of this -- won't be surprised.END
Dubai mulls extending power of DIFC courts
* username: rupertbu
Sir Anthony Evans, the Chief Justice of the DIFC Courts, said efforts were under way to allow the court to handle specific types of commercial cases involving banking, shipping and financial services that took place outside the DIFC zone.
“In the medium term, there is a possibility that the court’s jurisdiction might be expanded,” Sir Anthony said. “As a specialist court, we may be of use outside the DIFC.”
Saudi Dar Al Arkan Prices $450M 5-Year Sukuk To Yield 11%
* username: rupertbu
Proceeds from the 144a sale will go to fund the company's current and future development projects.
Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and Unicorn Investment managed the deal.
Moody's rates the securities Ba2 while Standard & Poor's rates them BB-.
The deal is seen testing the waters for Middle Eastern credits after the debt woes of Dubai World sparked a panic across global markets late last year.
Henry Azzam, Deutsche Bank's chief executive for the Middle East, told attendees at a conference in Dubai Wednesday that Dar Al Arkan is in the process of selling $750 million of sukuks.
The company last raised 750 million Saudi riyals ($200 million) through a locally issued sukuk in May 2009.
Terms were as follows:
Amount: $450 million
Maturity: Feb. 18, 2015
Coupon: 10.75%
Price: 99.058
Yield: 11%
Ratings: Ba2 (Moody's Investors Service)
BB- (Standard & Poor's)END
Mashreq Seeks to Raise Size of Euro-Medium Note to $5 Billion
* username: rupertbu
The lender has scheduled an extra-ordinary general assembly meeting in Dubai on March 7 for the approval, it said in a statement to the Dubai bourse today.END
Qatar woos foreign cash with ownership reforms
* username: rupertbu
The reforms highlight a debate about the merits of liberalising foreign residency and ownership rules to increase competitiveness as Gulf nations attempt to diversify their economies away from dependency on energy exports.
Qatar's neighbour United Arab Emirates, of which Dubai is a member, proposed a draft law last year allowing foreigners 100 percent ownership outside the free zones that have long lured businesses with the promises of tax-free earnings.
Saudi Has Spent Almost Half of $400-Billion Plan
* username: rupertbu
“We’ll see the expenditure accelerating” this year, al- Assaf said in an interview in Kuwait. “I think we’ll be ahead of the timetable.”
The kingdom, the world’s largest oil exporter, announced the spending program in 2008 to bolster the economy. It was the largest stimulus package in the Group of 20 nations as a percentage of gross domestic product. Al-Assaf told an investors’ conference in Riyadh on Jan. 24 that “continuous stimulus” is needed even as the economy rebounds from last year’s stagnation.
Market overview: FTSE 100 up 29
* username: rupertbu
RAIL TRAFFIC CONTINUES TO TREND HIGHER
* username: rupertbu
Breadth continued to improve as 14 of the 19 commodity groups are now reporting year over year gains. Metals, nonmetallic minerals, farm products and motor vehicles all reported double digit gains.