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Tuesday 18 January 2011
Qatar Names Mohammed Al Sada Energy Minister, Replacing Attiyah, QNA Says - Bloomberg
The government-run Qatar News Agency said Al Sada, minister of state for energy and industry since 2007 and managing director of RasGas Co. prior to that, was named to his new position by Qatar’s Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani.
Attiyah, OPEC’s longest-serving oil minister, was made head of the Emir’s court and will retain his position as deputy prime minister. Attiyah oversaw the transformation of Qatar from a country reliant on oil into the world’s biggest exporter of liquefied natural gas, or LNG.
FT Tilt - What are Aldar's assets really worth?(Registration)
Abu Dhabi announced its biggest ever corporate bailoutout last week, and while it did much to reassure creditors the company will make good on its debts, shareholders and analysts still question its prospects as a growth business. Today, Breakingviews columnist Una Galani makes the important point that even after a massive asset writedown - mandated as part of the bailout - the market still doesn't think Aldar's assets would sell for that:
The company's gross asset value will also fall dramatically to $8.5 billion -- partly because of the sales and partly as a result of a $2.9 billion impairment charge on its remaining assets to reflect falling land values and scrapped projects. The net asset value will be $6.3 billion. With a pro forma market capitalisation of only $2.4 billion, investors clearly don't believe even the reduced book values.
(Aldar's current market cap is about $1.47bn, Galani is factoring in the value of outstanding convertible bonds into the pro forma figure)
UPDATE 1-UAE's Emaar to meet bond investors from Jan. 21 | Reuters
HSBC (HSBA.L), RBS (RBS.L) and Standard Chartered (STAN.L) have been picked to arrange the meetings which start on Jan. 21 and will take place in Asia, the Gulf region and Europe, Emaar said in a statement posted on the bourse website. "A transaction may follow subject to market conditions," the statement said.
The property market in the United Arab Emirates suffered in the wake of the global financial crisis as developers overstretched themselves in the pursuit of ambitious projects.
Kuwait Airways Sale by Government Reached Final Stages, Minister Says - Bloomberg
“The establishing committee submitted its first memo which the government is now looking at,” al-Busairy told reporters in Kuwait City today. “I expect the company’s establishment to start by the end of March.”
Kuwait Investment Authority, the Gulf Arab state’s sovereign wealth fund, was authorized last year to establish a shareholding company to hold the airline’s assets, KAC Chairman Hamad al-Falah said in an interview last March. The fund formed a committee that was given one year to implement the privatization, al-Falah said at the time. The shareholding company will be called Kuwait Airways Co.
Dubai Shares Climb on Regional Growth Prospects; Drake & Scull Advances - Bloomberg
Drake & Scull, an engineering contractor for the real- estate industry, climbed the most since Jan. 2. Arabtec Holding Co., the biggest publicly traded builder in the United Arab Emirates, gained for a second day. The DFM General Index rose 1 percent, the most since Jan. 6, to 1,625.53 at 1:18 p.m. in Dubai.
“We are seeing global markets continue their upward trend along with commodity prices,” Omair Ansari, equity strategist at Gulfmena Alternative Investments, said in an e-mailed response to questions. “Dubai-listed corporates are exemplifying their ability to capture the region’s growth story.”
Nasdaq Dubai unveils new IPO, listing rules amid liquidity fears - Markets and Companies - ArabianBusiness.com
Under the proposed rules, new IPOs will need a minimum of 400 individual shareholders or to reserve at least 10 percent of the offer for retail investors, the company said.
Listed firms – which include state-backed ports operator DP World and contractor Depa – will also have to report results quarterly, rather than the current half-yearly updates.
Bahrain's Arcapita to raise capital as $1.1. bln loan looms
Arcapita was badly hit by the crisis as it struggled to exit its investments due to global investor woes and its fee income from raising fresh funds in the Gulf Arab region collapsed.
'We can confirm that we are conducting a rights issue that has been put to existing shareholders,' a spokesman for the company told Reuters.
FT.com - Opec lifts output as oil flirts with $100
The revelation by the International Energy Agency comes in spite of a string of public comments from Opec countries such as Iran and the United Arab Emirates suggesting that there was no need for more oil and playing down the impact of high oil prices.
The cartel left its official production levels unchanged at a meeting last month in Quito, Ecuador. But the IEA said on Tuesday that Saudi Arabia and other Opec countries were quietly lifting their output in response to higher prices.
Aldar expects to return to profit this year - The National
"In the coming year, you will see that the company will be in black at net profit level for 2011 and 2012 as well," Shafqat Malik told investors on a conference call.
Aldar announced a funding plan last Thursday under which the Abu Dhabi Government will buy Dh10.9 billion (US$2.96bn) of the company's infrastructure assets on Yas Island, Dh5.5bn of residential units and land.
Lufthansa Aims `To Take Gulf Carriers Down' in Europe Push, Emirates Says - Bloomberg
Cologne-based Lufthansa has so far succeeded in lobbying to prevent Emirates from obtaining landing slots in Stuttgart and at the new Berlin-Brandenburg International airport, which is scheduled to open in June next year, Clark said.
“Their mantra is to take the Gulf carriers down, as well as dominate the markets they sit in,” he said. Emirates aims to “re-engage” with the German government over the slots issue before the summer and is hopeful it “will see sense,” he said.
Tunisia Revolt Spurs Surge in Region's Credit-Default Swaps - Bloomberg
The CHART OF THE DAY shows credit-default swaps insuring government debt from Morocco to Egypt have surged to the highest levels since July 2009. Contracts on Tunisia climbed to 184 basis points from 120 at the start of the year, while contracts on Egypt jumped to 307.5 from 237 and Morocco rose to 159 from 125, CMA prices show.
“If things were to get out of hand, you have the risk of broader contagion that starts to impact banking exposures,” said Vivek Tawadey, head of European credit strategy at BNP Paribas SA in London. “The risk is it moves further eastward. As things currently stand, we believe that this is a localized event which should correct over time.”
FT.com / Europe - Portugal looks beyond debt issue on Gulf tour
Luís Amado, Portugal’s foreign minister, said potential purchases of Portuguese public debt by Qatar were “the subject of conversations between the respective finance ministers”.
“It is an area that is at the centre of our attentions,” he told Portuguese television.
FT.com - North African bourses fall on Tunisia contagion fears
Tunisia’s widespread youth unemployment, corruption, autocracy and food price inflation – which led to the ousting of president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali last Friday – is common across the Arab world.
Barclays Capital slashed its economic forecast for Tunisia on Monday and warned the risk of the country’s political turmoil spilling over to other countries in the Middle East is “not negligible”.
FT.com / Middle East & North Africa - Gulf shifts focus to domestic energy
The field’s crude oil output was increased by 50 per cent to 750,000 barrels a day in 2009, and Aramco recently signed a $500m deal with GE Energy to further raise the reservoir’s capacity to 1m barrels.
Perhaps more important, the deal also includes a substantial increase in Shaybah’s gas output, and a plant to process it into liquid form.