Monday, 14 April 2025

#UAE’s Sidara bids £242mn for Wood Group after offering £1.5bn last year

UAE’s Sidara bids £242mn for Wood Group after offering £1.5bn last year

Sidara has made a £242mn offer to buy Wood Group less than a year after walking away from a £1.5bn bid for the crisis-hit UK oil services and engineering business. 

Wood said on Monday that United Arab Emirates-based Sidara had made a “nonbinding conditional proposal” to buy the group for 35p a share, a 40 per cent premium on its 25p closing price last week. 

The offer included a possible injection of $450mn by Sidara into Wood, it said. Wood said its board would be minded to recommend that shareholders accept a firm offer if one was made by Sidara, a privately held network of engineering and design companies run from the UAE and London. 

Sidara would also take on Wood’s outstanding debt of approximately $1.1bn, much of which needs to be refinanced in the coming months. 

The proposed price is about 85 per cent lower than the offer discussed by Sidara last year before it walked away citing “geopolitical risks and financial market uncertainty”. 

Shares in UK-listed Wood have collapsed in recent months as it struggles with high debt levels and questions about its governance. 

Wood said last month that it would need to restate financial results affecting the past three years and that its accounts for the year 2024 would be delayed, meaning its shares were likely to be suspended from trading at the end of April. 

It added that an independent review of its projects division had found “cultural failings”, including information being withheld from auditors. 

Wood said on Monday that Sidara had made “significant progress” on its due diligence, but that any firm offer would depend on Wood publishing its audited accounts for 2024. 

The Financial Times first reported Sidara’s latest takeover talks for Wood in February. 

Wood said on Monday that combining with Sidara “would create a leading global engineering consulting company” while Wood would “operate as a standalone, client-facing brand”. 

Wood’s stock gained more than 14 per cent in early trading on Monday. 

Under UK takeover rules, Sidara has until April 17 to make a firm offer for Wood or walk away.

#Dubai Property Boom Faces Pressure as Oil Falls, Trump Tariffs Test Demand - Bloomberg

Dubai Property Boom Faces Pressure as Oil Falls, Trump Tariffs Test Demand - Bloomberg


Over the last four years, Dubai property prices have surged 70% and outperformed other major cities. That relentless boom now faces its biggest threat since the pandemic as US President Donald Trump’s tariffs roil markets.

The outlook for oil producing Gulf economies has dimmed, with crude plunging below $65 a barrel on the back of the trade tensions and a decision by OPEC+ to boost supply. Meanwhile, the uncertainties that have hit asset prices from India to China and the UK risk deterring the wealthy foreign buyers who’ve been snapping up Dubai real estate.

Property prices in the emirate had already begun moderating in recent months, with last year’s 16% rise less than the 20% of the previous year as buyers started to push back on big increases.

The risks of a bigger real estate slowdown in Dubai are now piling up, analysts say. A regional economic pullback due to crude’s decline would result in fewer jobs for the expats who’ve helped boost the property market, according to Mohammed Ali Yasin, founder and chief executive officer of Oracle Financial Consultancy and Investments.

At the same time, high levels of international investment in Dubai’s real estate market leave it vulnerable to the downturn in global assets, said Taimur Khan, the head of research in Middle East and Africa for real estate services firm JLL.

“There is a question as to whether international groups that might be facing more uncertainty in their home markets could want to follow through with investments here,” Khan said.

The fortunes of the emirate’s property market have long been tied to crude, with prices falling in early 2020 and 2014 in tandem with oil. Average home prices in Dubai fell around 33% between 2014 and 2020 after oil prices collapsed and curtailed state revenues.

Trump has paused most of the tariffs he announced earlier this month. But he’s levied a 145% rate on China, which is the biggest buyer of Middle Eastern oil.

“People are under estimating the impact of slower growth in China and in turn lower demand for oil on our markets,” said Yasin, who’s based in Abu Dhabi. “Government spending and projects would be most impacted if oil prices stay close to $60 per barrel and that will have an impact on jobs and lower economic activity, in the long term,” he said.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has warned that neighboring Saudi Arabia may see its budget deficit soar to $67 billion this year and cut spending on a multitrillion-dollar plan to transform the economy.

The outlook for Saudi Arabia impacts Dubai because many firms are headquartered in the emirate and use it as a springboard into the kingdom. So cuts to construction projects in Saudi Arabia are likely to impact hiring and jobs in Dubai as well.

Residential values in Dubai jumped 69.8% between November 2020 and December 2024, according to the researcher Knight Frank. The rally was fueled by the government’s handling of the pandemic and its liberal visa policies. Wealthy investors, from Russians seeking to safeguard assets to crypto millionaires, have rushed in.

For now, developers say they are still selling briskly. Muhammad Binghatti, the chairman of the privately-owned developer Binghatti Properties, said the company managed to complete all planned sales during the volatility of the past week.

Also, Louis Harding, the chief executive of Dubai broker Betterhomes, said oil prices may not have the same impact as earlier years because the emirate now has measures like long-term golden visas that encourage expats to stay on even during downturns.

For now, weakness in the greenback is also an advantage to foreign buyers because Gulf currencies are pegged to the US currency. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index tumbled 2.4% last week and the gauge is at the lowest level since October.

Dubai’s biggest developer Emaar Properties PJSC is down more than 10% since the tariffs were announced on April 2, while rival Aldar has lost more than 5% amid the market turmoil. Both stocks remain up around 40% for the past year.

Other pressures could yet come into play. Potential currency devaluations by any countries looking to balance out the tariffs would also put Gulf countries at a potential disadvantage, Khan said.

“There are a lot of known unknowns,” Khan said.

Most Gulf markets gain on US tariff exemptions | Reuters

Most Gulf markets gain on US tariff exemptions | Reuters


Most Gulf stock markets ended higher on Monday, in line with global shares, supported by an easing of trade tensions after the U.S. granted exemptions for smartphones and computers from tariffs.

The move also excluded the specified electronics from Trump's 10% "baseline" tariffs on goods from most countries other than China, easing import costs for semiconductors from Taiwan and Apple iPhones produced in India.

On Wednesday, Trump had announced a reprieve for levies on dozens of countries, while ratcheting up tariffs on Chinese imports effectively to 145%.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab advanced 1.8%, led by a 4.7% jump in top lender Emirates NBD (ENBD.DU), opens new tab and a 3.2% rise in sharia-compliant lender Dubai Islamic Bank (DISB.DU), opens new tab.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab climbed 0.9%.

Oil prices - a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets - rose more than 1% on the U.S. tariff exclusions and Chinese data showing a sharp rebound in crude imports in March, but gains were capped by concerns that the trade war between the U.S. and China could weaken global economic growth and dent fuel demand.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab added 0.3%, helped by a 1% rise in the Gulf's biggest lender Qatar National Bank (QNBK.QA), opens new tab.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab, however, finished flat, after two sessions of gains.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cut its 2025 global oil demand growth forecast on Monday, citing the impact of data received for the first quarter and U.S. tariffs, and also reduced its global economic growth forecasts for this year and next.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab ended flat.

Meanwhile, Qatar and Egypt agreed to work towards a package of $7.5 billion in direct Qatari investments, according to a joint statement released by the Egyptian president's office on Monday.

Egypt is pushing ahead with efforts to secure funding from Gulf neighbours and foreign partners as it seeks to tackle heavy foreign debts and a gaping budget deficit.

#Dubai: Brookfield Has Billions Riding on Middle East Private Equity Revival - Bloomberg

Dubai: Brookfield Has Billions Riding on Middle East Private Equity Revival - Bloomberg

First came the Wall Street banks and then the global hedge funds. Now, a wave of private equity firms led by New York-based Brookfield Asset Management are also setting their sights on the oil-rich Middle East to spur deals and profits.

While this month’s dramatic plunge in crude prices highlights the risks of a region that’s reliant on oil revenues, they’re intent on investing in economies where vast government diversification drives have fueled a financial boom.

Brookfield has become one of the biggest foreign investors in the Middle East by building a private equity portfolio of $8 billion and amassing infrastructure and real estate assets worth $5 billion. It intends to raise at least $2 billion for a Middle East-focused fund — the biggest of its kind — while weighing a string of new investments. Other heavyweights including Warburg Pincus LLC and General Atlantic LP are also expanding in the Gulf.

It’s a region that can be hard to crack. Oil’s recent drop to below $65 a barrel is likely to force some governments to weigh spending cuts. Just a few years ago, fundraising had dried up in the Gulf amid the collapse of the local investment giant Abraaj Group. And more than a decade ago, Carlyle Group Inc. faced challenges in the Middle East amid currency devaluations in some countries.

Still, the lure of the Gulf’s newly-ascendant economies has proven irresistible as high interest rates have hampered leveraged buyouts globally over the past year. More recently, the market turmoil fueled by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs has dashed hopes for a deals resurgence that many private equity firms were counting on to exit long-held investments. All that’s made the Middle East a more important source of liquidity for these asset managers.

“The Middle East means emerging market returns with developed market risk,” Jad Ellawn, who heads Brookfield in the Middle East, said in an interview. “That is the attraction. You don’t find that anywhere else.”

The moves by Brookfield and other private equity firms have already begun driving a resurgence in a regional industry that lay dormant for years after Abraaj collapsed in 2018 as a probe found it had misused investor money.

The number of private equity deals in the Middle East have nearly tripled from a decade ago, and assets under management have nearly doubled, researcher Preqin says. The investments mark a sharp change for a region that foreign firms had mainly seen as a source of funding in earlier years. Increased PE activity has the potential to further fuel deal volumes in the region, where Bain & Co. estimates overall M&A activity already touched $29 billion last year.

The Gulf can be a volatile place to invest in, with sharp boom and bust cycles. As recently as 2019, the region’s economies were in the throes of a slump driven by declining crude prices.

But a big bounce back in the price of oil around 2022 padded state coffers and fueled a sharp turnaround even as other economies were reeling from the pandemic. Progress on bankruptcy laws and immigration rules are now making foreign investors more comfortable. Massive privatization drives and investments by governments to diversify away from crude are offering a new source of private equity deals.

Home-grown companies have begun maturing, making them more attractive for foreign buyers. And an IPO market that has run red hot has opened the door for private equity firms to list companies at a profit.

KKR & Co. recently announced a major investment in a Gulf data center and said it would help spend $5 billion to expand that. CVC Capital Partners Plc, Ardian SAS and others have moved people to the Gulf, spending considerable effort to forge ties with regional entrepreneurs and family conglomerates. They are complemented by a slew of local firms from Gulf Islamic Investments LLC to Saudi Arabia’s Jadwa.

The big shift has been that foreign firms “are actually investing in the region,” as opposed to tapping its vast sovereign wealth, said Huda Al Lawati, founder and chief executive of Aliph Capital, an Abu Dhabi-based mid-market PE firm.

In recent days new challenges have emerged. Fears of further pressure on oil prices have roiled the Gulf’s main stock indices. The risks are particularly high for Saudi Arabia, the region’s largest economy, which needs oil at close to $110 a barrel to balance budgets. Crude’s decline raises the possibility of much tighter outlays by governments and more curbs on investments by sovereign wealth funds that have poured money into local and international deals.

So far, Brookfield has benefited from investing in the Gulf when others were hesitant, entering the market before many of its rivals. In 2015, Chief Executive Officer Bruce Flatt was on one of his regular pilgrimages to the Gulf where the firm was backed by some of the region’s big wealth funds. Anuj Ranjan, who today leads the firm’s sprawling private equity empire, was along for the ride. Before they landed, Flatt had already sent out an internal memo: Brookfield would be establishing an investment office in Dubai.

Bankers say Brookfield is seeing payoffs from being an early mover. Ellawn has steadily amassed a vast network of connections in a region where relationships are the cornerstone of all dealmaking. These days, he nurtures the firm’s relationships with key deal-makers, including executives at Abu Dhabi’s largest bank, sovereign wealth fund Mubadala and asset manager Lunate. Meanwhile, Toronto-based parent Brookfield Corp. has a member of Saudi Arabia’s powerful Olayan business family on its board of directors.

In Dubai, Ellawn can regularly be seen striding between meetings through the financial center, where the Gulf’s economic confidence is on full display. The hub’s tall towers are brimming with Wall Street bankers and lawyers on the prowl for their next deal, and the highest floors offer an unobstructed view of the construction frenzy taking place in the emirate.

Brookfield has had some early successes, and says it focuses on assets that form the backbone of the regional economy. Its ICD Brookfield Place tower, which opened during the pandemic in Dubai, now has almost 100% occupancy as hedge funds landed and global banks expanded in the city.

Meanwhile, the new expats who arrived have driven surging demand for schools. GEMS Education — which Brookfield has invested in — is doing brisk business and preparing to launch one of the world’s most expensive schools charging $56,000 a year.

A cross-border consortium of investors put money into GEMS. It included Gulf Islamic Investments, Marathon Asset Management and the State Oil Fund of Azerbaijan.

“We’ve proven that the ingredients for a successful private equity environment exist,” Ranjan said. “And I do think our peers will show up.”

France’s Ardian opened its Abu Dhabi outpost in 2023. Warburg Pincus is moving a dealmaker to Dubai while Permira Holdings LLP is looking to open an office in the emirate. Top executives from Blackstone Inc., General Atlantic and Carlyle frequently attend the biggest financial conferences in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.

Beyond oil prices, geopolitics can often weigh on sentiment in the region. Also, while capital markets have been on a tear in recent years, private equity exits through initial public offerings remain rare in the Gulf. Valuations can also swing widely as company owners are reticent to sell.

Governments across the Gulf have been pushing firms to make the region an investment destination on its own merit instead of an easy source of cash to the rest of the world. That’s inherently challenging, though, when the state-backed sovereign wealth funds wield enormous firepower, meaning there’s strong competition when it comes to sourcing local deals.

The experiences of other international firms also show how hard it can be to win in the Middle East. Carlyle raised $500 million for a Middle East fund in 2009, and although that performed well it didn’t go on to start another. There was a shortage of sizable deals at the time as well as currency swings in Turkey and Egypt. There were broad concerns about corporate governance in the region, and it was another choppy period for the Gulf because of lower oil prices.

Carlyle continues to have half a dozen people on the ground in Abu Dhabi, mostly focusing on fundraising while the group also looks opportunistically at deals in the region.

More recently, the outlook for the region has looked vastly different because of economic reforms, and in February the research firm Magnitt predicted that private equity in the region was positioned for a rebound.

“It’s a golden decade,” for the Gulf, Ellawn said.