Showing posts with label Vision. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vision. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 October 2010

HH Shaykh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Interview: "Dubai is Back"


Here's the Bloomberg interview with Shaykh Mohammad and Shaykh Hamdan.

And as well, here are some unbiased reactions to the interview by various local personalities.

Sunday, 3 October 2010

DIC Restructuring: Difficult Discussions Over Margin and Covenants?

Asa Fitch over at The National reports that discussions between DIC and its creditors over the proposed five-year rescheduling are focused on:
  1. The margin. DIC would like 85 bp.  The lenders appear to be sensibly asking for more.  Though the precedent set by Dubai World's rescheduling is not in the lenders' favor.
  2. The lenders would like covenants triggering default if certain levels of asset sales aren't met in the second and fourth years of the restructured facility.
While Asa's sources describe the proceedings as "fierce", the Company itself sees things proceeding smoothly.  

I suspect this will end up with a cosmetic change in the margin.  Hopefully, the banks have their eyes firmly on the prize (the more important point):  covenants to force asset sales.  An extra 100 or 200 bps is going to be cold comfort, if the banks can't force the return of their principal.  

There's nothing like the reluctance of an investor who bought at the top of the market to sell when markets are depressed.  He knows there's real additional value there and he has the loans to prove it.  Plus do I need to add The Vision.

Friday, 1 October 2010

Reuters: How Dubai Got Serious?

An interesting report from Reuters:  How Dubai Got Serious.

A deliberate choice of headline?  Or perhaps an unintended indication that at one point Dubai was not serious?

To whet your appetite some quotes.  My comments follow each quote.
The auditors' task is to investigate exactly where the money went, who lined whose pockets, and what other financial landmines might lie in store. Forensic audits at state-linked firms, such as Dubai Holding, are part of a wider corruption probe that has targeted senior figures from Dubai's boom years.
Lots of commissions to track down to say nothing of more simple misappropriations.
Abu Dhabi's ascendancy began in the wake of 2008's global credit crunch. Reports about debt trouble in Dubai's flagship companies had been circulating within government from as early as 2005, though most people seemed happy to ignore them. In 2008, the end of a six-year oil-fueled boom burst Dubai's real estate bubble while the global financial crisis left the emirate unable to refinance looming debt obligations.
Lenders merrily rolling over loans and pretending everything was OK.
 "The announcement was a disaster for Dubai. They were told 'don't worry, Argentina has done this, Venezuela has done it. People forget and they start lending again.' But what they didn't take into account was that those are real economies. This is not a country.
Ouch!  But right on target.  Not a country in several ways. 
"Nakheel's books were so screwed up it wasn't even funny."
"No-one knew the magnitude of what was owed, then the complexity of it," the former adviser to Dubai World says. "A lack of experience -- and ego -- made it hard to admit defeat."
And still make it so for the "Dubai's back" crowd.
Almost two-thirds of Dubai World's debt is held by six banks, four of them British: HSBC, Lloyds, Royal Bank of Scotland, Standard Chartered, and local lenders Emirates NBD and Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank.
Another great moment in banking!  There's no fool like and old fool.  And then there are bankers.
"They believe that now the problem is solved," says the former Dubai World adviser, who is critical of creeping complacency just a year after the crisis. "The problem is not solved, they still owe the same amount of money. They will have to pay the same amount, only a little later."
See above "We're back".

Tuesday, 28 September 2010

"We're Back" - Part II: "Back to the Future"

Two Unnamed Lenders Unsuccessfully Attempt to Retrieve Their Loan

We're back indeed!

Seems Limitless needs another six months

Guess lenders should have figured out that when the borrower's name is Limitless, there could be all sorts of related problems with amounts and repayment.

I can't wait for the sequel.  This plot has got at least a couple more runs.

Time for a Visit to the Optometrist?


Dubai is back in business and the emirate's vision is unchanged, His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, told Bloomberg Television on Sunday.
Corrective lenses may help this condition.

Begin with the top line, Your Highness.

(Being a Shaykh means you never have to admit a mistake.  If you can read this from 5 meters, your Vision truly is 20:20).