Dubai Debt Crisis
Dubai Debt Crisis
On
By
AR.Vignesh
(09bs0002676)
Submitted to
1 Introduction 1
7 Conclusion 13
Appendix
Dubai is one of the seven emirates of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). It is
located south of the Persian Gulf on the Arabian Peninsula. The Dubai
Municipality is sometimes called Dubai state to distinguish it from the emirate.
Written accounts document the existence of the city for at least 150 years prior to
the formation of the UAE. Legal, political, military and economic functions with
the other emirates within a federal framework, although each emirate has
jurisdiction over some functions such as civic law enforcement and provision and
upkeep of local facilities.
Dubai has been ruled by the Al Maktoum dynasty since 1833. Dubai's
current ruler, Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, is also the Prime Minister and
Vice President of the UAE.
The emirate's main revenues are from tourism, property and financial
services. Although Dubai's economy was originally built on the oil industry,
revenues from petroleum and natural gas currently contribute less than 6% (2006)
of the emirate's US$ 80 billion economy (2009). Property and construction
contributed 22.6% to the economy in 2005, before the current large-scale
construction boom.
Dubai has attracted attention through its real estate projects and sports
events. This increased attention, coinciding with its emergence as a Global City
and business hub, has highlighted labour and human rights issues concerning its
largely South Asian workforce. Established in 2004, the Dubai International
Finance Centre was intended as a landmark project to turn Dubai into a major
international hub for banks and finance to rivals New York, London and Hong
Kong.
Dubai's top re-exporting destinations include Iran (US$ 790 million), India
(US$ 204 million) and Saudi Arabia (US$ 194 million). The emirate's top import
sources are Japan (US$ 1.5 billion), China (US$ 1.4 billion) and the United States
(US$ 1.4 billion).
Dubai government has announced just recently, for the time being , not in a
position to repay its outstanding debt of $7,40,000.At the same time, Government
owned mega finance institution-Dubai World also declared that it may not be able
to repay any loan for 6months.This 'Dubai World' is engaged in different business
enterprises like-transport, ship building, township building, etc. A sister-concern of
Dubai world a building construction company, named NAKHEEL is also telling
that it requires some more time to repay its debt installments.
Meanwhile Dubai’s stock market is down 60pc this year, hitting many of the
listed companies.
Asset:
1 Sovereign assets $90 billion
2 State-affiliated companies assets $260 billion
In spite of all these, experts hope that it is possible to recover. It comes out
of past experience. Dubai had faced similar economic crisis in 1999.Then
Abudhabhi, another emirate in UAE, had helped Dubai by lending a loan of
$1,00,000. Abudhabhi is a financially stable country..It can help.
But the quantum of need this time is much more than it was in 1999.Just on
th
29 November, Abudhabhi has announced that it would consider the financing
aspect, item wise, taking each main transaction on merits. It has also clarified, it is
not going to take full responsibility of all loans.
Dubai, unlike other six emirates of UAE is not a country rich with oil
resources. This city state is purely a business city which wholly depending upon
tourism and other businesses. Dubai World, in a haste to attract world
entrepreneurs started spending more and more on building fine roads, star hotels
etc. Foreign institutional investors also invested much here, especially during the
last four years.
What happened was that the Dubai government requested the creditors of
Dubai World (one of three conglomerates that are backed by the emirate), to agree
to a 'standstill' on repayments until May 30 2010.
The standstill also applies to the $4.05 billion sukuk, or Islamic bond, issued
by Nakheel, the state-owned builder famous for the spectacular Palm Jumeirah
scheme and other such mind boggling projects that involve large-scale land
reclamation. Nakheel's parent company is Dubai World.
The truth is that Dubai is being crushed under a mountain of debt. The
emirate has chalked up debt in excess of $80 billion by expanding in banking, real
estate and transportation. Dubai World with $60 billion liabilities has sought a six-
month standstill on its debt repayment to all its lenders.
A storm broke out in last November, emanating from the part of the world
that is widely seen as a major beneficiary of the rise in oil prices. Yet Dubai’s story
is not about oil. Indeed it is precisely the absence of oil and natural gas (less than
6% of GDP) that prompted this emirate go down the path of tourism, hospitality,
and commercial real estate development, that lies at the heart of the matter now.
The financial crisis in Dubai continues the Tower of Babel curse. Attempts
to build the tallest building in the world require such investor euphoria and access
to capital that they frequently mark a top of the cycle. Burj Dubai, which was
topped earlier this year did not just edge out the former giant Taipei 101, but leapt
above it (at 818 meters vs. 509 and 162 floors vs. 101).
It has been clear for some time that Dubai’s opulent construction of an adult
play ground in the Middle East was a bit over the top and that its projects were
designed for radically different economic conditions. There have been reports of
largely empty luxury hotels, unfinished projects, partially built buildings and more
difficult credit conditions.
Many believe that as goes Dubai World so goes Dubai, and expect its larger
and richer neighbor, Abu Dhabi to exact political concessions in exchange for
providing support. Dubai World accounts for roughly three quarters of Dubai’s
debt and about half of Dubai’s $25 billion remittances.
There are seven emirates in all that make up the United Arab Emirates
(UAE). Dubai’s GDP of roughly $40 billion accounts for something on the
magnitude of 2% of UAE’s GDP. Yet what ails Dubai appears to be affecting the
UAE as whole. Some reports indicate that nearly half of the $582 billion
construction projects are on hold or simply cancelled.
Implications
There are a number of channels by which the events in Dubai can have a
material impact on the global capital markets even for those who are not directly
exposed. However, we judge the immediate reaction excessive, while at the same
time recognizing that the panicked reaction confirms our suspicion that despite the
rally in risk assets since late March, market sentiment remains fragile and jittery.
First, a review of data from the Bank for International Settlements suggests
that outside of the UK, foreign bank exposure to the UAE itself is rather
diversified, though as one might have suspected, they are concentrated in Europe.
Of the roughly $123 billion UAE foreign obligations, UK banks are responsible for
about $50 billion and Europe as a whole almost $90 billion. US banks account for
about $10.6 billion, while Japanese banks have just shy of $9 billion exposure.
Trying to drill down to the emirate level and company level are a bit more
difficult as the data is hard to find and what is available appears few years old at
best. Nevertheless, while a default by Dubai, should it come to that, would be the
largest sovereign default since Argentina in 2001, would do the beleaguered banks
no favors, it probably will not undermine capital ratios in any material sense.
A second potential impact is on the monetary policy of the major central
banks. Central banks in the developed countries for the most part, with the UK a
notable exception, are unwinding some of the extraordinary measures associated
with the crisis, though for the most part (Australia and Norway are the exceptions)
stopping shy of actually raising interest rates. The new albeit mild shock for their
troubled banks and, should the heightened volatility in the global capital markets
be sustained, would seem to encourage policy makers, in anything, to move slower
and more cautiously perhaps than before. We think this is of marginal significance
at the moment.
A third potential impact is on the UAE’s peg to the dollar. While the Saudi’s
stance toward the dollar peg has been unwavering, the UAE’s central banker has
been all over the board. In mid-November, Kuwait’s basket approach was seen
favorably as an alternative to the dollar-peg, but late in the month, desire to drop
the dollar appeared to have cooled off significantly. The dollar’s peg among the
Gulf Cooperation Council, except for Kuwait, is an element of stability and may be
marginally less likely to be jettisoned now than before.
5. Impact on World and Indian Economy
Anxiety over Dubai’s economic health has shaken world markets after
Dubai World, the fulcrum of the emirate’s economy, announced that it would delay
repayment of some of its debt. The lack of information about Dubai’s flagship
holding company, which is owned by the government, triggered indiscriminate
selling of stocks linked to the region.
Markets in Asia fell sharply in the backdrop of the disclosure. In Japan, the
Nikkei 225 had lost 3.2 per cent, its biggest one day fall in nearly eight months. In
Seoul, the Kospi dropped by 4.7 per cent, marking a four-month decline. Hong
Kong’s Hang Seng fell by 4.8 per cent.
The cascading effect of Dubai’s debt problems were felt worldwide, because
the emirate is the region’s key financial centre, and is well integrated with global
markets. Analysts say that any default in debt repayment by Dubai can set a
dangerous precedent, and the contagion could spread, threatening the fragile
recovery of the global economy from recession.
However, some analysts are of the view that the emirate of Abu Dhabi,
which is rich in oil, and continues to remain financially strong, is expected to bail
out Dubai out of its current financial difficulties.
Fuelled by its oil revenues, Abu Dhabi, unlike Dubai continues to witness as
real estate boom, absorbing South Asian, and especially Indian labour in
significant numbers.
About 4.5 million Indians live and work in the Gulf region and remit more
than $10 billion annually. Representatives of major Indian construction and
engineering companies have maintained that Dubai’s financial woes are unlikely to
affect them much as their exposure to the emirate’s real estate sector has been
limited.
India’s only full-service back in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bank of
Baroda has exposure of 7-8 percent of its loan book in the country.
The emirate positioned itself as a Islamic finance centre with top lenders like
HSBC, Deutsche, Standard Chartered using it as a base, as it sought to become a
financial hub between Asia and Europe. Much of that money and talent could now
to flow to its immediate neighbors as Dubai slowly works through its mountain of
debt and its shaken financial community exhibits a newfound aversion to risk. Up
for grabs is a bigger share of an estimated $1 trillion Islamic financing industry,
which like conventional banking is back on a growth trajectory as the global credit
crisis ebbs.
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar, which also have ambitions of becoming
regional financial centers, will catch up as they are well regulated and have
developed at a more measured pace, bankers told Reuters.
Countries outside the Middle East are less likely beneficiaries, market
watchers say.
Malaysia, for example, has the world's largest Islamic bond market and is
known for more business-friendly interpretations of what is allowed under sharia
law than many Gulf countries, opening the door for a far greater range of financial
products.
In spite of all criticism from around the world Dubai still has an hope to
bounce back from this issue. This kind situation is not a new one to Dubai. Earlier
during 1991, Dubai faces same kind of problem . but it came out that issue
tragically. At that time its sister emirate abu dabhi financed to recover from it.
Of course now the amount require to recover from this issue is huge when
compare to earlier. But there is being supported by abu dabhi with some limitation.
As of now Dubai may or may not survive in the future. Because day by day its
stock market value coming down due to this issue.
If Dubai is not able to repay its debt, it will cause big set back to all over the
world. It will create more unemployment problem to India(42.5% population in
Dubai are Indians).
a. Tables
Banks
Closing Price of
2,406.98 Closing Price of 2007 3,414.53
2006
Closing Price of
1,096.75 Closing Price of 2009 973.49
2008
Fin/Invest.
Closing Price of
4,603.94 Closing Price of 2007 8,061.88
2006
Closing Price of
2,430.34 Closing Price of 2009 2,109.97
2008
Insurance
Closing Price of
4,785.43 Closing Price of 2007 4,629.69
2006
Closing Price of
3,336.06 Closing Price of 2009 3,402.42
2008
Realestate
Closing Price of
9,929.65 Closing Price of 2007 13,681.10
2006
Closing Price of
2,375.93 Closing Price of 2009 2,819.36
2008
Transport.
Closing Price of
- Closing Price of 2007 935.40
2006
Closing Price of
378.68 Closing Price of 2009 459.96
2008
Materials
Closing Price of
309.47 Closing Price of 2007 348.39
2006
Closing Price of
247.45 Closing Price of 2009 139.58
2008
C.Staples
Closing Price of
664.00 Closing Price of 2007 664.00
2006
Closing Price of
396.00 Closing Price of 2009 501.00
2008
Telecomm.
Closing Price of
1,058.25 Closing Price of 2007 1,199.03
2006
Closing Price of
351.13 Closing Price of 2009 454.69
2008
b. Graphs
Sno Website
1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubai
http://hubpages.com/hub/FINANCIAL-CRISIS-IN-DUBAI-REASINS-AND-
2
EFFECTS
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/louisearmitstead/5829577/Dubai_finally_r
3
eveals_its_financial_position/
http://business.rediff.com/slide-show/2009/nov/27/slide-show-1-dubai-shock-
4
why-it-happened-how-it-hits-india.htm#contentTop
http://seekingalpha.com/article/175772-the-potential-impacts-of-dubai-s-
5
financial-crisis
6 http://beta.thehindu.com/business/article55995.ece
7 http://www.dfm.co.ae/pages/default.aspx?c=1053
8 http://www.nasdaqdubai.com/products/ftse.html