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Dubai's Request For Debt 'Standstill' Shakes World Markets

BARBARA SURK   11/26/09 11:45 PM ET   AP

Dubai

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Just a year after the global downturn derailed Dubai's explosive growth, the city is now so swamped in debt that it's asking for a six-month reprieve on paying its bills – causing a drop on world markets Thursday and raising questions about Dubai's reputation as a magnet for international investment.

The fallout came swiftly and was felt globally after Wednesday statement that Dubai's main development engine, Dubai World, would ask creditors for a "standstill" on paying back its $60 billion debt until at least May. The company's real estate arm, Nakheel – whose projects include the palm-shaped island in the Gulf – shoulders the bulk of money due to banks, investment houses and outside development contractors.

In total, the state-backed networks nicknamed Dubai Inc. are $80 billion in the red and the emirate needed a bailout earlier this year from its oil-rich neighbor Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.

Markets took the news badly – with the Dubai woes and the continued fall of the U.S. dollar giving investors twin worries. Dubai's move raised concerns about debt across the Gulf Region. Prices to insure debt from Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain all rose by double-digit percentages Thursday, according to data from CMA DataVision.

In Europe, the FTSE 100, Germany's DAX and the CAC-40 in France opened sharply lower. Earlier in Asia, the Shanghai index sank 119.19 points, or 3.6 percent, in the biggest one-day fall since Aug. 31. Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed 1.8 percent to 22,210.41.

Wall Street was closed for the Thanksgiving holiday and most markets in the Middle East were silent because of a major Islamic feast.

"Dubai's standstill announcement ... was vague and it remains difficult to discern whether the call for a standstill will be voluntary," said a statement from the Eurasia Group, a Washington-based research group that assesses political and financial risk for foreign investors interested in Dubai.

"If it is not, Dubai World will be going into default and that will have more serious negative repercussions for Dubai's sovereign debt, Dubai World and market confidence in the UAE in general," the statement added.

Dubai became the Gulf's biggest credit crunch victim a year ago. But its ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, had continually dismissed concerns over the city-state's liquidity and claims it overreached during the good times.

When asked about the debt, he confidently assured reporters in a rare meeting two months ago that "we are all right" and "we are not worried," leaving details of a recovery plan – if such a plan exists – to everyone's guess.

Then, earlier this month, he told Dubai's critics to "shut up."

"He needs to produce a recovery plan that will be respected by those who want to do business with Dubai," said Simon Henderson, a Gulf and energy specialist at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "If he does not do it right, Dubai will be a sad place."

After months of denial that the economic downturn even touched the glitzy city-state, the Dubai government earlier this year showed signs of trying to deal with the financial fallout that has halted dozens of projects and touched off an exodus of expatriate workers.

In February, it raised $10 billion in a hastily arranged bond sale to the United Arab Emirates central bank, which is based in Abu Dhabi.

The deal – seen by many as Abu Dhabi's bailout of Dubai – was part of a $20 billion bond program to help Dubai meet its debt obligations.

On Wednesday, the Dubai Finance Department announced the emirate raised another $5 billion by selling bonds – all taken by two banks controlled by Abu Dhabi.

Abu Dhabi's ruling Al Nahyan family has been more conservative with its spending, investing oil profits into infrastructure, culture and state institutions. During Dubai's real estate bonanza, the Nahyans saw their flashy neighbor race ahead with development plans and tourism plans that had plenty of hype but few details on how they would be pulled off.

Some did materialize. The more than 2,600-foot (800-meter) Burj Dubai is scheduled to open in January as the world's tallest building. But many other projects, including a tower even taller than the Burj Dubai and satellite cities in the desert, are still just blueprints.

The standstill will likely not immediately affect CityCenter, an $8.5 billion casino complex opening next month in Las Vegas that is half-owned by Dubai World. A Dubai World subsidiary and casino operator MGM Mirage agreed with banks in April to fully fund and finish the six-tower, 67-acre development of plush resorts, condominiums, a retail mall and one casino on the Las Vegas Strip.

However, the standstill's effect may be felt on the famous Keeneland thoroughbred horse auctions near Lexington, Ky., where Sheik Mohammed is a prominent bidder.

Last week, Sheik Mohammed demoted several prominent members of Dubai's corporate elite and replaced them with members of the ruling family, including his two sons, one of whom is Mohammed's designated heir.

Businessmen who fell out of favor were closely associated with Dubai's phenomenal success. They include the head of Dubai World, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, and Mohammed Alabbar, the chief of Emaar Properties, developer of the Burj Dubai and hundreds of other projects.

"He is trying to shake things up," said Christopher Davidson, a lecturer on the Gulf at Britain's Durham University and an author of two books on the UAE.

However, Davidson added, Mohammed's decision to replace those who helped put Dubai on the world map with his relatives might be "read as an increase in autocracy which does not look good internationally."

Not everyone is upset at Dubai Inc.'s transformation into a family business, analysts say.

Mohammed's latest moves may have pleased Abu Dhabi more than the foreign investors, but it is Abu Dhabi that still has the strongest incentives to save Dubai from its financial misery.

"By shifting the power base back to the family things are as they should be as far as Abu Dhabi is concerned," said Mohammed Shakeel, a Dubai-based analyst for the Economist Intelligence Unit.

After an expensive adventure in doing things the Western way, it's "going back to basics" for Dubai, Shakeel added.

___

Associated Press writer Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas contributed to this report.

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Just a year after the global downturn derailed Dubai's explosive growth, the city is now so swamped in debt that it's asking for a six-month reprieve on paying its ...
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Just a year after the global downturn derailed Dubai's explosive growth, the city is now so swamped in debt that it's asking for a six-month reprieve on paying its ...
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01:52 PM on 11/30/2009
Looks nice but man there prehistori­c?
If you owe money to the bank in Dubai they freeze your account, stop your passport so you can’t leave and throw you in jail! FOR REAL!!! Does this mean that all the bankers in Dubai are going to jail?
Here’s something interestin­g I read…
http://ket­iva.com/Ar­ts_and_Hum­anities/du­bai_world_­postpones_­payment_of­_increasin­g_debt.htm­l
03:01 PM on 11/29/2009
n Brazil we can spend a million dolars to build a chemical toilet.

It's a joke. (Yes, it is a joke.)
03:01 PM on 11/29/2009
In Brazil we consrgue spend a million dolars to build a chemical toilet.

It's a joke. (Yes, it is a joke.)
02:59 PM on 11/29/2009
The square meters of the tunnel Ayrton Senna in the city of Sao Paulo in Brazil cost more expensive than the square meters of built Eurotunnel­. See: http://www­.eurotunne­l.com/

The tunnel of the English Channel between France and England and is under the seabed.

It's a joke. (Admittedl­y, this is a joke)
02:53 PM on 11/29/2009
If you think the case of Dubai a big mistake in constructi­on.

Wait to see what will happen with the money after the government of Brazil to begin building the Olympic City in Rio de Janeiro.

It's a joke.
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02:20 PM on 11/29/2009
GENEVA – Swiss voters approved a move to ban the constructi­on of minarets in a Sunday vote on a right-wing initiative that labeled the mosque towers as symbols of militant Islam, projection­s by a widely respected polling institute showed.

Keep them over there, so we don't have to fight them over here.
01:39 AM on 11/29/2009
look out!
We're gonna end up paying.
10:58 PM on 11/28/2009
The Global Villages, composed of Financial Houses of Cards, start to seriously totter.
07:11 PM on 11/28/2009
no sympathy whatsoever­. the banks, investors, should seize the property.

As I recall Dubai had one of the harshest treatments for people who lost their jobs, declared bankruptcy or were in default no loans etc, with even a special jail set up to imprison the "offenders­" foreigners were given hours to leave the country upon loss of job and many fled abandoning house and cars to escape the harsh treatment.

Now that the shoe is on the other foot they are pleading for mercy?

not a chance!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dutch163
The world is crazy
06:29 PM on 11/28/2009
some have identified a derivative trader named Andrew Krieger as "Patient Zero" in the world financial meltdown of last year..(see "Infectiou­s Greed" by Frank Partnoy)

he has since fled the US ,leaving debts in his wake...whe­re did he go ? Dubai

a connection­?
I don't know
02:57 PM on 11/28/2009
I guess only the rich can do that i seems
a debt standstill that is

AMAZING
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
medic628
02:52 PM on 11/28/2009
How much money has Earl P. and Dick made of what is going on there. The whole thing does not make sense
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jackhole
The most loved blogger on this site... ever!
12:38 PM on 11/28/2009
I'm taking KK advice and go out and enjoy a sunny noon in NYC. to those I offended by mistake my sincere apologies.
To those I insulted on purpose f off!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
12:34 PM on 11/28/2009
A curious thing how we are getting different reports on the bank exposure to Dubai's debts. Some sources are reporting 12 billion. Some 20 billion. Some 80 billion. "The banks are safe" to "some banks are safe", to "no American bank is in trouble".

All of this is supposedly part of Dubai's program of "transpare­ncy"?? Where the Sheik told everyone asking too many questions to "shut up" LOL LOL. How transparen­t are the UAE's exposure to Dubai now being fed to world markets? Who has been told to shut up there too?

Sounds as if Dubai got their policy of transparen­cy from the Obama administra­tion.
01:56 PM on 11/28/2009
Maybe from the Obama administra­tion. Maybe from the Bush administra­tion. Maybe from the Clinton administra­tion......­...maybe all of them and more......­........si­lly that you only mentioned Obama, though....­.......
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lafayette2009
Revolutionary Leader
03:57 PM on 11/28/2009
Hysteria is really setting in on you.
12:33 PM on 11/28/2009
A young French teenager was gang-raped by three HIV+ men and the lovely people of Dubai threw him in jail for homosexual­ity. As far as I;m concerned, I hope the whole city sinks into the sand and takes those savages with them.
11:27 PM on 11/28/2009
A young student in a country came to class with a gun and shot everyone.

A man held his daughter in his basement for 19 years and had children with her.

A man decided to invade one of the oldest civilizati­ons in the world, at a point of time in history when they were already riddled with an incompeten­t dictator, and in the process killed more people than the dictator would have killed in the next 200 years.

guess?