Home BusinessAbu Dhabi to the rescue
Dubai: Abu Dhabi"s $10 billion bailout of Dubai World will boost confidence and please Nakheel bondholders. But this volte-face won"t restore the credibility lost over recent weeks.
- Asian stocks rebound on Dubai financing; Japan shares decline - Dubai crisis not to hit DP World"s ops: chief - UAE stocks soar after Abu Dhabi"s $10-bn aid - Abu Dhabi gives Dubai $10 bn to cover debt - Monday, Monday - Emaar calls off proposed merger with Dubai Holding
Dubai never loses the ability to surprise. After shocking the capital markets last month by saying it wouldn"t stand behind Dubai World and its Nakheel property subsidiary, it has now announced a bailout of Nakheel"s first bond maturity as well as a further $5.9 billion of working capital for Dubai World.
Dubai clearly underestimated the impact of its announcement last month that it was seeking a standstill on Dubai World"s debts. The move damaged its reputation in the capital markets, jeopardized its future as a financial centre and knocked the ratings of state-linked and private companies — as well as harming the region as a whole.
Dubai"s U-turn may also be linked to the fact that Nakheel"s bondholders had formed enough of a position to prevent a standstill and force a default on both Nakheel and Dubai World. That would have inflicted further reputational damage.
With the first of the bonds out of the way, Dubai can now get on with restructuring Dubai World"s remaining $22 billion debt. Maybe that can be done consensually. But, just in case it can"t, Dubai has added a stick to its carrot. A new tribunal is being established which could theoretically impose a solution. Whether creditors accept that such a retrospectively-created tribunal has international legitimacy remains to be seen.
What"s more, despite Dubai"s new fondness for the word "transparency", there are two unanswered questions. First, what are the terms on which Abu Dhabi has supplied Dubai with the $10 billion? Second, will international and local creditors be treated equally? Some wording in the government"s press release suggested particular concern for local creditors — although that doesn"t apparently mean international creditors will get a worse deal, according to a source close to the situation.
Unfortunately, Dubai won"t find it so easy to shrug off the memory of the past few weeks. It"s not just that the brouhaha makes it more expensive for any Dubai companies to access international funding. The public relations disaster will stick in investors" minds for years to come.