Nakheel Plans $1.1bn Of Early Debt Repayments In 2014
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Nakheel Plans $1.1bn Of Early Debt Repayments In 2014

Nakheel Plans $1.1bn Of Early Debt Repayments In 2014

Nakheel was taken over by the government as part of a $16 billion rescue plan completed in 2011.

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Dubai developer Nakheel plans to repay nearly a third of its total bank debt in the first quarter of 2014, well ahead of maturity in 2015, as it benefits from a rebound in the emirate’s property sector.

Nakheel, the builder of a palm tree-shaped island off Dubai’s coast, was the most high profile casualty of the Gulf state’s property market collapse in 2009 and was taken over by the government as part of a $16 billion rescue plan in 2011.

The property market rebounded in 2013, with prices rising around 22 per cent from 2012. In the crash, they had plummeted more than 50 per cent from their 2008 peak.

As a result of the rebound, Nakheel will not require further government support and is targeting annual profit growth of 15 per cent, its chairman, Ali Rashid Lootah, told a news conference.

“We are confident that we will not touch the government funding and we will be ok without it,” Lootah told reporters.

“Where there’s a will, there’s a way. We will keep looking at ways to cut costs. When there’s a need to raise cash, we will do so,” he added.

Of the Dhs6.8 billion ($1.85 billion) of bank debt due in 2015, Nakheel will repay around Dhs2.35 billion in February and another Dhs1.65 billion in August, the company said.

“These funds came from increased sales and also by mitigating claims of creditors,” he added.

The developer handed over 7,000 units to customers last year.

The company’s total cash outflow of Dhs56.9 billion that was assessed after the restructuring has been cut to Dhs41.3 billion, and the net deficit has dropped by Dhs22 billion to 8 billion, it said in a presentation to reporters.

Nakheel will also repay a $1.2 billion Islamic bond, which it issued to trade creditors as part of its restructuring plan due in 2016, on time.

“We will have no trouble repaying on time,” Lootah said.

Of trade creditors’ Dhs8 billion of claims against the company, nearly all have now been settled amicably, with the expected payout to be worth around 15 percent of the total, according to a presentation by the company.

Trade creditors often settled claims at a steep discount as they needed the funds quickly after a long delay in repayment by Nakheel as it secured its restructuring.

Dubai’s building boom came to a grinding halt in the wake of the 2009 financial crisis and state-owned Nakheel shelved several projects including two other palm-shaped island projects and an island shaped as the world.

Nakheel will restart one of the palm islands, though on a smaller scale. However, development of Palm Jebel Ali and the The World islands are still incomplete.

Lootah said there would be no further infrastructure development at the World islands.

“We sold it as it is and we are encouraging customers to start development,” he said.

The state firm aims to shift away from residential developments to more lucrative malls and hotel projects.

It has projects totalling Dhs4.7 billion lined up for this year in retail, hospitality and leasing, Lootah said.

“We will have four new hotels to be announced this year. This is part of a strategy to build more cash-generating assets.

“There are no plans to divest any assets as was initially planned in the restructuring,” he said.

“We will try to capitalise on existing infrastructure for future projects. We have to move cautiously.”


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