Dubai World Repays $300m Early To Creditors - Sources
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Dubai World Repays $300m Early To Creditors – Sources

Dubai World Repays $300m Early To Creditors – Sources

The payment came from the proceeds of asset sales completed by the firm and follows an initial sum of $284.5 million returned in March to creditors.

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Dubai World, one of the emirate’s big state-owned conglomerates, has made a second early repayment worth around $300 million under its $25 billion debt restructuring plan, sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

The payment – made at the end of June – came from the proceeds of asset sales completed by the firm and follows an initial sum of $284.5 million returned in March to creditors, which include dozens of local and international lenders.

A spokesman for Dubai World declined to comment.

A top executive in the emirate, Mohammed al-Shaibani, told Reuters earlier this year that Dubai World planned to make further early debt repayments after the March payment, as well as meet the first scheduled repayment under the restructuring plan – $4.4 billion due in May 2015.

Dubai World ran into trouble during the emirate’s 2009 property market collapse, forcing it into one of the Middle East’s largest-ever debt restructurings.

Its fortunes have begun to rebound in line with the wider Dubai economy, which has seen key industries like tourism and logistics boom and real estate prices recover from their nadir.

Other Dubai state-linked entities have also announced positive debt news in recent days, with developer Nakheel saying it would pay all of its $1.5 billion outstanding debts under its restructuring plan by August, while real estate finance firm Amlak confirmed a new proposal had been put to creditors on $2.7 billion of debt.

“Dubai’s recovery from the excesses that led to the 2009 bust is well entrenched, broadening and gaining pace,” Jean-Michel Saliba, economist for the Middle East and North Africa at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, said in a July 3 note.

“There is steady, yet uneven, progress in Dubai government-related entities (GREs) deleveraging. The real estate recovery and improved banking sector liquidity have given breathing space to GREs,” he said, adding a mixture of internal cash generation, asset sales and refinancings would be among the factors to help Dubai meet its large overall debt pile.


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