Friday, December 4, 2009

Real Estate Stocks on High despite Dubai Fiasco





Domestic realty stocks that bore the brunt of heavy
 selling last week following the Dubai debt crisis have,
 in fact, outperformed the broader market in the past 
one week. The BSE realty index has give a return 9.57% 
during the period compared to the BSE Sensex gain of 
just 1.96%. Even on a monthly basis, realty stocks have
 generated a higher return of 15.30% to Sensex gain of 11.56%.


Experts feel that the sentiment towards real estate sector
 has improved after lenders slashed their housing loan 
rates that are very positive for the industry. Further last four 
months of robust IIP numbers, along with better-than-expected
 GDP growth for the second quarter ending September 30,
 signifies the underlying strength in the domestic economy 
that augur well for the Indian real estate sector.


Shailesh Kanani, real estate analyst, Angel Stock Broking, 
said the main reason for realty stocks to go up is that the
 overall markets have gone up. “Moreover, bankers have
 reduced housing loan rates. HDFC has reduced housing loan 
rates to 8.5%, in line with SBI at 8.5%. This increases affordability
 and EMI goes down.” The DLF stock surged 8.37% or Rs 29.65 
in the past week, while the stock of Unitech gained 16.43% during the same period.
“Currently, the stock market is exuberant and the residential real 
estate sector has started to look up as customers have come back
 to the market. Realty stocks grow and dip in line with the growth
 and dip in economy,” said Ambar Maheshwari, head, investment 
advisory, DTZ International Property Advisers


He said, “We are projecting the GDP to grow over 7%, which 
comes at a time when there is lot of disposable income in the market
 followed with lot of investments. As a result, people are buying more
 houses and corporates too are doing well. Real estate is a horizontal 
sector and almost all other sectors are vertical sectors. Realty stocks 
grow on the back of all the other sectors.”


Anand Narayanan, residential director, Knight Frank India Private Ltd, 
said, “The growth story in real estate is that Indian housing sector is 
broadly 10% of the Indian population, which has access to grade 
A office space. Since listed real estate companies have taken equity
 to clean up their books, their stocks look positive. Real estate stocks
 are seen moving in tandem with what was observed during the 2007-08 fiscal.


 In terms of sales, both residential and commercial sales can be better in line with 2007-08.”
The domestic equity market ended the day on a flat note following profit 
booking in key index heavyweights. The Sensex ended the day at 17,185.68 points,
 up 15.77 points or 0.09%, while the Nifty ended the day at 5,131.70 points, 
up 0.16% or 8.45 points


Source: Indian Realty News

Godrej Properties to Raise as Much as $108 Million From IPO

By Sumit Sharma

Dec. 4  -- Godrej Properties Ltd., controlled by
Indian billionaire Adi Godrej, aims to raise as much as 4.99 billion
rupees ($108 million) in an initial share offer.

The Mumbai-based developer plans to offer 9.43 million shares
for 490 rupees to 530 rupees apiece, parent company Godrej
Industries Ltd. said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange
today.

The shares will be offered from Dec. 9 to Dec. 11, the
company has said.

Godrej Properties leads Indian property companies including Lodha
 Developers Ltd. and Sahara Prime City Ltd. in seeking to sell 
shares for the first time to raise about 142 billion rupees. 

The developers aim to pay down debt and build new projects
in a nation with an estimated shortage of 24.7 million homes.

ICICI Securities Ltd., Kotak Mahindra Capital Co., IDFC- SSKI Ltd. 
and Nomura Financial Advisory & Securities (India) Pvt. 
are managing the share sale for Godrej.

The developer plans to use the fund to build new projects and repay loans, it said.

Source:Bloomberg

Morgan Stanley Looks to Restructure CMBS


A real-estate fund managed by Morgan Stanley is trying to restructure a $1 billion securitized mortgage on five resorts it bought in 2007 in the latest example of a bad commercial-property bet made by the firm.
Morgan Stanley's $1.75 billion MSREF V U.S. fund bought eight resorts at the top of the market from CNL Hotels & Resorts Inc. It put $1.52 billion of debt on five of the properties, including a $1 billion first mortgage and a $525 million mezzanine loan. The first mortgage was carved up and sold to investors as commercial mortgage-backed securities, a popular form of financing during the boom.
Hilton Worldwide
The 780-room Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa in Maui accounts for 40% of the $1 billion securitized mortgage that a Morgan Stanley fund is trying to get renegotiated.
But the five resorts have been hammered along with the rest of the luxury-hotel market by the economic downturn, making it difficult for them to pay debt service and possibly even operating costs. The resorts' combined cash flow declined to $84 million in this year's first half from $150 million during the last six months of 2007, according to debt-rating company Realpoint LLC. Their average occupancy fell to 62.5% from 72% in that same span.
Morgan Stanley was among the most aggressive buyers of real estate during the boom of earlier this decade. Its real-estate investing group bought at least $53 billion of property and sold only $14 billion between 2005 and 2007, according to Real Capital Analytics. Now, those deals made at the top of the market are dogging Morgan Stanley as property values plummet, rents decline and refinancing options remain scant. Most of that real estate was purchased by its Morgan Stanley Real Estate Funds unit, known in the industry as MSREF.
The MSREF V U.S. fund, which owns the resorts, has suffered a sharp decline in value. It also held the 310-room former Maui Prince Hotel in Hawaii, which the fund and a partner lost to foreclosure earlier this year. The California State Teachers' Retirement System last summer disclosed that its $137 million investment in MSREF V was worth just $300,000 by last March.
The five resorts inlcude the 780-room Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa in Maui; the 796-room La Quinta Resort & Club and PGA West in La Quinta, Calif.; the 739-room Arizona Biltmore Resort & Spa in Phoenix; the 693-room Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Miami; and the 279-room Claremont Resort & Spa in Berkeley, Calif.
The servicer overseeing the mortgage last month transferred it to its special servicing team tasked with handling complex negotiations with borrowers, according to Realpoint. A recent monthly report issued by the servicer, PNC Financial Services Group Inc's Midland Loan Services, noted that the loan was transferred "due to servicer determination of imminent default." The report also said the borrower was "requesting extension options."
The mortgage comes due in February 2011. Meanwhile, rating firm Fitch Inc. said Midland told its analysts that the resorts' cash flow no longer covers the cost of their operations. Representatives of Midland and Morgan Stanley declined to comment.
Potential outcomes of the Morgan Stanley fund's bid to restructure the mortgage are many. The fund hopes to get revised terms on the mortgage so it can retain the resorts, according to a person familiar with the talks. If the fund defaults on the mortgage, the special servicer may try to foreclose.


Dubai: A High Rise, Then a Steep Fall


DUBAI -- As financial crisis roiled much of the world in October 2008, the head of Dubai's biggest state-owned developer unveiled his latest megaproject: a $38 billion development that would include a tower nearly two-thirds of a mile tall.
"I'm sure most of you are asking why we're launching this, and you'd be mad not to question it," said the executive, Chris O'Donnell, at a news conference. Though there would be economic ups and downs in the years needed to build the tower, he told listeners, demand would continue to outstrip supply.
"The fundamentals in the market are too strong," he said. "There won't be a crash."
Since then, residential real-estate prices in Dubai have slumped by almost 50%. Developers have slashed jobs and scrapped projects. Groundbreaking on the tower was long ago put on hold. The yearlong retrenchment culminated in last week's surprise announcement that Dubai would seek to restructure $26 billion of debts owed by Dubai World, the holding company for many of the government's port, infrastructure and real-estate businesses.
Getty Images
A woman and child ride past the Burj Dubai skyscraper.
Behind this jolt was one of the world's most concentrated property bubbles. Some $430 billion worth of construction projects have been scrapped across the United Arab Emirates, a desert country with a population of just 4.5 million and an area smaller than South Carolina. The majority were slated for the emirate of Dubai, according to estimates by the Middle East Economic Digest, a regional projects tracker.
The boom was fueled by easy credit, a poorly regulated market overrun by speculators, and cheerleading from Dubai officials -- including the hereditary ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
His vision for the city -- a tolerant, modern metropolis open to the world, its many faiths and some of its excesses -- has long rankled conservative Arab neighbors, including some officials in Abu Dhabi, the buttoned-down capital of the U.A.E. But for others, Dubai became a symbol of what a modern Arab state might achieve if it embraced the West and its financial system. President Barack Obama, in a June speech to the Muslim world in Cairo, singled out Dubai as a place where economic development worked.
Dubai's soaring skyline is a symbol of pride here. At a National Day parade this week, men dressed in traditional Arab garb pushed floats consisting of scale models of the city's iconic buildings. There were models of the Burj Dubai -- the world's tallest skyscraper, due to open next month -- as well as the sail-shaped Burj Al Arab hotel and the Mall of the Emirates, which houses an indoor ski slope.
"Our leaders have been able to achieve all of this," said Ahmed Al Hammadi, watching the parade. As for the current debt crisis, "we will come out of it stronger," he said.
Officials and developers justified the breakneck pace at which these were built by touting Dubai's proximity to both Asia and Europe, its tax-free and tolerant way of life and its position as the region's business hub. Foreign executives, architects and real-estate brokers flocked here for the seemingly limitless scope to pursue big projects. International debt and property investors bought into the dream, too, until global financial markets seized up and much of the world plunged into recession. Then, buyers began to bail out, employers shed staff and companies put expansion on hold.
The result is a jaw-dropping real-estate overhang. "To Let" signboards adorn the facades of dozens of recently finished buildings along Sheikh Zayed Road, the superhighway that cuts through the city's canyon of skyscrapers. Office vacancies in new buildings run at 41%, according to international property agency Colliers International.
After taking markets by surprise last week with a request to delay debt payments at Dubai World by six months or more, the government here said early Tuesday it would begin a multiphase restructuring effort aimed at the company's debt, including $6 billion related to lending by the state-owned property developer, Nakheel. It said the restructuring would include the assessment of "deleveraging options," including asset sales. Dubai World said it had started discussions with its banks and these were proceeding on a "constructive basis."
International securities markets recovered their poise after a scare, but the effects aren't just financial. The debt announcement appeared to open a fresh rift between Dubai and U.A.E. capital Abu Dhabi. Federal officials there were livid at being left in the dark by Dubai's decision to seek a debt standstill, say people familiar with the situation. The rift has the potential to unsettle an important U.S. ally in the Persian Gulf, because Dubai, as a re-export hub and offshore financial center for Iranian businesses, is seen as key to U.S. efforts to isolate Iran.
Dubai and Abu Dhabi officials have underscored unity in recent days. But while the U.A.E. federal government orchestrated a $10 billion bailout earlier this year for Dubai companies, it hasn't stepped in to offer assistance to Dubai World.
Dubai's growth began in the early 1980s when Sheik Mohammed and his father pushed to diversify the economy in the face of dwindling oil. Dubai built luxury beachside hotels to lure wealthy visitors from India, Asia and the Middle East, plus package tours from Europe and Russia. In 2002, Sheik Mohammed opened the door to foreign ownership of property in certain developments. With little more than a brochure and a floor plan, buyers began to slap down deposits on townhouses, apartments and villas that wouldn't be ready for years.
Aarti Chana was living in the U.K. in 2004 when Nakheel pitched a project called Palm Jebel Ali to prospective buyers. As the second piece of a spectacular development jutting out in the sea in the shape of a palm tree, Palm Jebel Ali would include homes built on stilts, forming a 7.5-mile chain spelling out an Arabic poem written by Sheik Mohammed. "It takes a man of great vision to write on water," the poem reads in part.
Many units would be ready for occupancy by December 2009, Nakheel said. Ms. Chana, now 38 years old, put 10% down on a $780,000 five-bedroom beachfront villa and, making plans to settle here, sold her house near London. "I believed in the Dubai story," she says.
In 2006, Sheik Mohammed consolidated a handful of government businesses into the Dubai World holding company, with Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem as its leader. To head Nakheel, Mr. Sulayem, in turn, plucked Mr. O'Donnell from Australia, where he headed a fast-growing property fund.
Messrs. Sulayem and O'Donnell declined to comment for this article. A spokesman for Nakheel didn't respond to emailed questions, nor did a spokesman for Dubai's ruler.
Nakheel was on a roll, preparing to open the first of the palm developments, Palm Jumeirah, and planning the next two. In September 2006, at a separate, 914-acre residential community called Jumeirah Park, villas starting at $654,000 sold out in a day. International banks and local lenders offered loans for up to 97% of the purchase price.
To help finance all this construction, Mr. O'Donnell turned to the bond markets. An investor presentation in November 2006 called Dubai a "vantage access point" that would draw in businessmen from a wide swath of the greater Middle East, from India to Egypt. It projected that Dubai's population, then just under 1.2 million, would grow by two million in 14 years.
Investors rushed to buy a piece of Nakheel's Islamic bond, known as a sukuk. Swamped by demand, the borrower increased the issue's size to $3.5 billion.
That year, Dubai's real-estate sector raised $4.9 billion through bonds and syndicated loans, according to data provided by Thomson Reuters. Real-estate borrowing soared in 2008 to $30.4 billion.
In 2007, a Dubai World affiliate bought the Queen Elizabeth 2, unveiling plans to moor the ocean liner at the Palm Jumeirah and turn it into a luxury hotel.
By then, cracks in the real-estate market were forming. Officials had put few regulations on development that might limit the speculation. Now, concerned that the market had grown overheated, they did so. And in early 2008, authorities embarked on a series of high-profile corruption investigations at some big real-estate and finance firms.
But police, courts and the companies themselves disclosed little about the probes. As a result of the lack of transparency, the crackdown on corruption, instead of comforting investors, spooked them.
"There is a complete distrust by investors in the system," said Michael Diaz, a Miami-based attorney with offices in Dubai. Dubai and U.A.E. officials say they have made efforts to improve the legal system.
In April 2008, police detained the Lebanese-American chief executive of one of Dubai's top developers. The company didn't disclose the arrest until after it was reported in the press. He denied wrongdoing
A string of other detentions followed at some of Dubai's biggest companies, including Nakheel. A Nakheel spokesman didn't answer emailed questions about the probe.
Typical was the case of British developer Arthur Fitzwilliam, an affable 58-year-old polo fan from London. He had lived in Dubai for two decades, dabbling in real estate and other ventures. In 2004, he inked a deal to develop a 14.5 million-square-foot plot of desert acquired from a government-controlled company.
The Plantation Equestrian and Polo Club would have air-conditioned stables for 800 horses, four polo fields, facilities to host horse shows and a five-star hotel. Mr. Fitzwilliam sought partners to help finance the project. A British banker agreed to provide financing, in exchange for a 30% stake, Mr. Fitzwilliam said in an interview.
But in June 2008, authorities detained Mr. Fitzwilliam, the banker and one other. Then in September, Dubai Islamic Bank, or DIB, foreclosed on the land for the project. It also seized more than 100 polo ponies, Mr. Fitzwilliam said. For almost a year, he sat in jail before charges were filed. In March 2009, authorities charged seven men with scheming to defraud DIB, according to a bill of indictment filed by Dubai's public prosecutors. Mr. Fitzwilliam was accused of aiding the scheme.
Last month, he was transferred to a Dubai hospital to undergo tests for cancer. Four Dubai police officers stood guard outside his room.
Mr. Fitzwilliam denied any wrongdoing, as did the British banker he was working with. "I want a fair trial, and I'm prepared to go with the system," he says, shackled to his hospital bed. "Anyone who knows the case knows I'm not guilty."
A spokesman for the Dubai prosecutor's office didn't respond to requests for comment.
Amid the uncertainty surrounding the arrests, the crisis roiling the rest of the world was catching up with Dubai. When global credit markets froze up in late 2008, international investors stopped buying Dubai property. Some who had already bought stopped making installment payments. Nakheel and others shed staff and scrapped or delayed dozens of projects.
Last February, the troubles touched Ms. Chana's plan for a new home in Dubai. Nakheel halted work on the Palm Jebel Ali. Though dredging had been done, little construction had.
Ms. Chana says she has sunk about $550,000 into her still-unfinished home. Earlier this year, she flew to Dubai to try to salvage the investment. She is living in a hotel-apartment with her daughter, helping to organize other investors and petition Nakheel for rebates. "I just won't let this drop," she says. "It's become my obsession."
In October, Nakheel proposed that Jebel Ali investors transfer their contracts to property elsewhere that is already finished or close to it.
Simon Murphy bought a $240,000 ground-floor apartment in the Palm Jumeirah in 2002 and moved in five years later. He is now a "resident representative" to Nakheel, like being part of a homeowners board. He says that in recent weeks, Nakheel has cut back on maintenance, including tree trimming.
Since Dubai's debt-standstill announcement, Mr. Murphy says, many apartment residents have stopped paying management fees, typically around $700 a month. Nakheel declined to comment. "Most people fear that their money will go into the bottomless pit of Nakheel debt," Mr. Murphy says.
—Andrew Harrison and Maria Abi Habib contributed to this article.
Source:WSJ

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

IT DEPT TO RECOVER 1000 CRFROM INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT COMPANIES



NOV 27, 2009



The Income-Tax (I-T) department will recover close 
to Rs 1,000 crore from infrastructure development 
companies after a recent tax tribunal order clarified
 that the exemption available for infrastructure
development cannot be extended to contractors or
sub-contractors.

 The order puts an end to the practice of 
contractors and sub-contractors claiming benefits under
 section 80 I A of Income-tax Act, which was incorporated
to encourage investment in infrastructure projects.

While deciding an appeal by Belgaum-based BT Patil & Sons
 Construction, the three-member bench of the Income-Appellate
Tribunal (ITAT), Mumbai, held that the provision in the
 Income-tax Act is only for enterprises engaged in
infrastructure projects, and therefore cannot be extended
to work contracts and sub-contracts.

With this order, issued in October-end, contractors
 and sub-contractors who moved I T A T and Commissioner
 (Appeals) against tax demand on them would now have
to pay tax. In certain cases, the I-T department is
planning to reopen assessments.

Significantly, the ITAT order also underscores
retrospective aspect of the provision.

 The provision was given retrospective 
effect from 2000 by an amendment made in 2007.
The ITAT held that “the explanation, as inserted by Finance
Act 2007 with retrospective effect from 1/4/2000, made it clear
that the benefit of section 80 IA shall not apply to a person
who executes a works contract entered into with
 the eligible enterprise”.

The ITAT Bench, comprising GC Gupta, 
Pramod Kumar and RS Syal, observed that
the language of the provision clearly explained
 the intention of the legislature so much so that
 even if a work contract is undertaken by a sate
or central government, it cannot avail the benefit
 under section 80 IA of the I-T Act.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

UAE banks risk credibility loss on Dubai exposures

 29th Nov 2009

DUBAI: The credibility of the United Arab Emirates finance sector will suffer unless the authorities and lenders move quickly to assuage fears
Dubai

| Burj Dubai: The tallest tower | Dubai's metro
| Dubai's mega projects

that Dubai's debt trouble are spiraling out of control, analysts and bankers say.

Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, said on Wednesday it planned to restructure one of its holding companies, a shock announcement that triggered global concerns about the emirate's ability to meet its debt obligations.

International banks' exposure related to Dubai World amounts to $12 billion in syndicated and bilateral loans, banking sources said.

"I would say it is a huge shock for the UAE banking sector, and until we have some clarity the current situation will continue to cause damage," said Raj Madha, banking analyst at EFG Hermes.

Regional banks such as Emirates NBD and Mashreq Bank, which play a pivotal role in funding the UAE economy, have not made public statements yet on their exposure.
"Dubai World and its entities account for a very large chunk of the Dubai economy and its indebtedness and we expect Emirates NBD to have a full share of that," Madha said.

Officials at the Dubai-based bank could not be reached for comment.

UAE banks are exacerbating the situation by remaining silent on their exposures, said another banking analyst at a large international bank, who requested not be named.

"Unless there is clarity from banks, people will just make up numbers, which is worse," he said. "On the whole, the reputation has been damaged."
TRANSPARENCY

The region's financial services sector has already drawn criticism for its lack of disclosure and transparency but some analysts expect the Dubai debt crisis to spark a change.

"The way in which the UAE authorities handle the problem will clearly be important for investor confidence, as it will set a precedent for Dubai," Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note.

"Taking into view the huge reputational risks involved and also the amount of leverage that currently exists in the emirate we believe that the UAE authorities will be more likely to try and secure an orderly restructuring of outstanding liabilities of the two firms," the Goldman analysts said.

As a result of Dubai's debt struggle, banks will continue to face difficulties in the coming quarters.

"We expect asset quality to continue to deteriorate in the coming quarters and this trend could be exacerbated by the direct and indirect impact of a debt restructuring by Dubai World, which represents a major pillar of the Dubai economy," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Mohamed Damak.

The UAE banks, however, will continue to be supported by the authorities, analysts said.

"I very much doubt that banks will be expected to bear the full burden of their exposure. I think at some level the assets would be or should be bought out by the federal government," EFG's Madha said.

Ratings agency Moody's also said it had no reason to believe that the federal government would abstain from supporting banks in Dubai or in other emirates.
Source: REUTERS

Dubai World mulls 4 options for repaying $59 bn debt

29 Nov 2009, 

DUBAI: Debt-ridden Dubai World is mulling over four options
to repay its $ 59 billion credit and liabilities, media here
reported.

One of the options being considered by advisers to the conglomerate,
 is the on-schedule (December 14) repayment of the $ 4 billion
payment of a sukuk (Islamic bonds) from Nakheel(real estate arm),
 the National said.

Dubai World seeking an extension to repay its multi-billion debt
till May 2010 has sent world stocks on a tailspin and has raised
alarms in the financial world.


"If Dubai World pays back the sukuk (the islamic bonds), it would
solve a problem for the company and its bondholders, and leave open
the option of rescheduling bank debt and other liabilities, including
bills owed to international contractors," the daily said.

The other options
being considered include a scheme to offer bond
holders 80 per cent redemption of the value of their holdings,
with
 similar offer being made to bankers.


Alternatively, Dubai World may move forward with the plan to seek a
 general "debt holiday" under the terms of last week's standstill proposal,
 by which payments would be frozen until May 30 next year with
 a view to negotiating a rescheduling of all its debts.


Lastly, Dubai World might embark on a general liquidation
of assets in response to legal action by creditors. "But this
is thought to be a remote possibility, as it is likely to impair
 the value of Dubai World assets, leaving everyone worse off," the report said.

Source:PTI

People disinvesting Dubai, UK better for real estate investment: Knight Frank

27 Nov 2009,


Pranay Vakil, Chariman, Knight Frank gives his take on the
Dubai financial crisis and what it means for property prices and
investment.

How are you reading the situation? Are you firstly surprised
or you pretty much expected this coming by because we had heard
of some problems brewing in Dubai time and again, sporadically
there was some news that kept coming out?


Well, that is true because most of the demand that exist in Dubai
 is what I would like to call the imported demand, which comes
 from outside of Dubai. There is very little real demand coming
from within, so if the west was affected by the recession,
the demand in Dubai went down drastically. To give you an example,
 if a villa on Palm was available for say 12 million Dirhams just
about 18 months back or may be two years back, it is now available
for just 4 million Dirhams, and you can see the drop from 12 to
just 4. Now that has happened mainly because the demand has
completely evaporated and the supply has overtaken the shrunken demand.

Sure, so how do you see this situation now playing out because we
are talking about a couple of the US banks having exposure and
perhaps having worked on the syndicated loan that Dubai world
has on its books right now, so in wake of those defaults that
may come by in the future. They have just pointed out that right
now, they cannot make their payments. It could have like a ripple
 effect on the provisioning and the accounting of couple of the US
banks who are in transaction with Dubai world?


Well, that is true but that is not going to improve the demand situation.
I mean see after all the property market works on demand and supply like
any other market and if the demand is not going to pick up in the near
term, what we are doing is just a first-aid to the banks just to kind of
 complete some obligations for having created the supply. I think only the
 time seems to be the remedy where over the next three to five years,
demand and supply should equate.

What kind of a hit could certain Indian real estate company stake on their
 exposure in the Dubai real estate market listed or otherwise?


Well as you know there are couple of firms from the Middle East that are
 involved into real estate in India, I mean, Emaar being one of them. Now
 see basically they had come here with the money bags to kind of invest
into the real estate in India but I think those money bags are no longer
available from the Middle East. I mean what they are trying to do now is
to create the resources from within India itself and invest it into the
 projects with they have ongoing. But, of course having said that the India
 real estate is far stronger at this point in time compared to the
Middle Eastern real estate.

Sure but what about Indian companies which are of course within
 Indian jurisdiction who have exposure to the Dubai real estate
 market and there are handful of those, could these get significantly
impacted I mean you would have assess the realty situation in Dubai as
you rightly pointed out as well, could that have a significant impact of
 some of the balance sheets of Indian real estate firms as well?


I think there are some very well known companies that have presence
 I mean one of them is the tallest residential tower as you know in Dubai
but the demand has slowed down for all of that even from India. On the
contrary there are a number of people wanting to disinvest in Dubai and
kind of pull their money out and put it into some of the market like may
be London or UK which today is a very good market to invest.

What would this do to the liquidity situation for real estate firms
in India, one could it have an impact in terms of the fact that its
real estate per se which will get impacted in Dubai and two in terms
of how would the funding situation change for some of the real estate
 companies. A significant amount of people from the Middle East
 buy apartments into India that is one and two the kind of
 funds that will coming via the Middle Eastern route,
do you think that will get impacted?


Well, as you know there are 16 IPOs waiting in the wings
and they will be hitting the market very soon. We are
expecting them to bop up about in excess of 10,000 crores.
I think all of that is going to have a huge impact mainly
in India but some overflow of that or a ripple effect like
you said also in the Middle East.

Source:ET Now

Celebrities set to lose millions -The Dubai Effect

Swati Sharma


Dubai's spiralling credit crisis
 will see Shah Rukh Khan and Abhi- Ash
( Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai)
sharing some anxious moments with the likes
 of David Beckham and Brad Pitt. These celebrities
 will lose millions on their luxury pads
 in Palm Jumeirah in Dubai.

The Bollywood celebrities had seen the prices of
 their upcoming luxury homes plummeting last year
 because of the economic slowdown. But now, with
real estate developer Nakheel's acceptance that
the palm treeshaped development, which juts out
into the Persian Gulf, has run out of cash and may
 not be finished, the situation has gone from bad to worse.

Speculation is rife that the man- made development,
 which is the second after the Great Wall of China
 that can be seen from the moon, will end up looking
like an ugly, unfinished construction site.

SRK had received a villa at The Palms as a gift from
Dubai's ruler to promote a boulevard named after him.

 SRK's villa, within shouting distance of the sevenbedroom
house bought by David Beckham and his wife Victoria in 2002,
has a private beach that is guarded by a 24- hour patrol.

Abhi- Ash are also believed to own a villa in the prestigious
 Sanctuary Falls, a resort- style villa community within Jumeirah
 Golf Estates. The villa comes with Scavolini designer kitchens
and Bang & Olufsen home the-

atre systems. The couple had made quite a noise about how they
 would like to use the pad as a weekend destination for
the entire Bachchan family.

These Bollywood celebs are among the many who had queued
 up for the 2,000 luxury villas on The Palms that went up
for sale in 2002 and got sold out within a month. Other
celebrities who own patches of this bigdevelopment include
Donald Trump, Michael Owen, Michael Schumacher and Tiger Woods.

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie own an artificial island within '
 The World' in Dubai, which is a cluster of 300 man- made islands
 that collectively form a map of the world's continents and countries.
 Virgin's flamboyant boss, Richard Branson, and pop star Rod Stewart
have properties in the same development.

Among the sportsmen, former Formula 1 champion Michael Schumacher
owns a $ 7- million ( Rs 32.5 crore at present rates) slice of
' Antarctica' in The World.

Britain's star footballers Ashley Cole, Michael Owen and Gary Neville
also have villas. So does former English Test cricketer Andrew Flintoff.

Early this year, these villas, which were priced at $ 4.4 million
( Rs 20.5 crore) each, saw their prices going down
by half to $ 2.2 million ( about Rs 10.2 crore)

Source: India Today

Dubai: Waiting to return

Meenal Dubey
New Delhi, November 28, 2009


Till not too long ago, Kerala was rejoicing over
' beating' the economic meltdown.
But the Dubai
crisis has revived fears of mass reverse migration
 from the Gulf.

Alarm bells had started ringing over a year ago as
the slump had the world economy in a pincer grip and
there was panic in Kerala, the state from which the
maximum number of people go to the Gulf.

Doomsday prophets were proved wrong when the state
weathered the worst phase of Gulf recession.

Mass exodus from the Gulf also came to an end.

Now, however, the situation seems to be back to square one.

The ministry of overseas Indian affairs ( MOIA) is keeping
an eye on the situation
and has predicted the departure of
lakhs of Indian workers back to the nation.

"We want to wait and see how the situation develops before we
take any drastic action," a senior MOIA official said.

There is nothing we can do at the moment to address the
situation." India has over five million overseas workers,
sourced mainly from Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh,
Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan, Bihar and Punjab.

 About 2.5 lakh Indians head to Dubai each year for work.
At least eight lakh people head to the UAE each year,
making it the biggest recipient of Indian workers overseas.

"Many workers have returned from Dubai after their two- year
contract expired. They comprise about 30 per cent of the total
workers coming to India from Dubai,
" the official said. Besides,
hundreds of people have lost their jobs in the Gulf, especially Dubai.

But Gibbson, a Malayalee civil engineer who lost his job in a
Dubaibased MNC to recession earlier this year, is itching to
go back to the Gulf.

"Apart from Dubai, the situation is not bad elsewhere," he said.

Inputs from M. C. Rajan in Chennai 

source: India Today

Small Dubai exposure may save Indian real estate arena

The demand- based Indian real estate industry having
a very little exposure in the overseas markets will sustain
the Dubai shock waves, according to experts.

The government- city owned conglomerate, Dubai- World, 
has interests in real estate, ports, transportation, logistics,
natural resources and the leisure industry.

The firm carries around $ 60 billion in liabilities.

Anuj Puri, chairman and country head, corporate default situation.
However, the sovereign has not defaulted, so the condition is
presently restricted only to real estate. This would not have
a major direct impact on India's real estate market, which is
largely locally driven. Nevertheless, it is conceivable that the
RBI may take a cautious approach in terms of liquidity in the
real estate sector, which would not be good news in light of the
fact that FDI norms for Indian real estate are on the verge of being 
relaxed." 

Almost all major real estate players, including Unitech Ltd,
DLF, India Bulls Ltd and HDIL have confirmed having no
who had plans for the Dubai market are now getting cautious.

For instance, Delhi- based Omaxe is likely to exit its
two real estate projects in Dubai.

Rohtas Goel, CMD, Omaxe Ltd, said, " We will soon
decide on exiting the Dubai realty projects. We had
planned Rs 2,850- crore investment in Dubai. We have
already paid Rs 40 crore to Nakheel as first installment last
year for buying land for both the projects. The possession
of land was to be handed over as per the set timelines.

However, Omaxe has still not gained any rights from master
developer He added, " With global downturn, there has been
a slowdown in Dubai real estate market too. Current developments
may not have large impact on us as we have other exit options
open for us." Nagarjuna Construction is another company that
has a venture in Dubai - a 440- apartment project.
The company is now going slow on it.

Also, Emaar MGF, a joint venture between Dubai- based
Emaar Properties and India's MGF, said its operations are
only in India and the developments in Dubai would have no impact.
" Our business and funding plans are on track," a company statement said.  

Source:India Today

Dubai crash rattles India

Ranjana Kaushal
New Delhi, November 28, 2009


Global financial markets went into a terrified tailspin
 when news broke of Dubai's $80- billion debt crisis.

Stocks crashed worldwide and commodity prices plunged
the most since July as Dubai's attempt to delay debt
repayments - a technical default for most investors -
spooked markets.

The Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index or Sensex
fell 1.32 per cent on Friday or 222.92 points to close at 16,632.01.

Fears that the tiny emirate - the financial hub of the
oil- rich Persian Gulf region - could default, led to
 massive sell- offs. The Sensex plunged sharply at start
of trade, falling more than 550 points in early trade,
 before the market rallied on news that the impact may
not be as severe on India as anticipated.

While the US market was shut for the Thanksgiving weekend,
stock futures fell sharply on both the NYSE and Nasdaq,
 signalling future shock.

Britain's top share index was down 2.9 per cent in afternoon
trade on Thursday, while Tokyo lost 2 per cent, as traders
 worldwide sought to cut exposure to risky assets.

Others may not be so lucky.

When Shah Rukh Khan bought a luxury mansion in Dubai's premium
 Palm Island less than a year ago, he could have hardly anticipated
 that his much- hyped property was being built by builders who
were knee deep in debt.


Khan isn't the only Bollywood star vying for a luxury house
in Dubai. The Bachchans - Abhishek and Aishwarya, Sameera Reddy
 - and several well- known fashion designers have invested in
properties upwards of $ 2 million.

For most of these high networth individuals, the delivery of
their dream homes will be delayed and a resale of the property
at anything like the purchase price seems a dim prospect for some time to come.

The debt tornado in Dubai has engulfed almost all sectors in
 the country. With Indians forming more than 42 per cent of
the population of the desert kingdom, and with many businesses
 having exposure to Dubai, the shockwaves will be felt in India as well.

The crisis began on Wednesday when Dubai, part of the United Arab
Emirates, asked to delay payment on billions of dollars of debt
issued by Dubai World and its main property subsidiary Nakheel,
developer of three palm shaped islands that once lured celebrities
and the super- rich.


Dubai, which has an accumulated debt of $ 80 billion, mainly to
fund grandiose mega projects like the creation of artificial
islands and the world's tallest structure, the Burj Dubai,
has been mauled by the worldwide recession. Home prices
fell 50 per cent from their 2008 peak, according to Deutsche
Bank AG. That meant disaster for Dubai World, the real estate
conglomerate owned by the ruling family.

Around $59 billion of the nation's total debt is in the name
of Dubai World arm Nakheel. This has been underwritten by the government.

In India, the government moved swiftly to do damage control,
with finance secretary Ashok Chawla saying the impact on the
economy would be minimal and that remittances from Indians in
Dubai are unlikely to be hit.

That, however, remains to be seen. Dubai has already seen one
round of blood- letting during the global economic meltdown.
Tens of thousands of Indians have already returned home, with
little or nothing to show for their labour.

Kerala, the state with the maximum dependence on remittances,
actually asked the Centre for special funds to settle returnees.

Businesses too, will be hit. Jewellery exporter Rajesh Exports
Ltd says the Dubai crisis hits it directly as 40 per cent of
its revenues are from the emirate.

Indian banks Bank of Baroda, ICICI Bank and State Bank of India
( SBI) claim their exposure to real estate firms is either zero
or insignificant.


M. D. Mallya, chairman and managing director, Bank of Baroda, said,
 " We have only 7- 8 per cent of our total loan- book in the entire
Gulf region. Dubai constitutes nearly half to the loan book which
comes to less than Rs 5,000 crore." The SBI said it had only minimal
lending exposure in the UAE - less than Rs 1,500 crore. ICICI said it
has no material, non- India linked exposure to Dubai firms.

Shyamala Gopinath, deputy governor, Reserve Bank of India, said:
" We will ask banks to furnish details regarding their exposure in
Dubai World." Dubai's growth is directly linked to the infrastructure sector.

So, the debt crisis is likely to impact companies and businesses with
interests in Dubai's realty market. Engineering major Larsen & Toubro's
exposure to Dubai is in the range of $ 20 million-$ 25 million and has
been one of the most aggressive companies in the region.

R. Shankar Raman, executive vice- president, finance, L& T, said
on Friday that the company's exposure was largely in the hydropower
segment. Its total exposure in West Asia over the last two years is around $ 200 million.

Nagarjuna Construction again has a significant exposure in Dubai.

Y. D. Murthy, executive vice- president, finance, Nagarjuna Construction,
 said, " The firm has only one venture in Dubai - a 440- apartment project,
 and is going slow on it. It is also doing a Rs 100- crore water pipeline
project at Dewa, Dubai. There is no default payment problem at the Dewa
 project
and the exposure to the Middle- East is mostly to government- owned
agencies." Emaar MGF, a joint venture between Dubai- based Emaar Properties and
India's MGF, said its operations are only in India and the developments in Dubai
would have no impact. " Our business and funding plans are on track," a company
statement said.

While the crisis has sent jitters globally, analysts say the Gulf city state can
count on Abu Dhabi, its deep- pocketed rich brother, to avoid default.


"Dubai is not on the verge of bankruptcy, thanks to Abu Dhabi's support," said Pascal Devaux,
Middle East risk assessment economist at BNP Paribas.


Source: India Toay

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