EFTA00742189.pdf
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From: Jeffrey Epstein cieevacation@gmail.com>
To: Sultan Bin Sulayem
Subject: Re:
Date: Thu, 19 Nov 2009 12:45:37 +0000
good first step
On Thu, Nov 19, 2009 at 7:19 AM, Sultan Bin Sulayem <
> wrote:
Road to Recovery, Part I
Posted By Scott Narlliiian on November 18, 2009 @ 3:42 pm In CateLatgrae91=1, @neelat MILQLt. £=B84mM I No Comments
Bad news is often stickler than good news. Regardless of whether It's true or not, it's something that certainly holds true for the economic
outlook of the Gulf. Dubai in particular has received a severe lashing from the international press since late 2008, with the UAE's largest
city painted not merely as a victim of the global economic malaise but as a symbol of hubristic overreach that received its deserved
comeuppance.
A growing number of economists say the pessimism has been overdone and that the picture for the Gulf is not nearly as dark as it seemed
Just a few months ago. Indeed, a consensus is building that not only is the region headed for robust recovery, but that the silver lining may
soon eclipse the cloud itself.
Some experts say the Dubai crash, along with the lessons likely to be learned from it, may have even been the best thing that could have
happened to the UAE and its neighbors, for if the 2002.2008 boom had continued, a number of much needed reforms might have been
delayed indefinitely, leading to more lasting damage further down the road.
To be sure, those interested in the bad news have no shortage of stories to choose from. There's the $10 billion fraud allegation leveled
against the head of Saudi conglomerate Saad Group, a scandal that suggests lending practices at Gulf banks have been less than stringent.
Or to take a more recent example, the "travel news" section of The TImesnewspaper recently reported - on tenuous grounds, citing a single
unnamed property agent as its source - that Nakheel's landmark island chain development The World had been "canceled," the quoted
source adding that the man-made archipelago "doesn't even look like the world" and that most of it resembles "a pile of muck." The suicide
of the buyer of Ireland was offered as further evidence of The World's apparent failure.
Never mind Nakheel's assurances, published in the Dubai daily the Khaleef Times, that it has already handed over 33 islands to buyers, or
the recent report MArabian Business that Safi Qurashi, the British property developer who bought the Great Britain island for $60 million in
May 2008 started building on it immediately alter Ramadan. The World, rightly or wrongly, has become yet another symbol of Dubai's folly.
The case of Nakheel is emblematic of the rush to judgment in a situation more nuanced than most boosters or detractors would have it.
Uke many Dubai developers, Nakheel is a troubled firm. Its bonds and sukuk (Islamic bond) certificates were trading at levels that
resembled Junk bonds earlier this year, with yields reaching as high as 85 percent at one point. Several developments have been
suspended before they even began, including another man-made island chain slated to surround The World called - what else? - The
Universe, announced at the boom's tall end in 2008.
Other projects have been subjected to little or no scrutiny. Take Dubai Promenade, for instance, a million-square-meter waterfront
development adjacent to Dubai Marina, notable for the building depicted on promotional drawings which resembled a donut standing on
end. It was dear to anyone who visited the construction site in the spring that work had come to a halt.
Not a crane, truck or bulldozer was to be found on the vast expanse of reclaimed land, and even the on-site offices had been cleared of
everything but the furniture. Dubai Promenade's Web site still promises "a sophisticated waterfront community" with "breathtaking vistas
from every direction" as though the Dubai property boom was still in full swing.
In previous years, words such as those lured lenders like flies to honey, but during the first half of 2009, holders of Nakheel sukuk
certificates began to get skittish about how the company would pay off its $3.52 billion in obligations due in December, sending the price
plummeting.
Sentiment began rebounding over the summer, with investors becoming more bullish on Nakheel, on Dubai as a whole, and on the Gulf in
general. By August, Nakheel's sukuk price had risen 46 percent from its February low of63.5 cents on the dollar, a movement Abu Dhabi
daily The National called "one of the dearest indications yet that Dubai is getting the upper hand on the financial crisis."
Markets had watched the issue as an indicator of how the Dubai government would handle the emirate's $80 billion-plus debt load, and it
was gradually becoming clear that the government would not allow Nakheel to default, aided as it was by the UAE central bank, which
came to the rescue earlier this year by buying at least $10 billion of Dubai's $20 billion bond issue.
Whatever Nakheel's woes, there's still plenty of money to go around.
In August, Bank of America Merrill Lynch raised its 2010 growth forecast for the GCC from 3.2 percent to 3.7 percent, reflecting growing
confidence that the region would emerge from the economic downturn faster and stronger than it had previously expected. Although the
bank's forecast for 2009 growth remained below market consensus at -1 percent, it laid out a case for renewed bullishness next year.
For one thing, oil prices are likely to remain high, leading to sustained budget surpluses. Even at the worst of times around the New Year,
oil only dipped to $35 a barrel, relatively high compared to prior downturns, and going into the fourth quarter of 2009 it was trading at
roughly double that, dose to the $75 per barrel deemed a "fair price" by the leaders of the region's biggest producer, Saudi Arabia.
EFTA00742189
"There is a kind of consensus - we're not there yet, but we will be in a few months time - that oil prices are going to be much higher than
in any previous recession," says Tucker Hamzaoglu, an analyst for Bank of America Merrill Lynch in London. "When oil exceeds $65 per
barrel, which is our average budget breakeven forecast for the GCC, these countries start saving.
Since we see oil prices at $64 at the end of this year and $82 the next, this is definitely going to be supportive of fiscal balances."
Trends magazine
Article printed from Dubai Business I Kippreport: http://www.kip_pi tport.com
URL to artide: http://www.kipeport.com/2009/11/road-to-recovery-part-i/
Click here to print.
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EFTA00742190
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| Filename | EFTA00742189.pdf |
| File Size | 154.9 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 8,036 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-12T13:56:09.867731 |