OMG I nearly chocked on my coffee for trying not to laugh at this statement: "[the Dubai World debt restructuring] will have no significance [on the real estate sector] because restructuring is a normal word."
The statement comes from one Abdul Majeed Ismail Al Fahim, chairman of Dubai Pearl, speaking to Arabian Business.
He is right; restructuring is a normal word, and one which has been used so much in the last 12 - 18 months that it has almost become white noise in the global-economic newsroom. So, if this had simply been a case of Dubai World "restructuring" its debt then yes, the negative effect may well have been minimal.
That is: if it hadn't been made public that Dubai World had been forced to ask its creditors to postpone its debts, before there was any talk of the word "restructuring". But there was, and because there was we analysts have been able to fill in the blanks and have done so in national newspapers from Arabia to Zimbabwe (excuse the potential for a slight exaggeration there).
The real story goes: state-owned Dubai World is financially incapable of honouring its debts, and the real financial powerhouse of the Emirates (A.K.A Dubai’s rich uncle) refused to bail it out any longer, so it was forced into its current situation. Now the world looks on to see how much of a lesson the rich uncle wants to teach its easily led nephew.
Because of the way the story unfolded this is almost certain to have a negative impact on the property market. After shedding almost 50% in less than a year, Dubai property prices rose 7% in the 3rd quarter according to Colliers international. But one of the market’s biggest potential obstacles was always going to be residual negativity about the crash.
This had obviously began to fade as prices started to rise, but the Dubai World fiasco is bound to set back international sentiment by reminding us all just how much money fell into the Dubai pit never to be seen again.
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