Arabtec's Shaky Foundations Dent UAE's Credibility
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Arabtec’s Shaky Foundations Dent UAE’s Credibility

Arabtec’s Shaky Foundations Dent UAE’s Credibility

Dubai-based Arabtec has not provided any serious explanation for what is happening, says Reuters columnist Una Galani.

Gulf Business

The shaky foundations of the most prominent builder in the United Arab Emirates have dented the country’s credibility. Shares in Dubai-based Arabtec, which helped erect the world’s tallest tower in the emirate, have more than halved since May 15, wiping almost $4.9 billion off its market value. The debacle is a warning to investors attracted by the UAE’s new emerging market status.

Arabtec’s slide began last month amid rumours of a rift between its two largest shareholders. Chief executive Hasan Ismaik mysteriously trebled his stake in the contractor to 28.9 per cent this year before resigning as chief executive on June 18. Fears that he will sell out have left a massive overhang on the stock. The slide accelerated earlier this month when Aabar, an investment fund of the Abu Dhabi government, cut its stake from 21.6 per cent to 18.9 per cent.

Arabtec has not provided any serious explanation for what is happening. The company has said that it’s implementing a “limited restructuring” but it hasn’t quantified that in any way. A cadre of senior executives has also left the company raising questions marks over the expansionist strategy Arabtec has pursued in the past two years, taking it into new sectors such as heavy industry and oil and gas.

Aabar’s silence also raises questions about its commitment to the group. The fund’s minority shareholding leaves it unclear whether or not Arabtec is a sovereign entity with all the implicit financial guarantees that brings.

Aabar, which also owns stakes in commodity trader Glencore and Italian bank UniCredit, first disclosed a stake in Arabtec in 2012 and has since turned the builder into an economic policy tool. This helped the company secure a huge pipeline of projects – including a contract to construct the Abu Dhabi branch of the French Louvre museum and a $40 billion contract to build one million new homes in Egypt. It’s now unclear how many of those projects will go ahead.

The uncertainty surrounding one of the country’s most heavily-traded stocks comes less than one month after MSCI, which compiles widely-followed stock indices, formally promoted the UAE from frontier to emerging market status. It’s a timely reminder that, when it comes to good corporate governance, the Gulf is still a desert.


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