Dubai tycoon Hussain Sajwani resigns, makes $599m offer to take Damac private
Now Reading
Dubai tycoon Hussain Sajwani resigns, makes $599m offer to take Damac private

Dubai tycoon Hussain Sajwani resigns, makes $599m offer to take Damac private

Damac traded below the Dhs1.3 per share offer price on Wednesday

Avatar

Dubai-based billionaire Hussain Sajwani offered to take over the rest of Damac Properties at a discount of nearly 45 per cent to the developer’s local listing in 2015, the latest bid to buy out minority shareholders in the United Arab Emirates over the past year.

Maple Invest Co Limited, an investment vehicle owned by Sajwani, offered Dhs2.2bn ($599m), making what it called “a voluntary conditional offer for the issued share capital of Damac not already owned by Maple and its affiliates,” according to separate statements on Wednesday.

Sajwani, who owns a 72 per cent stake in the developer, resigned as Damac’s chairman to avoid conflict of interest.

Damac traded below the Dhs1.3 per share offer price on Wednesday. The stock dropped as much as 6.2 per cent before paring its drop to 1.5 per cent at the close, valuing the entire company at Dhs7.74bn.

Sluggish trading, a slump in prices and liquidity, and a desire to escape investor scrutiny have been driving efforts to take public companies private in Dubai. Emaar Properties said in March it will effectively delist one of its units for about two-thirds of its original public-offering price. Late last year, government-controlled Meraas Holding proposed taking DXB Entertainments private at a 33 per cent discount.

The proposed price is equal to the stock’s closing level of Tuesday. It’s 31 per cent lower than the average price for the shares over the past five years.

“The suggested premium appears very low given recent developments in the Dubai real estate market and the improved outlook for both demand and prices,” said Tarek Fadlallah, the Dubai-based chief executive officer of the Middle East unit of Nomura Asset Management.

Dubai’s property market has been improving and the pace of residential property price declines has been slowing this year. Dubai’s largest developer Emaar Properties said sales in the first five months of this year more than tripled from 2020 to Dhs10.5bn.

Damac listed in Dubai’s main bourse in 2015 in an exchange for shares that were traded in London since 2013. The company raised about $379m with its UK IPO.

Its stock is down about 1.5 per cent for the year, lagging a 14 per cent increase for the DFM General Index and a 13 per cent increase for a gauge tracking listed real estate companies.

Emaar Malls’s de-listing plans paved the way for Damac and the stock market will be left with less depth as a result, according to Mohammed Ali Yasin, chief strategy officer at Al Dhabi Capital Ltd.

The trend may have repercussions for a market that’s struggling to sustain interest and risks depriving investors of exposure to one of the emirate’s crucial sectors.

Damac has reported losses in 2020 and 2019 as the property market struggled with an oversupply that hammered prices for the past seven years. The construction industry will deliver an estimated 62,000 homes in Dubai this year and nearly 63,500 in 2022, which would be the most since 2009, according to consultancy firm Knight Frank LLP.

“The premium that used to be there for public companies in the real estate industry is no longer there,” he said. “Real estate firms are lagging and managements are under pressure at a time recovery has some time to go.”

You might also like


© 2021 MOTIVATE MEDIA GROUP. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Scroll To Top