Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Take the 'bling' out of Dubai


So you're not planning to spend $75,000 for two nights at the Burj Al Arab? Well, you're not alone. As the ‘bling’ season gets into full swing, as proved by last week’s lavish offer from Royal Jet, it’s worth sparing a moment to read the latest report from the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the Arab League into the precarious situation in the wider region.

The statement, which was released at the end of last year, highlighted that the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) needs to find 51 million new jobs by 2020 – just for the current regional unemployment rate to remain at a standstill.While unemployment is also a growing concern in the rest of the world – 10.4 percent in the US and 19.4 percent in Spain – the Arab League report states that the proportion of young people that are out of work as a percentage of total unemployment in most Arab countries stands at more than half.

A closer look at the Arab Labour Organisation’s figures shows that Algeria is the most-affected country, with that same figure for the country’s younger generation standing at around 70 percent. Try marketing the ultimate two-day break to them.


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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Work abroad while young and single


DO CONSIDER working abroad when you are young and single.

Having such work experience will help your career, especially with multinational corporations, and you have less to lose if you do not have a family of your own. Working overseas when you are much older may mean sacrificing time with your loved ones.

This was the advice given by Singaporeans working in the Middle East.

As part of a class of 41 undergraduates from the Singapore Management University's Business Study Mission Middle East programme, we visited over 20 companies in Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates from Dec 6 to 16 last year, meeting business representatives, policymakers and diplomats.

We also met overseas Singaporeans in Bahrain, Qatar and Dubai. Most were in their 30s, and they would stay for two to four years, working in professions such as retail, legal services and banking.

Among the perks of working in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region is the high pay. According to a business development manager in Qatar, two years of working in the Gulf region pays the equivalent of 10 years' work in Singapore.

There is also the adventure of working in the exotic and rapidly developing GCC markets. The working environment is also less stressful; your day starts typically at 10am and you knock off by 4pm.

The downside: the lack of entertainment options in many places and having to adapt to a foreign culture. Even in cosmopolitan cities like Abu Dhabi or Dubai, it is difficult to integrate with the local Arabs, let alone in more conservative societies like Saudi Arabia.

But working overseas allows young Singaporeans to see the world before they take up 'headquarters' jobs in Singapore or get married.

As graduation looms, I have decided to satisfy the travel bug while still young and single, starting perhaps with a short stint in the GCC region. I can then refine my goals in life and discover my threshold level of comfort and familiarity.


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Saturday, January 23, 2010

Dubai’s First Foreclosure May Open Floodgates in Worst Market


Jan. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Dubai’s housing rout sent prices down 52 percent in the past year, prompting some homeowners to abandon their cars and mortgage payments and flee the country. Not one received a foreclosure notice.

Until now.

Barclays Plc. won the sheikdom’s first foreclosure cases in court, clearing the way for lenders holding about $16 billion of Dubai home loans to take action when borrowers don’t pay. Islamic lender Tamweel PJSC, the emirate’s biggest mortgage bank, has several of its own foreclosure claims pending and estimates about 3 percent of its mortgages are in default.

“Banks will be more aggressive in pursuing legal action if they see the process is efficient,” said Antoine Yacoub, a banking analyst at Moody’s Investors Service Inc. “They were trying to avoid the courts and restructure most of their loans, but once they see a precedent has been set, they will be encouraged to push more cases through.”

The successful foreclosures by Barclays may open the floodgates in Dubai’s property market, which went from the world’s best in 2008 to the worst after credit dried up and speculators who had fueled price increases left the market, according to Deutsche Bank AG. Moody’s estimated in September that 12 percent of the 27,000 residential mortgages in the sheikdom would default within 12 to 18 months.

Banks and developers until now have avoided the process of reclaiming homes through the courts, barred by tradition and an arcane legal process that few understood. The Barclays and Tamweel cases may change that, because they show that a 2008 mortgage law -- setting out rules for default, foreclosure and repossession -- is working.

Mortgage Law

The law requires lenders to give homeowners 30-day notice of their intent to pursue a foreclosure, said Jody Waugh, a partner at law firm Al Tamimi & Co. in Dubai. Courts then review the case and can issue a debt judgment that turns the property over to Dubai’s Land Department for auction. Waugh estimates the process may take two to four months.

Barclays, Britain’s second-largest bank, said in an e- mailed reply to questions that it won the foreclosure orders, without providing details of the cases. The ruling shows that Dubai’s market is “evolving and is poised to come at par with other mature markets of the world,” the bank said.

Both lenders and developers in the United Arab Emirates have tried to stem rising defaults through out-of-court settlements with distressed customers after falling prices left buyers with mortgages worth more than their properties. That has helped minimize the amount of bad debt on their balance sheets and kept repossessed houses off a market that’s already suffering from too much supply. Provisions for bad loans in the U.A.E. surged 68 percent by to 32 billion dirhams ($8.7 billion) as of November, compared with a year earlier.

Abandoned Homes

Before the mortgage law was passed, lenders and builders could resort to the courts to enforce contracts, though they didn’t have the right to foreclose.

Tamweel’s pending cases, filed almost two months ago, involve homes abandoned by owners who left Dubai at the onset of the global financial crisis, Chief Executive Officer Wasim Saifi said. Tamweel’s default rate has been “hovering between 2.5 percent and 4 percent for the past six months,” he said.

As alternatives to foreclosures, lenders in Dubai have extended payment periods and developers allowed customers with several properties to return some of them. The absence of mortgage securitization gives U.A.E. lenders makes it easier for lenders to restructure loans than their counterparts in the U.S., where mortgage debt was often sold on to investors.

Foreign Banks

U.K.-based Standard Chartered Plc and HSBC Holdings Plc top the list of foreign banks providing mortgages in the U.A.E., according to Deepak Tolani, senior research associate at Al Mal Capital PSC.

“While it is not Standard Chartered’s preferred approach, foreclosure is a legitimate course of action should a borrower not meet their obligations,” the bank said in a statement. HSBC declined to comment on the issue when contacted by Bloomberg, while Islamic mortgage lender Amlak Finance PJSC didn’t respond to e-mailed questions.

Banks are unlikely to head to the courts to foreclose on properties en masse because of concerns that large numbers of repossessed properties on the market will drive prices lower, said Saud Masud, a Dubai-based real estate analyst at UBS.

While auctioning a few properties “will be easy,” hundreds or even thousands of foreclosure sales may draw buyers away from new and secondhand properties, Masud said.

‘Slippery Slope’

“It’s a slippery slope,” Masud said. “Mass auctions may reprice the property market in a meaningful way as investors prefer to pick real bargains in auctions.”

A cultural stigma attached to forcing people out of their homes has also deterred foreclosures. That may not protect speculative investors who helped drive prices up by buying several properties with the aim of selling at a profit soon after.

“The mortgage law has given clarity and certainty to the exact process that must be followed by anyone wishing to enforce a mortgage,” said Waugh, whose firm is currently handling fewer than 10 repossession cases.

Foreigner Population

Dubai’s population, which is about 90 percent expatriate, may drop by 8 percent in 2009 and another 2 percent in 2010, UBS AG estimated in March. Dubai’s immigration department doesn’t provide regular statistics on visas.

Citizens make up only about 20 percent of the overall U.A.E. population, which largely consists of workers from countries including Pakistan, the U.K. and Lebanon. Workers have one month to leave the country after their work visas are canceled.

Dubai first allowed foreigners to own property in 2002. That led real estate prices to quadruple in the following six years, helped by a growing expatriate workforce and speculation fueled by borrowing.

The U.A.E. last year scrapped a rule that automatically qualified homeowners in Dubai for a permanent residency visa. Owners of properties valued at 1 million dirhams or more are now required to renew residency visas every six months.

About 65,000 residential units will be completed in Dubai by 2011 and the emirate needs to create a minimum of 100,000 white-collar jobs to satisfy oncoming supply, Nomura said on Oct 15. Deutshe Bank estimates that 30,000 units may be delivered by the end of 2010.

Faster Process

“When people talk about litigation in the Middle East, they’re concerned over the possible time it would take to obtain a judgment,” Waugh said. “The speed at which it appears judgments may be obtained under the mortgage law is a real, positive sign for banks.” The Barclays cases were filed in November, he said.

The U.A.E.’s central bank in October proposed reducing the time it takes for a loan to be classified as non-performing by half to 90 days. Banks “most probably” will be asked to comply during the first quarter of this year, said Sofia El Boury, a banking analyst at Shuaa Capital PSC.

So far, no properties have been auctioned, according to Mohammed Sultan Thani, assistant director general at the Dubai Land Department. Requests may start pouring in this year as banks give up on other alternatives, he said.

“Amicable solutions are hard to reach when a buyer lost his job,” or when a property is worth less than the amount owed on it, Thani said.

Lending Swelled

Mortgage loans totaled 137.6 billion dirhams in July 2009, central bank data shows. About 25,000 to 30,000 mortgages have been taken in the U.A.E. with over 95 percent of them in Dubai, analysts say.

The central bank estimates that real estate accounts for about 13 percent of total loans in the U.A.E. Shuaa’s El Boury said the real figure is “much higher” and official numbers aren’t realistic “given the financing contributions to real estate construction and development in the U.A.E.”

The new mortgage law applies to only some kinds of Islamic lending, Waugh said. Shuaa estimates about 25,000 mortgages were extended by Tamweel and its competitor Amlak alone. The two lenders, which control more than half of the U.A.E’s mortgage market, are set to merge this year. Shares of both companies have been suspended since November, 2008.

Negative Equity

The biggest risks to banks come from loans underwritten after 2007, which are “most probably in deep negative equity by now,” Moody’s Yacoub said. Also at risk are Islamic Istisna’ mortgages where a buyer doesn’t make any payments until the property is delivered, he said.

Barclays said the court’s decisions will renew lenders’ faith in Dubai’s legal system, “which could result in bigger lending mandates specifically for mortgage business.”

Judging by the first cases, the process seems to be working, Al Tamimi’s Waugh said. “Like anything, there are a few teething problems that are being resolved, but the fact that we have obtained judgments so quickly is positive.”


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Friday, January 22, 2010

Work on container port project starts


The start of work to build the UK's first container port for 25 years has been announced by the site's owners.

Dubai's DP World had put the future of London Gateway under review after a slump in container traffic raised questions about the viability of the £1.5bn deep-sea port and logistics park near Thurrock in Essex.

DP World is part of Dubai World,

which faces a debt restructuring, although the highly profitable port operator insists it remains financially sound . The company said on Monday it had acquired 1,000 acres and other interests in the project from Royal Dutch Shell and now planned to start some construction work.

The announcement came ahead of a visit to the site yesterday by Gordon Brown, prime minister, and Lord Mandelson, business secretary, for a ceremony to mark the start of work.

Lord Mandelson said the project would create 36,000 jobs. "Developing our infrastructure will underpin the steps the government is already taking to stimulate the economy, and will lay the foundations for further advances in the future," he said.

The project is set to transform how product distribution works in much of the UK because it will allow goods to be landed far nearer than before to the main population centres of London and the south-east. The two busiest container ports are Felixstowe, in Suffolk, and Southampton.

The site includes a logistics park for distributors to sort goods on arrival. Until now, almost all such distribution centres have been in a small area near Rugby and Northampton.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.


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Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Getting In On the Dubai Boom


Unless you’ve been camping out in Tibet for some time, it’s been hard to miss the news that Dubai is booming. The place is already home to the world’s tallest office tower; new residential islands bigger than San Francisco are under construction in the Persian Gulf; the Dubai government has ordered up an amusement complex the size of Paris. And according to Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley, 20% of the world’s construction cranes are operating in Dubai. To put it another way, Dubai is a swaggering, hyperthyroid boomtown, reminiscent of Texas cities during the banking, oil, and construction fevers of the 1980s. In relation to its neighbors, certainly, it’s the most attractive place for a thousand miles around—a mecca of shoppers, vacationers, pensioners, ambitious expats, and worldly corporations.

Even more impressive, tiny Dubai—it’s both a city and a state in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and is only half again as big as Rhode Island—may transform not just itself but also the economy of much of the Middle East. Its successful launches of vast, well-run projects, including the profitable and popular Emirates airline, spectacular hotels, and a huge medical complex blessed by Harvard Medical School, have been noticed by its neighbors, such as Saudi Arabia. Now they too are spending far more on infrastructure improvements, health care, and long-term growth that will help build economies not entirely dependent on oil. Indeed, the recognition that Dubai was likely to run out of that very commodity is what spurred its ruler—His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, who’s in his late fifties—to steer Dubai in this new direction some 15 years ago.

The question, of course, is whether your company should join the party. Dubai deserves a serious look from just about any corporation—or individual, for that matter—capable of delivering world-class managerial or creative ability. “There’s simply not enough homegrown talent to keep up with all the things they want to do,” says Ayman Haddad, managing partner of the Middle East and North African region for the executive recruiting firm Heidrick & Struggles, which is opening a Dubai office.

Middle East investing is not trivial. The six countries that make up the Gulf Cooperation Council—Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE among them—have a combined GDP of some $750 billion, which puts the group between Australia and Holland. Morgan Stanley’s Stephen Roach says that what’s happening in Dubai may be “emblematic of a new Middle East.” The entire region could become a much bigger, more rewarding, and easier-to-navigate market than it has been in the past. “There will be no turning back,” says Roach. “In a world where the globalization debate is dominated by China, it’s high time to broaden our horizons.”

Dubai’s transformation has drawn hundreds of corporate players, including General Electric, Gillette, Halliburton, Microsoft, and Starwood Hotels, and many have made Dubai their regional headquarters. One of the first to do so was Gillette, which considered setting up a local base in a number of places, including Cyprus, but opted for Dubai in 1988. “I could see how the government was changing its attitude about attracting companies,” says Samir Hadad, a former Gillette vice president for the Middle East and Africa who now runs Stargate Advisory Group, a consulting firm that advises foreign companies on how to set up shop or expand in the region.

Dubai has created a dozen special zones, each dedicated to a single industry such as banking, telecom, health care, or Internet services, and has encouraged corporate newcomers to locate among their ilk. This clustering seems popular. Microsoft operates from a shiny new four-story office building overlooking a verdant park and pond. Zaid Abunuwar, a Jordanian who has worked for the company for 10 years, five of them in Dubai, heads a 40-person team that trains distributors and resellers all over the Middle East. To Abunuwar, Dubai is the right place to be. “The Internet, the telecom, the airlines are all excellent,” he says. As more companies move into the neighborhood, it becomes an even more attractive and practical place to do business. “I can walk down the street and talk to my counterpart at Hewlett-Packard,” says Abunuwar, gesturing out a window.

Other American companies are equally pleased to be in Dubai. Says John Lancia, GE’s director of public policy and strategic planning in the Middle East: “What Dubai has done successfully is, they’ve made a very friendly environment for multinationals or small business to do business from.” For GE, that means helping to develop infrastructure all over the region, from locomotives and jet engines to desalinization plants and electrical generators, as well as selling its washing machines and light bulbs. “They like and admire American brands here, no question about it,” Lancia says. “This is one heck of a market for GE. It’s becoming one of the highest-growth regions for the entire company.”

Some caution is warranted on the part of companies considering the plunge. For one thing, Dubai isn’t the place to set up a manufacturing plant; there’s no pool of cheap local labor. And maybe some industries are reaching the saturation point. Foreign bankers with local roots are complaining about the influx of competitors that has pushed the total number of banking firms to about 30. “People complain that so many banks have come there that they’re giving business away to get market share,” says an American executive at a big European bank. You’d think the Koran’s ban on riba , or interest, would make life tough for this particular industry. Not really. Instead of lending money to various projects, banks must invest in them and then collect profits by taking a cut of the earnings or, in the case of real estate investments, the rents. To ease the whole process, Dubai has established the Dubai International Financial Center, a special zone where corporate occupants have to comply with international banking regulations rather than the Koran. This has proved so popular with foreign bankers trying to get some Dubai action that there’s now a flurry of construction of new office towers to accommodate them.

Who should be in Dubai? For starters, just about anybody selling luxury goods. “Buyers are seeking the best,” says Thomas Bradtke, one of the principals in Boston Consulting Group’s local office. “In some ways this is an odd market. The biggest, most expensive cars—BMW and Mercedes—outsell the smaller, less expensive ones.” Since the unabashedly wealthy from all over the Middle and Far East already come here to shop, the shopping malls are crammed with top-of-the-line brands, from Hugo Boss to Tiffany. Cruising malls is a major diversion for people living in and visiting Dubai. But retailers have to be careful. Some mall walkers are just killing time, and older malls can go out of fashion quickly. Says Philip Schneider, a Chicago-based corporate-relocation consultant for Deloitte: “When a mall is three years old, how many people keep going to it?”

For now, real estate construction is the hottest business in town, and many U.S. companies have won big roles. Chicago architects Skidmore Owings & Merrill LLP designed the Burj Dubai tower, which will stand maybe as high as 2,600 feet when it is completed in 2008. New York City construction-services company Parsons Brinckerhoff is supervising the construction of those offshore islands. Carrier Corp., Trane Corp., and other manufacturers of air-conditioning systems are cooling off what gets built. Caterpillar earthmovers are everywhere.

It’s unlikely that U.S. producers could compete with low-cost steel and concrete suppliers from nearby India. But Dubai is hungry for top engineering, architectural, and planning expertise and recognizes American companies as often the best in the world at those disciplines. Even smaller companies can play in this market—witness a Wisconsin outfit called Spancrete Machinery Corp. It manufactures equipment that produces precast, prestressed hollowcore concrete slabs and wall panels used in residential and commercial construction. The company attended a trade show in Dubai a while back, sold one of its machines to a local buyer, and is now helping this new customer set up its own slab-building business.

The current spasm of office and apartment construction will probably slow in a year or two, but some mammoth building projects will remain. Dubai’s existing airport on the north end of town is already jammed—at 2 a.m. you have to walk sideways to get through the crowds—and is being expanded. A second airport to the south, toward Abu Dhabi, is just being built. Next up: Dubailand, a colossal entertainment center, and Dubai Medical City, a big health-care complex. Both will be providing work to designers, consultants, and vendors for years.

At the moment, Dubailand, perhaps the most grandiose of all the projects rising from the drawing boards, is just a cloud of dust on the outskirts of town. But it is slated to cover three billion square feet when it’s done, with half a dozen stadiums, racetracks, and golf courses, one designed with input from Tiger Woods. Universal Studios is partnering with a big local construction company, Tatweer, to create one of Dubailand’s amusement parks. Other companies are planning sports academies that promise to make professionals out of talented amateur golfers and soccer and tennis players. There will even be a ski mountain, domed and refrigerated.

Not that skiing isn’t already a Dubai fixture. At the titanic Mall of the Emirates, one of a half-dozen sprawling shopping centers that rival anything in Los Angeles, five ski slopes, the biggest one 400 meters long, rise enclosed and refrigerated on stilts over the city’s streets. Après-skiers can curl up next to images of crackling fireplaces displayed on computer screens at an adjoining restaurant.

The pace of construction is unnerving, as are some of the stresses of living and working here, and the dust-riddled air is tough to breathe. Sheikh Zayed Road, the main drag, is jammed during the evening rush hour, turning a 20-minute cab ride from one side of town to the other into a 90-minute crawl. A lot of traffic is made up of the buses that take construction laborers and low-level office workers on their stop-and-go, two- and three-hour rides to dormitories in tiny (and cheaper) emirates to the northeast. The air and traffic are likely to get far worse as Dubai’s office and residential space triples in the next two years. An elevated train is being built along the main highway, but that isn’t likely to lessen the logistical strain much. Its planned stops lie beyond walking distance from many of the new offices and apartment buildings.

And yet Dubai has a certain exuberant appeal—a Las Vegas without so much in-your-face sin. Visitors and locals alike can choose from dozens of great restaurants, including Biella for Italian and Delhi Darbar for Indian. If you want a glass of wine or other alcoholic drink with your meal, you’ll have to patronize a restaurant located in a hotel, such as the Rib Room at the Jumeirah Emirates Towers Hotel. Nearly all the five-star hotels (39 at last count) have glittering nightclubs that are packed on weekends. You can go for a boat ride along the canals around the Mina A’Salaam hotel. The lobby of the sail-shaped Burj al Arab hotel (where Tiger Woods famously knocked golf balls from the rooftop helicopter pad into the Gulf) is so popular that the hotel now prohibits gawkers. And of course there’s also the opportunity to visit the various local racetracks, including one where camels are the mounts of choice. Okay, so there’s no Louvre, no Metropolitan Opera House. But as a Western salesman encountered at the spectacular Shangri-La Hotel observes, “You want culture, go to Paris. People come here for a good time.”

Much of Dubai’s flavor seems to derive from its ruler, Sheikh Mohammed, who is sometimes referred to as the CEO of Dubai Inc. Anne Jafery, who moved to Dubai from Michigan in 1989 and founded Ink, a publishing, design, and event-planning company, admits to being dazzled: “He’s an amazing leader. He started a process of very long-term planning, which is counter to the traditional Bedouin culture. Before him, the attitude was ‘ Inshallah,’ which means ‘God willing,’ but often meant ‘when I get to it.’ That has totally changed.” Nowadays, says Jafery, “there’s a joke that when the sheikh says jump, people don’t say, ‘How high?’ They say, ‘When can we come down?’”

The sheikh and his forebears also get credit for making Dubai one of the most tolerant places in the Middle East. In contrast to hyperstrict Saudi Arabia, women in Dubai are free to hold jobs, go about without scarves or veils, associate unchaperoned with men, and drive. Less-than-devout Arabs from all over the Middle East can be seen standing and drinking alcohol at the clubs in local hotels, but this doesn’t mean that Emiratis, as people from the region are called, are casual about their religion. Says Thomas Bradtke of Boston Consulting Group: “They’re Western in attitude but speak to the protocols of religion. So it might look liberal, but the people stick to what is required.”

For all the changes the government has made to modernize and foster growth, newcomers will be irked by some clunky rules on starting and running a business that apply across the UAE. One of these is that most businesses must be majority-owned by an Emirati. If you’re a foreign company looking to open a hotel or establish a chain of stores, you will have to find a local partner. Some, in fact, bring both expertise and capital to the deal. Even if they don’t, “it’s not quite as bad as it sounds,” says Sameer Alibhai, a Canadian who moved to Dubai years ago and is involved in various businesses, including real estate. “Both parties usually sign another piece of paper saying the local guy doesn’t really run or control the business, and instead of half the profits, he gets a flat fee.” (Fees typically start at less than 30,000 dirhams, or about $8,300 a year, for smaller deals but can run as high as $500,000 for companies with revenues of over $50 million.) Changing partners is not difficult, Alibhai says. “I just did it. It’s no big deal.”

Even more encouraging, the UAE is working on a new law that would open various parts of the service sector to full foreign ownership, probably including health care and education, and would invite further foreign participation in financial services like insurance. This could happen by the end of the year.

Finding talent to run a business may be difficult. Almost all the potential candidates in town are foreigners and governed by elaborate rules about whom they can work for and how long they can stay. A foreign employee who quits a job must return home for months and then reapply for a work visa. “It’s an employer’s paradise,” one Western business owner says. “Foreign employees can’t leave for higher pay.” Hiring a local brings its own frustrations. Many Emiratis grew up supported by a generous, oil-rich government that provided cheap housing, health care, even travel, and didn’t put a premium on hard work or education. That stopped a few years ago, when the current sheikh declared an end to the free lunch. But a sense of entitlement still exists, observes one Westerner, and a new rule requires any business with more than 50 employees to hire at least one Emirati.

Dubai is trying to close the ability gap. Among other things, it has developed a three-year executive-education program with the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School to train some 40 potential business leaders per year. “We’ve brought them to the United States, to Hong Kong, and to Singapore,” says Wharton professor and academic program director Bulent Gultekin. Dubai, of course, picks up the tab.

Other emirates are following close on Dubai’s heels as places where Westerners can set up businesses and make money for themselves and their hosts. For now, though, Dubai, with its booming, opportunity-rich economy, has the clear lead. And if it can throw a martini and a ski slope into the mix, well, where else would you want to go?


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Tuesday, January 5, 2010

After tough year, Dubai expats pack up, eye Asia


HONG KONG: For lawyer Wilfred Goh, the sign it was time to leave Dubai came early in 2009, when the financial crisis took its toll, plunging the emirate's main stock index down roughly 70 percent in a matter of months.

After speaking to friends and government officials, Goh decided to return to Asia, with the thought that Hong Kong, China or Singapore offered better job opportunities. Goh, 47, eventually got a job back home in Singapore.

"We just felt Dubai's economic climate was not very good and they had started to retrench people," said Goh, who works at the Central Chambers Law Corp in Singapore.

The flight of top foreign work talent from the Gulf's financial hub began in early 2009, and levelled off as the market recovered toward the middle of the year. But then Dubai dropped a bombshell in November, disclosing a delay on a massive debt pile.

The $26 billion debt debacle sank Dubai's markets and spurred many foreign professionals to hasten their retreat from the city-state for more job security.

Precise numbers of job losses is unknown, but estimates say thousands of foreigners have been fired or forced to leave Dubai this year.


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Friday, January 1, 2010

Dubai defines small business


The Dubai Government has defined what qualifies as a small business as part of an initiative to help the sector develop in the emirate.

The Mohammed Bin Rashid Establishment for SME Development, an arm of the Dubai Government, announced the official definition of what constitutes micro, small and medium-sized businesses based on employee numbers, annual turnover and industry classifications.

The organisation will use the definition to help develop policies designed to assist small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) and encourage local banks to create specific financial products, said Abdul Baset al Janahi, its chief executive.

“Starting today, banks can design products that cater to the sector itself,” Mr al Janahi said. “You cannot do a ‘one-size-fits-all’ product.

“Now when the banks and credit analysts evaluate the business and the risk related to it, they can know the category it fits in and what kind of financing it will need.”

The definitions are:

Ÿ Micro businesses: up to nine employees and a turnover of Dh9 million (US$2.4m) for trading companies; up to 20 employees and a turnover of Dh10m for manufacturing companies; and up to 20 employees and a turnover of Dh3m for service companies.

Ÿ Small businesses: up to 35 employees and a turnover of Dh50m for trading; up to 100 employees and a turnover of Dh100m for manufacturing; up to 100 employees and a turnover of Dh25m for service.

Ÿ Medium businesses: up to 75 employees and a turnover of Dh250m for trading; up to 250 employees and a turnover of Dh250m for manufacturing; up to 250 employees and a turnover of Dh150m for service.

There are about 80,000 Dubai businesses in the small-to-medium enterprise categories, or 98.5 per cent of the entire Dubai business environment, said Alexandar Williams, the director for strategy and policy at the Mohammed Bin Rashid Establishment for SME Development. Recent government figures have shown SMEs account for about 85 per cent of all jobs in the UAE and contribute to 46 per cent of its GDP.

With the definitions finalised, the agency plans to release figures on the economic effects such enterprises have on the Dubai economy at the end of the first half of next year, Mr Williams said.

Reaction from the business community at yesterday’s announcement was generally positive, but some questioned whether the Dubai Government would protect new small businesses from insolvency.

“There’s a potential for Dubai to become the entrepreneurship centre of the Middle East,” said Dale Murphy, a senior research fellow at the Dubai School of Government.

“One of the first steps I’d work on now is reforming insolvency laws, which is under way in the context of the large corporate world, but there has to be attention to the beneficial impact in smaller businesses.

“In order to undertake the risk of starting a business, you need to make sure that you’re not going to go to jail if you fail.”

In the UAE, if a business provides a cheque from an account with insufficient funds, the police can issue a warrant for the signatory’s arrest.

Sami al Qamzi, the director general of the Department of Economic Development (DED), which oversees the SME agency, said UAE bankruptcy laws were under review with the DED and other federal authorities.

“We’ll have to review all the existing policies and give our recommendation to solve the current situation,” Mr al Qamzi said.

“It’s an ongoing exercise that is under review.”


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