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📄 Extracted Text (408 words)
To: Jeffrey Epstein[jeevacation©gmail.com]
From: Farkas, Andrew L.
Sent: Thur 4/30/2009 6:02:06 PM
Subject: FW: Dubai Woes
From: Cohen, Jeffrey
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2009 1:44 PM
To: Farkas, Andrew L.; Garrison, Frank; Aston, Jim; Carleton, George; Levy, Marc
Subject: Dubai Woes
Dubai's Economic Woes Just Got Worse
• By ANDREW CRITCHLOW
Green shoots in the desert? Not so fast. Hopes that Dubai's economy was starting to recover have been
dashed by Standard & Poor's, which has put six of the Gulf emirate's major government-related entities
on negative watch ahead of a possible downgrade to junk. That creates fresh doubts about Dubai's
ability to raise funds on the international markets, raising the possibility it will need another bailout from
Abu Dhabi.
S&P's move comes as a shock since it follows a barrage of recent reassuring statements from Dubai
officials — including ruler Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum — that the emirate had its financial
difficulties now under control. Earlier this year, Dubai secured a $20 billion emergency bailout program
underwritten by the Abu Dhabi-based central bank. Abu Dhabi has already stumped up the first $10
billion, with international investors expected to provide the rest. That no longer looks so likely.
The S&P action suggests Dubai's economic problems could be much worse than initially thought. What
prompted the effective downgrade was confirmation that real-estate developer Nakheel and parent
company Dubai World, whose other investments include port operator DP World, may have to
restructure their debts amid plummeting revenues. Foreign contractors have also complained of delays
in payment.
Bankers say that S&P's action was already priced into the market on Nakheel's debt and credit default
swaps on Dubai's debt moved little after the downgrade threat. But this latest blow to confidence is
bound to make intemational investors wary of subscribing to the second half of the $20 billion
emergency bond program.
That would leave Dubai with no option but to go back to Abu Dhabi for the rest of the money. But that
won't be easy. Its larger neighbor has its own economic problems. Its sovereign wealth funds are losing
money. Last week, Mubadala Development Co. acknowledged it lost more than $3 billion last year. And
with oil prices rooted around $50 a barrel, Abu Dhabi will have to dip into its foreign reserves to help its
federal partners.
In the desert, green shoots often tum out to be mirages.
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EFTA02442242
Write to Andrew Critchlow at andrew.critchlowndowiones.com
EFTA_R1_01517114
EFTA02442243
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
c87d0f99ae8c048808241c6776a9aa492d608c902a5afc2602379384e40c0226
Bates Number
EFTA02442242
Dataset
DataSet-11
Type
document
Pages
2
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