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Business / Middle East Business

Amlak proposes new restructuring deal for $2.7bn debt

Published: 03 Jul 2014 - 01:08 am | Last Updated: 22 Jan 2022 - 10:41 pm

DUBAI: Dubai mortgage lender Amlak has made a new proposal to creditors to restructure and extend repayments of about $2.7bn of debt, aiming to end protracted talks over the last major hangover from the emirate’s property market crash in 2008.
The Shariah-compliant mortgage lender, in which Dubai’s biggest developer Emaar Properties owns a 45 percent stake, proposed in June to make an initial down-payment of 20 percent, or about Dh2bn ($545m), a company spokesman said in a statement.
The remaining debt will be paid to lenders over 12 years, of which Dh1.4bn would be swapped into a convertible instrument which will be repaid “over the next few years” from Amlak’s real estate assets, the statement added.
The extended tenure, a feature of a number of restructurings in the emirate including the $25bn Dubai World debt deal, is aimed at allowing asset values to improve so that they can then be sold to service debt repayments. 
“Following the meeting, depositors have been given two months to assess and accept Amlak’s restructuring package after which Amlak will be able to start repaying its debt and take the next steps to lift the suspension of the trading of its shares which has been in place since 2008,” the statement said.
Amlak has been in talks over the debt with a six-member creditor committee, which includes commercial banks such as Emirates NBD and Standard Chartered and two government funds. 
Its shares have been suspended since November 2008, when a credit crunch and market slump took hold. Earlier this year, the UAE’ economic minister said trading in Amlak would resume in the second half of this year.
Dubai’s property sector has seen a sharp rebound in prices over the last two years, with some properties back to 2008 levels, which has helped improve the fortunes of Dubai state-linked entities that cut restructuring deals after the crash.
Reuters