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Business / Middle East Business

UAE bourses hire advisers for merger

Published: 03 Oct 2013 - 12:42 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 11:21 am

ABU DHABI/DUBAI: Abu Dhabi and Dubai have hired banks to advise on a possible merger of their two main stock exchanges, a state-backed deal that could energise financial markets in the United Arab Emirates, sources familiar with the plan said.

Merging the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX) would be one of the biggest reforms in the country’s financial industry in recent years.

It would make it easier for investors to operate across the markets and could stimulate trade and attract more foreign investment.

Shares in DFM, the only listed bourse operator in the Gulf region, surged 15 percent to the daily limit reaching the highest level since November 2009. Dubai’s broader benchmark index reversed earlier losses to close up 2.7 percent on the Reuters report. 

Talks on a tie-up between the Dubai Financial Market  (DFM) and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX) have occurred on and off since at least 2010, but they have been hindered by differences over valuations and Dubai’s 2009-2010 corporate debt crisis.

With a renewed focus on cooperation between the two emirates in several fields, the idea of a merger of the two bourses has once again gained traction. 

Abu Dhabi, the richest emirate in the UAE, has hired US investment bank J P Morgan Chase and local lender First Gulf Bank to advise on the merger, the sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity as the matter is not public.

One source said Abu Dhabi’s mandate came from the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, the top policymaking body in the emirate. The council did not respond to calls and emails seeking comment. 

Investment Corporation of Dubai (ICD), the flagship holding company which owns stakes in many of Dubai’s top entities, including DFM’s parent, Borse Dubai, has hired Citigroup  to advise on the matter, according to the sources.

A spokeswoman for JP Morgan and spokesmen for Citigroup and First Gulf Bank declined to comment; ADX and DFM declined to comment. A media representative for the Dubai government said she could not immediately comment. Three of the sources said the governments aimed to reach an agreement on the merger by the end of this year. 

“The two emirates have made a call to complete this merger before the year-end. Now that there is a political will, the main challenge for the advisers will be to do a proper valuation exercise which is acceptable to both the parties,” one said.

Companies listed on DFM, which include property developer Emaar Properties and bank Emirates NBD, have a combined market capitalisation of about $54bn. 

Stocks on the Abu Dhabi exchange, home to companies such as regional telecommunications giant Etisalat and National Bank of Abu Dhabi, have a market value of $101bn, according to Thomson Reuters data. 

Globally, a number of exchanges have been attempting to merge to give themselves the scale need to confront challenges of new technology and tough cost competition. In the United States, BATS Global Markets and Direct Edge said in August that they would merge; IntercontinentalExchange is mounting an $8.2bn bid for NYSE Euronext.   

Reuters