Dubai firm Al Habtoor postpones flotation

26 Dec, 2012

Al Habtoor Group, one of Dubai's leading family-owned firms, has postponed plans to raise as much as $1.6 billion in a move blamed by analysts on unrealistic price expectations for its stock. The company, whose operations span the hospitality, construction, education and automotive sectors, in September announced plans to float a quarter of its shares in an initial public offering on the Nasdaq Dubai bourse next year.
It said it wanted to use the proceeds to acquire hotels in Europe. "There was a sharp discrepancy between what the group was expecting (in terms of price) and the reality of the underlying market here, a senior banking source said on Tuesday, adding several international banks had pitched for the IPO mandate.
"It is a wise move to back off if you are not really sure whether it can be pulled off. "The equity markets are lacklustre globally and out in the region, there has been a major slump since the crisis," the source said, declining to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter. The Dubai-based company, which bought a small stake in Barclays in 2008, is one of the UAE's biggest family businesses and a stock market float from the group was seen adding momentum to local equity markets which have struggled to attract new companies since the global financial crisis.
Chairman Khalaf Al Habtoor said advisory firm Grant Thornton had valued the group at $6 billion, excluding some of its hotel and shopping mall assets and its ownership in the joint venture with Australian group Leighton Holdings. "I will continue to focus on best practice and growing the company in a sustainable way," he said. Market volatility and a reluctance among retail investors, burnt by the collapse in stock prices in the crisis, have been cited as factors behind the lack of new public offerings in the Gulf Arab region.
The last listing on the Dubai benchmark was Drake & Scull in March 2009, while the Abu Dhabi index has only seen a couple of minor sales since 2008. "Our house view is that conditions for IPO will be more conducive in 2015. The reason for postponing the IPO would be current market conditions and a lack of liquidity," Shehzad Janab, head of asset management at Dubai-based Daman Investment said.

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