Chapter 47: Chapter 47

we haven’t heard from Dubai in a while.’

‘That doesn’t mean the problem has gone away.’

‘Dubai Holding’s in trouble.’

‘That’s controlled by Al Maktoum.’

‘Yeah. Designed to consolidate their infrastructure and investment projects.’

‘They’ve missed loan repayments.’

‘What do you expect from that kind of place?’

‘What do you mean? They’re monarchies like the UK and their financial system

is dodgy.’

‘Not quite Pat!’

Barton laughed as Kennedy grinned sheepishly.

‘All those skyscrapers are assets, someone will end up buying them.’

‘If they’re not bombed by Iran.’

They both laughed.

‘Being serious for a moment Pat, every time they complete one of those

buildings, it adds to the market over-supply. So it’s going to take some time before

the situation sorts itself out.’

The doomsters rubbed their hands with joy, seizing on the news to shout I told

you so. Barton had to admit to a grim satisfaction; he was one of the few who had

not stood idly on the side lines.

The news that Government of Dubai would restructure Dubai World shocked

investors. Dubai was the champion of the real estate bubble where no idea had

been too outlandish. The brief statement announcing the news had been issued just

as the Emirate shutdown to celebrate the Muslim feast of Eid al-Adha nicely

coincided with the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend in the US, catching

investors by surprise. Banks and financial institutions in the know had been short

W

selling Dubai World for months in the certitude it could not meet its obligations.

In just five weeks the world’s tallest building was due to be inaugurated by

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum and the public would be able visit

Burj Khalifa’s observation deck, 828 metres high, and enjoy the spectacular view

over a skyline of half-finished buildings and empty construction sites. Dubai’s

once booming economy had to all intents gone into default and its property sector

had all but collapsed. Hundreds of projects worth more than three hundred billion

dollars were cancelled, shut down or hobbled, causing property prices in the

emirate to plunge by as much as sixty percent.

Dubai World, headed by Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, managed businesses and

projects for the Dubai government. It included Nakheel, the property developer

promoting Palm Jumeirah and The World, both built on reclaimed land off the

coast. Dubai World’s outstanding liabilities represented nearly three quarters of the

Emirate’s total debt, and the mere thought the company could be in difficulty,

caused the cost of insuring against its possible default to jump higher than that of

Iceland’s, reducing the value of the Emirate’s leading state owned companies to

junk status.

Tarasov and Kennedy had been momentarily taken by the idea of investing in

Dubai ― to Fitzwilliams dismay, but with the growing rumour that The World was

sinking into the sea, true or not, Tarasov put a quick stop to the idea, preferring to

focus his attention on London and Moscow. Work had stopped on the artificial

islands, sandbanks as Fitzwilliams called them, and there were few takers for

existing commercial property in the Emirate.

Tom Barton wondered about the fate of the vast numbers of Indian workers in the

Gulf region, many of whose families were now deprived of remittances, transfers

that represented a large part of India’s foreign revenues. Kerala would be most

seriously affected, as it accounted for about a quarter India’s labour force in the

Gulf’s hard hit construction industry.

The news stunned politicians and fear of a domino effect ripple through financial

markets, leaving investors wondering which country would be next; Greece, Spain,

even China. Leaders were left grappling with the consequences of the crisis with

little time to reflect on the causes or the shape of things to come.

Not all felt concerned by the bad news. There was Tony Blair for one. He had

little to worry. Since he had quit office he had become one of the richest ex-prime

ministers in British history. His property included a palatial residence in

Buckinghamshire, bought for almost six million pounds, and a home in London

that had set him back another five million. After handing over the reins of power to

Gordon Brown, Blair’s personal wealth had grown at a phenomenal rate. The same

could not be said for the mass of now disillusioned Labourites who had voted for

him.