Saturday, November 28, 2009

EC: Dubai debt crisis rocks markets in U.S., Asia

David M. Dickson and Joseph Weber
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Stock markets tumbled in the United States and across Asia on Friday as shocks from the ongoing debt crisis in the Persian Gulf emirate of Dubai continued to reverberate around the globe.

The once high-flying city-state, which has been ruled by the same family since 1833, announced its intention Wednesday to reschedule payment of $3.5 billion in bonds due in mid-December, rattling investors around the world.The surprise announcement from Dubai began exacting its toll in Asia on Thursday, afflicted European bourses several hours later and battered Asian indexes Friday before clobbering the U.S. stock market, which had been closed for Thanksgiving.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, after dropping 233 points, finished the day down 154.48 points (1.5 percent), closing at 10,309.92. All 30 components lost value. The broad-based Standard & Poor's 500 stock index lost 19.14 points (1.7 percent), finishing the shortened post-Thanksgiving session at 1,091.49. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index dropped 37.61 points (1.7 percent) and ended the day at 2,138.44.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei average tumbled 3.2 percent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index plummeted 4.8 percent, and the Shanghai composite index lost 2.4 percent after dropping 3.6 percent Thursday. European stock markets showed gains Friday after retreating the day before.

Dubai World Group, a holding company owned 100 percent by Dubai, asked its creditors Wednesday for a six-month "standstill" on its obligations due Dec. 14.

One of seven emirates that comprise the United Arab Emirates, Dubai has been suffering from a catastrophic property slump since the world financial crisis deepened last year. Once sky-high property prices for apartments built on land-reclamation projects in the Persian Gulf have already plunged 50 percent, and UBS AG, a Swiss-based bank, estimates prices could plummet another 30 percent.

"I don't see what the big deal is," said Willem Buiter, a London-based economist who advises governments, central banks and private financial institutions. "Dubai has experienced for most of this decade the craziest construction boom seen in the Middle East since the construction of the Great Pyramids. That boom turned to bust - as booms invariably do."

Investors in Dubai bonds, many of whom apparently include international banks based in Europe, may beg to differ on how much of a "big deal" the de facto default is. Dubai's total debt, divided among government-owned conglomerates and the government itself, is thought to be about $80 billion.

Unlike Abu Dhabi, the wealthiest emirate that claims about 10 percent of the world's proven oil reserves, Dubai has few natural resources. Instead, it has gambled heavily on developing itself into a leading financial and trade center and a tourist and vacation retreat for wealthy Arabs and Europeans.

When credit flowed freely before the worldwide financial meltdown began in late 2007, Dubai leveraged itself to the hilt, devising mind-boggling investment projects that now appear to be crumbling.

"When you start building a third island shaped like a palm tree, intending it to be as big and crowded as Manhattan, you are crying out for a sober voice to bark: 'Stop!' " commented Jim Krane, author of "City of Gold: Dubai and the Dream of Capitalism." Some schemes that were canceled after the financial crisis erupted included plans to build a Snowdome and an $11 billion Arabian Canal circling Dubai.

Wednesday's announcement was delivered just hours before the beginning of a weeklong UAE national celebration.

In another puzzling development that day, two big banks located in Abu Dhabi bought $5 billion of debt issued by Dubai - money that apparently will not be available in two weeks to fund Dubai's bond payment. In February, the Abu Dhabi-based central bank of the UAE funneled $10 billion to Dubai to help its profligate neighbor deal with the fallout from the intensifying global crisis.

Earlier this month, Dubai's ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, who doubles as the UAE prime minister, told critics of Dubai's financial machinations to "shut up." Now pressure is mounting on oil-rich Abu Dhabi, whose sovereign wealth fund (estimated at $900 billion) is the world's largest, to bail out Dubai.

Comment: This blog warned of the impending economic collapse of this and other Arab countries and its impact upon the price or value of the USA dollar and the USA economy. Similar to the very complicated challenges found in the ME so too are the economic challenges facing the world. There is no easy, quick fix. I ask that the mainstream media start doing their jobs-investigate, understand and simply report.
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