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September 15, 2009
ABU DHABI // The Shams Abu Dhabi project on Reem Island is faring
better than most major property developments under way in the capital
after a sharp downturn that has hit companies across the sector,
according to a report from Moody’s.
Overdue payments by developers to Sorouh Real Estate, the master
developer of the Shams project, peaked at 2.81 per cent this summer,
said Khalid Howladar, a senior credit officer at Moody’s.
So-called delinquencies, which are defined as payments that are more than 45 days late, totalled 2.25 per cent by July.
“With
the collapse in property last September and the ongoing liquidity
shortage, one would have expected an increase in smaller developer
defaults on the land purchases,” he said. “But so far the defaults in
Shams are relatively low”.
The Shams Abu Dhabi project, a
579-hectare master-planned community at the opposite end of Reem Island
from Abu Dhabi Island, will include apartment buildings, offices and
retail space. The first part of the project, the Sun and Sky towers,
will be ready for people to move in during the first quarter of next
year.
Officials at Sorouh said in recent weeks the company had created a
working group to help find financing for struggling developers who
bought land in the Shams Abu Dhabi project. Smaller developers across
the island are facing difficulties because of slowing sales and
problems raising financing from banks. By June, nine of the
developments on the island had changed hands.
Distressed asset
funds have started eyeing projects on Reem Island, where prices have
dropped as much as 50 per cent since the slowdown began last autumn.
Markaz, also known as Kuwait Financial Centre, said it was planning to
invest about US$50 million (Dh183.6m) in distressed assets on the
island.
Mr Howladar said the low delinquency rate of the Shams project was
likely because most of the developers who bought land from Sorouh had
already paid between 40 and 50 per cent of the cost. With so much
equity in the investment, a developer would suffer a big loss if he
defaulted on his payments.
However, the project is still not
proceeding at the same pace as originally scheduled. The company is
behind with its scheduled infrastructure works on the project, Moody’s
said. Working to a weighted average, where large infrastructure works
count for more than smaller ones, Shams is 40 per cent behind schedule,
the report said.
“Infrastructure works are now well under way on Shams Abu Dhabi and
good progress has been made,” Sorouh said. “Earthworks are now
finished, with bridges also completed. Essential infrastructure such as
water and drainage are now nearing completion and Sorouh continues to
invest a significant amount in the infrastructure of Shams Abu Dhabi.”
Moody’s
was able to give a more detailed look at the Shams Abu Dhabi project
because Sorouh issued a Dh4bn Islamic bond attached to the project last
year. As a result, the company has to provide public information about
how the project is faring.
“This is the only development in the market where you will get this
level of information because it’s rated and part of the reporting
requirements,” Mr Howladar said. “This type of exposure analysis is
what, frankly, every prudent developer should be doing if they were
interested in the quality of future cashflows.”
Source: The National
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