Business World

Trump’s man in Dubai wants you to know he’s Trump’s man in Dubai

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LONDON — Hussain Sajwani wants the world to know he’s Donald Trump’s man in the Middle East.

From his perch in Dubai, the billionair­e real- estate mogul is busy working to strengthen — and promote — his relationsh­ip with the Trump Organizati­on.

And he’s making no apologies, whatever critics might say about potential conflicts for America’s first family.

“Trump getting elected definitely enhanced the profile of his organizati­on’s brand,” he said in the London office of his company, Damac Properties Dubai Co.

“Being his partner, we get a benefit.”

Mr. Sajwani has two golfcourse developmen­t deals with the president’s family company in Dubai, which netted Mr. Trump as much as $ 10 million in 2015 and 2016, according to US financial disclosure­s.

The tie- up with Mr. Trump has transforme­d Mr. Sajwani from a little- known Dubai developer into someone who describes himself in press releases as “Trump’s Middle Eastern business partner.”

Mr. Sajwani says he’s sitting on $3 billion in cash and is ready to expand in Europe because Damac’s size — it has 44,000 units in the pipeline across the Middle East — makes it hard to grow at home. He’s eyeing investment­s in Berlin and the Spanish coastal resort of Marbella, and he’s investing £400 million ($516 million) in a luxury tower rising just south of the River Thames in London that’s due to open in 2019. Mr. Trump’s anti-Muslim rhetoric and his travel ban on immigrants from several mostly Muslim countries haven’t hurt Damac, Mr. Sajwani says.

To lead the European expansion, Damac on July 4 said it had hired Richard Choi, who had run HSBC’s real estate business in Europe and the Americas.

Mr. Sajwani is searching for another site in London, and said he might announce another project this year. Britain’s decision to leave the European Union has made investment there more attractive by weakening the pound and sparking a drop in land prices.

“There is more willingnes­s on the part of sellers” to do deals, he said.

A graduate of the University of Washington in Seattle, Mr. Sajwani got his start by setting up a catering company called Global Logistics Services, which supplied US troops in Kuwait and Iraq and now mostly works with oil companies in the Middle East.

He parlayed that business into real estate in the early 2000s, when the Dubai government eased restrictio­ns on property purchases by foreigners. By 2013, when Mr. Sajwani struck an agreement with Ivanka Trump for the Dubai golf course, Damac was developing the area as a luxury community he calls the emirate’s Beverly Hills.

In May, he hosted Donald Trump, Jr. in Dubai to discuss the recently opened golf course with roughly 180 Trump-branded villas priced at $2 million each.

Mr. Sajwani says he sells a few villas a month, paying a commission of “less than five percent” to the Trump Organizati­on.

There are plans for a small boutique hotel and a school attached to the golf course, all operated by Trump Internatio­nal. Another Trump golf course designed by Tiger Woods is due to open next year.

After Mr. Sajwani posted a photo on Instagram showing him at lunch with Donald Jr., saying they were “discussing new ideas and innovation,” speculatio­n surged about new deals. Mr. Sajwani says they only spoke about how to improve the Trump golf club in Dubai.

Mr. Sajwani says Eric Trump, the US president’s second-eldest son, invited him to the opening of a golf course in Scotland in June, so he flew up for the day. “I don’t play golf,” he admits, but the two were able to “catch up about Dubai.”— Bloomberg

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