The National - News

UNION PROPERTIES SWINGS TO RECORD DH2.3BN LOSS FOR SECOND QUARTER

▶ Dubai-listed developer books provisions and slashes value of investment­s following recent overhaul of board

- JOHN EVERINGTON

Union Properties (UP), the developer whose board went through an overhaul in May, reported its worst-ever quarterly loss yesterday after it wrote down the value of investment­s and booked provisions to cover accounting errors of the firm’s previous management.

The company recorded a Dh2.3 billion net loss for the three-month period ending June, which contrasts with a Dh71.7 million profit for the same period in 2016, it said in a statement to Dubai Financial Market (DFM). Its shares, which fell by as much as 10 per cent during early trade, recovered to close down 4.3 per cent at 82 fils, their lowest level this year.

The firm, primarily known for its projects in Dubai’s Motor City developmen­t, said it booked Dh2.8bn in provisions for the second quarter as a one-time charge for “the accounting irregulari­ty by the previous management”, said the UP chairman, Nasser bin Yousef.

The provisions also include the restatemen­t of a Dh503m gain in its 2015 account, relating to fair-value improvemen­t applied to the unbuilt grossfloor-area on a plot of land in Motor City; valuation losses on its investment properties and the managed wind-down of Thermo, its contractin­g subsidiary.

“We are confident that with the developmen­ts we are planning this year, we will quickly bring back the recognised value for the long-term sustained growth of the company,” Mr bin Yousef said.

UP said that a full overview of provisioni­ng has been commission­ed by auditors KPMG and had been disclosed to the regulator and to the shareholde­rs of the firm.

“The provisions reflect the new management team’s prudent approach to risk and in its treatment of unbuilt or floating gross floor area from an accounting standpoint,” the company said.

Craig Plumb, head of Mena research at property consultant­s JLL, said UP’s move to write down value of investment­s is not “indicative of what’s happening in the property market as a whole as the market’s been pretty flat in areas like Motor City and Dubai Investment Park where Union Properties has its developmen­ts”.

Dubai’s property market, which recovered strongly from the 2009 property crash, has softened again in the past years as oversupply and persistent­ly low oil prices affected investor sentiment.

UP results cap a poor second quarter for most of Dubai’s listed developers, following weaker financials from Damac Properties and Deyaar Developmen­t.

Damac, which is the US president Donald Trump’s business partner in Dubai, recorded a 21 per cent drop in net profit, below analysts’ estimates. Deyaar last month posted a 42 per cent decline in quarterly profit.

UP went through an impromptu reshuffle at board level, which included the resignatio­n of former chairman Khalid bin Kalban and two other directors.

Mr bin Yousef took over as the developer launched an in-depth investigat­ion of accounting practices within the company, dating as far back as 2013.

The company also appointed Ahmed Khouri as the new chief executive last month.

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