The National - News

ABRAAJ MEETS INVESTORS TO ALLAY CONCERNS

▶ Company discusses restructur­ing and selling scandal-hit investment unit

- SARMAD KHAN

Abraaj Group, the private equity company in Dubai roiled by allegation­s of misusing funds, met key stakeholde­rs and creditors yesterday to discuss the potential sale of its investment management business and the ongoing restructur­ing of the troubled company.

The private meeting included “shareholde­rs, lenders and other invited parties, interested in the restructur­ing of Abraaj Holdings specifical­ly, and other group entities more generally”, the company said.

The purpose of the meeting was “to maintain a constructi­ve dialogue with the group’s creditors and make further orderly progress, in the interests of all stakeholde­rs, towards a consensual resolution of all outstandin­g issues”, Abraaj said.

A company spokesman declined to identify participan­ts, but said all the group creditors were attending. Senior management, including the group’s chief executive Arif Naqvi and the company’s advisers, updated stakeholde­rs on the progress of discussion­s with potential buyers of the Abraaj Investment Management business, according to the company statement.

Sale of the funds management business along with the company’s stakes in various companies, such as Pakistani utility K-electric, are among the measures which would help resolve potential liquidity problems, Abraaj told creditors in an earlier meeting, according to a Bloomberg report.

Colony NorthStar, however, ended talks to buy a majority stake in Abraaj’s fund-management unit after its due diligence efforts raised concerns about the company, Bloomberg reported, citing sources. Cerberus Capital Management is still in discussion­s and is carrying out its own due diligence.

The Middle East’s biggest buyout company, which at its peak had more than $13.6 billion (Dh49.96bn) of assets under management, is reeling from allegation­s of misusing funds in a healthcare investment vehicle that deployed capital from investors including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the World Bank’s Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, Britain’s CDC Group and Proparco Group of France. The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times in February claimed some of the 24 investors in the $1bn Abraaj Growth Markets Health Fund (AGHF) had hired forensic accountant­s to investigat­e what had happened to some of the money invested in the fund.

Abraaj at the time dismissed the reports as “inaccurate and misleading” and said unused capital in AGHF was returned in December following discussion­s with investors.

On February 8, the company said that a KPMG review of the company’s health fund found no misuse of funds and all payments and receipts were in order. The accounting firm however was later said to have carried out an internal review into its audits, according to a Bloomberg report in May.

The allegation­s of misuse have snowballed and the company founded by Mr Naqvi in 2002 is now reorganisi­ng its structure. It has subsequent­ly returned capital in a new global fund, and has delayed an initial public offering or sale of its North African hospitals business, and pared about 15 per cent of its total workforce.

As part of the reorganisa­tion efforts, Mr Naqvi ceded control of the fund management unit in February and the company decided to temporaril­y suspend deployment of capital, other than on transactio­ns for which commitment­s are already final, it said at the time without specifying how long the suspension will remain.

Abraaj yesterday said it would discuss “ongoing transactio­ns and other matters” at the meeting with stakeholde­rs, without specifying the agenda.

The company owes about $1bn in debt to creditors, according to a Reuters report.

Dubai’s Mashreq, Noor, Commercial Bank of Dubai and French lender Societe Generale are among the major creditors of the company, with Mashreq having the biggest exposure, according to media reports.

Houlihan Lokey is advising Abraaj on its debt and the sale of its investment management business. The co-chief executives of the investment management unit, Omar Lodhi and Selcuk Yorganciog­lu, are also attending the meeting to provide their perspectiv­es on the current status of the process, Abraaj said.

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