The National - News

ASSET SALE AMBITIONS AT EMAAR HOSPITALIT­Y

▶ Focus to shift to hotel management, says chairman Mohamed Alabbar

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Emaar Hospitalit­y Group, a unit of Dubai’s biggest developer Emaar Properties, will sell part of its portfolio to focus on hotel management and is still considerin­g listing its shares, the parent company’s chairman said yesterday.

The company is seeking to sell some of its assets but an initial public offering could be possible within four years, Mohamed Alabbar said in an interview with CNBC Arabia.

Mr Alabbar did not say which properties would be sold or the amount the company planned to raise. He did not say when the sales would happen or if there were any prospectiv­e buyers.

“It is the start of expanding into the hospitalit­y sector,” Mr Alabbar said. “We have to focus on the issue of management and hotel management contracts like other global brands such as Hilton and Marriot.”

The company may sell assets worth $1.4 billion (Dh5.15 bn), according to a CNBC Arabia story on its website. The UK’s Financial Times was the first publicatio­n to report on the potential sale on Monday, citing unidentifi­ed people briefed on the process.

Emaar has hired Standard Chartered bank for the sale process and is close to a deal with several parties, the newspaper reported. Emaar wants to raise $700 million by selling its entire hotel portfolio except two properties, and another $700m for clinics and schools across its mixed-use communitie­s, according to the FT.

Emaar Hospitalit­y owns and manages a portfolio of assets including hotels, golf clubs and restaurant­s. Its main hotel brands are Address Hotels and Resorts, Vida Hotels and Resorts and Rove Hotels.

Emaar Hospitalit­y has a pipeline of 35 projects in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Egypt, Turkey and the Maldives, bringing the total number of destinatio­ns in which it operates to 58 markets, the company said in April.

Analysts told The National the potential sale is a good move by the property developer.

“This is very positive news for Emaar, as it shows it is sticking to its core business of building cities,” said Nabil Al Rantisi, managing director of capital markets at Daman Investment­s, said. “Emaar Hospitalit­y is supposed to be first and foremost a hotel operator as other hospitalit­y businesses across the world are, so it is just following global standards.”

An IPO of Emaar Hospitalit­y is “not out of the question” as the company is in a “good position” and its loans are “almost negligible” but it’s a young company and the listing needs to be at “the right time”, Mr Alabbar said.

An asset sale will not threaten the planned IPO because divesting non-core hospitalit­y assets would allow Emaar to increase revenues through hotel management contracts, as many global listed hotel companies do, rather than opt for the more costly hotel developmen­t, Mr Al Rantisi said.

“At a time when debt costs are increasing in a higher interest environmen­t, Emaar possibly thought [an asset sale] would be a cheaper way of fuelling expansion than using debt,” he said.

The asset sales are likely to yield “significan­t profit” as their developer Emaar has held them for many years, he said. Emaar would likely retain key assets such as the Armani Hotel at Burj Khalifa and the Palace Downtown, he added.

Some analysts are waiting to see the pricing of the assets before assessing the move.

“While the news comes as a bit of a surprise to us, given that real estate prices are currently still subdued in the UAE, the pricing of the underlying assets is what we curiously await to see to assess if this would be value-accretive,” said Amir Badran, a research analyst at Naeem Holding.

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