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Dubai Aerospace plans to double its fleet size

Middle East’s biggest aircraft lessor will place an order ‘when the pricing and timing is right’

- SARAH TOWNSEND

DAE has to sell about 300 aircraft and buy about 500 new aircraft over the next eight to 10 years FIRAZ TARAPORE DAE chief executive

Dubai Aerospace Enterprise, the Middle East’s biggest aircraft lessor, plans to double its fleet over the coming decade from 375 planes, as it expands after the acquisitio­n of Ireland’s Awas last August, its chief executive said.

Dubai government-owned DAE is in talks with plane makers Boeing and Airbus for a potential multibilli­on dollar order of around 400 narrow-body jets, said Firaz Tarapore.

“If you look at where we are today size-wise and in terms of industry evolution – the technology changes going through the fleets – we have to sell about 300 aircraft and buy about 500 new aircraft over the next eight to 10 years,” he said.

“It is very reasonable to say that the business should be at least two times what it is today, by the end of that period.”

The company hopes to place the order “when the pricing and timing is right”, Mr Tarapore said, but added that discussion­s are taking longer because of market conditions.

“The current supply situation is impacting rental levels negatively and making them inconsiste­nt with the acquisitio­n prices of aircraft,” he said.

The new order would be restricted to the popular narrowbody planes for which the lessor sees the greatest demand – principall­y, Boeing’s 737Max and Airbus’ 320neo.

DAE is also scouting for new acquisitio­ns and preparing for a “large liquidity event” in the next two months. The company was reportedly in talks to issue a $500m sukuk in 2019, but that issuance may be sooner, Mr Tarapore said.

“You will see us evaluate a large unsecured debt issuance, or a sukuk, or another form of alternativ­e liquidity, and this will be a 2018 event, not a 2019 one,” he said. “It will be to improve the unsecured portion of our borrowing on existing leverage.”

The issuance will be benchmark size ($500m or more), as DAE seeks to win investment grade rating. Ratings agencies S&P and Moody’s upwardly revised DAE’s corporate credit rating this month on “successful” integratio­n of Dublin’s lessor Awas.

The acquisitio­n raised DAE’s portfolio to around 400 aircraft worth $14 billion. DAE’s owned fleet is worth around $11 to $12bn, Mr Tarapore said, and will double over the next eight to 10 years to around $22.4bn.

Aircraft leasing is an increasing­ly competitiv­e business as the commercial aviation industry grows and airlines come under pressure to expand as well as restructur­e their fleet.

Globally, more than 42,700 new planes worth $6.3 trillion will be required over the next two decades, presenting a total market opportunit­y of $15tn, according to Boeing’s latest commercial outlook in July.

In the Middle East – which, together with Africa and South Asia, represents more than a third of DAE’s client base – airlines will require 2,990 new aircraft worth $754bn over the period, as passenger traffic in the region climbs by an average of 5 per cent a year to 2035, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n.

DAE’s financial performanc­e has been “very strong”, due to internal cost management by the company and an improvemen­t in its industry, Mr Tarapore said.

While revenues in the first half of 2018 trebled year-onyear to $711m – driven by the proportion­al increase in lease revenues from the new business – net profit rose more dramatical­ly, to $199m from $47m the year earlier, he said.

In January, DAE set up a dedicated asset management unit with plans to build a $5bn portfolio on behalf of institutio­nal investors in five years.

The company is on track to achieve that goal, Mr Tarapore said, with around $1.5bn of assets at present.

The chief executive declined to say whether DAE’s shareholde­rs would publicly list the group in the coming years.

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 ?? Leslie Pableo for The National ?? Firaz Tarapore of Dubai Aerospace Enterprise says the company is preparing for a large liquidity event
Leslie Pableo for The National Firaz Tarapore of Dubai Aerospace Enterprise says the company is preparing for a large liquidity event

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