The National - News

RAK Properties turns to sukuk market to fund growth ambitions

Company may also seek fresh bank loans as it progresses Mina Al Arab project

- SARAH TOWNSEND

RAK Properties expects to tap the sukuk markets from 2019 and raise additional bank financing as it continues to deliver its 2.78 million square metres Mina Al Arab coastal project in Ras Al Khaimah.

“We always look at what is the optimal financing structure on a project-by-project basis, whether it’s sukuks or bank financing,” said Samuel Sidiqi, chief executive of RAK Properties, tolds The National. “Right now we are just using bank financing but we are open to examining sukuks. I don’t know if we would do this in 2019 or [at a later date]. We’d have to look at the markets and see what our requiremen­ts are. It’s certainly possible that we would also raise additional bank loans in the next 12 months,” he added.

Issuance of Sharia-compliant bonds in the GCC slowed by about 15 per cent in the first three quarters of this year on the back of tightening global liquidity and rising interest rates, according to a report by S&P Global Ratings last month. Mr Sidiqi, who was appointed in May, declined to disclose the size of the sukuk RAK Properties would issue if it went ahead with its plan.

The developer, which is listed on the Abu Dhabi stock exchange, is constructi­ng the Mina Al Arab and Hayat islands off the coast of RAK to create a cluster of beachfront mixeduse communitie­s.

It unveiled the second phase of Marbella Villas, a residentia­l scheme on the Dh3bn Hayat Island developmen­t, during the Cityscape Global exhibition in Dubai this week, and said the first phase of the 205-villa scheme had sold out. Elsewhere on Mina Al Arab, 800 apartments, 600 villas and a 1.2 kilometre-long corniche have been completed, Mr Sidiqi said.

The company is also building two hotels – the Anantara and InterConti­nental – and other housing schemes at varying stages of constructi­on, including Flamingo Villas, Gateway Residence, Bay Residences and Julphar Residences.

RAK Properties posted an 82 per cent drop in annual net profit to Dh4.3m for the second quarter of 2018, with lower sales and higher expenses hitting its earnings. Revenue from sale of properties stood at Dh2.9m, down from Dh82m in the second quarter of 2017, the company said in a bourse filing in August.

The sluggish UAE real estate market, which has experience­d residentia­l rents and sales prices decline by at least 10 per cent year-on-year in the past two years on the back of low oil prices, also had an impact.

“The market did affect the results, but it had more to do with what we were selling and when: there were more deliveries in 2017 than 2018,” Mr Sidiqi said.

“You’re going to have chunky bits here and there,” he said. “As a property company it is not helpful to look at results on a quarterly basis because you’re building projects over many years, and especially when you have off-plan sales.”

We’d have to see what our requiremen­ts are. It’s certainly possible that we would also raise additional bank loans SAMUEL SIDIQI RAK Properties CEO

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