The National - News

Drake & Scull plans to resume trading of its shares on DFM after five-year break

- FAREED RAHMAN

Dubai-based contractor Drake & Scull Internatio­nal plans to resume trading its shares on the Dubai Financial Market after the company increased its share capital by Dh300 million ($82 million).

This follows the acceptance by the Dubai Courts of its restructur­ing plan that writes off 90 per cent of its debt, it said.

The company will hold a general assembly meeting on March 27 to seek the approval of shareholde­rs for the resumption of trading and the increase of its share capital.

If approved by shareholde­rs, the shares of the contractor will be traded on DFM for the first time in more than five years.

Drake & Scull fell on hard times during the three-year oil price slump that began in 2014 and heavily affected the property and constructi­on sector in the region. Trading of its shares was suspended in November 2018 after the company reported heavy financial losses.

Last year, DSI announced it intended to write off 90 per cent of its debts and convert the remaining 10 per cent into mandatory convertibl­e sukuk as part of a restructur­ing plan.

The company obtained approval from creditors who account for 67 per cent of the company’s total debt value, exceeding the threshold needed for the restructur­ing plan under the UAE’s Bankruptcy Law, DSI said at the time. It submitted a request to the court to approve the restructur­ing plan.

In 2022, DSI completed its restructur­ing plan after the company achieved the required voting percentage from its 600-plus creditors for a consensual agreement.

The financial restructur­ing is the second that DSI has undergone. In 2017, a capital restructur­ing took place that resulted in Dh1.7 billion worth of shares being cancelled to expunge historic losses, with private equity firm Tabarak Investment committing Dh500 million for a stake in the company.

In the third quarter of 2021, DSI also approached Dubai Courts, requesting the company to be subject to restructur­ing procedures in accordance with the emergency provisions of UAE Bankruptcy Law.

DSI has also accused its previous management of falsely inflating asset prices ahead of the company’s initial public offering.

“This progress wouldn’t have been achieved without the support of DFM, Securities and Commoditie­s Authority and the different government entities, as well as the efforts of the board of directors along with the efforts of the company executives,” said Shafiq Abdelhamid, chairman of Drake & Scull.

He said the shareholde­rs’ strong participat­ion in the meeting and for the subscripti­on in the new additional share capital increase was “a key step to the success of the restructur­ing plan”.

The company reported higher net losses in 2023 compared with the previous year, despite a rise in revenue.

Its total net loss for the year reached Dh352.1 million compared with Dh224.3 million for the same period the previous year, according to its recent financial statement.

Revenue for the period rose about 16 per cent to Dh93.8 million. The company had Dh356 million worth of assets by the end of last year.

The company will hold its general assembly meeting on March 27 to seek the approval of shareholde­rs

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