Antelope Valley Press

Emirati prosecutor­s looking into Dubai’s Union Properties

- By JON GAMBRELL and LUJAIN JO

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Emirati prosecutor­s said, Sunday, they launched a major investigat­ion into Dubai-based real estate developer Union Properties, saying they would probe allegation­s the long-troubled firm committed fraud and other offenses while trying to claw its way out of debt.

Union Properties, known for building Dubai Motor City, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

The announceme­nt by prosecutor­s renewed questions about the wider stability of Dubai’s boom-and-bust real estate market, which saw Union Properties pile on some $2 billion of debt during the city-state’s financial crisis over a decade ago. The company had nearly $500 million in debt at the end of last year, according to their financial filings.

A statement carried by the state-run WAM news agency said the investigat­ion involved allegation­s of the firm selling property at less than its real value and hiding the name of the beneficiar­y of the sale, as well as forging documents and other violations.

“The investigat­ion involves complaints lodged by the Securities and Commoditie­s Authority on allegation­s of financial violations committed by Khalifa Hassan al-Hammadi, chairman of the board of directors of Union Properties, along with some of its officials,” the WAM statement said.

A stock market filing by Union Properties identified a March 2020 transactio­n in which Amna al-Hammadi purchased a property for 30 million dirhams ($8.1 million) that had been earlier valued at 49.5 million dirhams ($13.4 million). Previous filings on the London Stock Exchange identified Amna as Khalifa al-Hammadi’s sister.

Neither Amna nor Khalifa al-Hammadi could be reach for comment. Union Properties’ filing sought to explain the sale by noting it came amid “the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and its accompanyi­ng negative effects — and in light of the company’s commitment to settle its debt towards its lenders.”

Other filings, on Sunday, to the Dubai Financial Market showed shareholde­rs wanted a vote later this week to possibly remove its Board of directors. Separately, the company said one of its subsidiari­es was involved in a lawsuit seeking nearly $1 billion, without elaboratin­g.

Shares in Union Properties fell as much as over 9% in trading Sunday on the Dubai Financial Market before closing down 4.83% to 26 fils a share, or 7 cents.

The firm’s current shareholde­r structure wasn’t immediatel­y clear, though a profile from the data firm Refinitiv showed its major investor as the Bluestone Fund.

Union Properties, like other firms, has struggled to come out of the shadow of Dubai’s 2009 financial crisis, when its property market collapsed. The city ultimately receive $20 billion in bailouts from Abu Dhabi, the Emirates’ oil-rich capital.

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