Arab Times

Saudi’s AHAB turns to new bankruptcy law

Bid to reach a settlement with creditors

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DUBAI, Dec 3, (RTRS): Conglomera­te Ahmad Hamad Algosaibi and Brothers (AHAB) has become the first company to file for a settlement under Saudi Arabia’s new bankruptcy law, seeking to resolve the kingdom’s longest-running and largest debt dispute.

The company hopes the move will help to bring a conclusion to creditor talks that have rumbled on since AHAB and Saad Group defaulted on about $22 billion of debt in 2009.

The law, which came into effect in August 2018, is the latest of the kingdom’s reforms aimed at attracting foreign investment and reducing the economy’s dependence on oil.

AHAB said on Monday that it had petitioned the Commercial Court in Dammam for a protective settlement procedure under the law. The mechanism, similar to Chapter 11 proceeding­s in the United States, offers a socalled cram-down provision, preventing minority dissenting creditors from blocking a settlement agreed by the majority.

“Filing under the law will allow AHAB to continue as a going concern, preserve the livelihood­s of thousands of employees and their families, support the national economy and enhance the reputation of Saudi Arabia in internatio­nal markets,” said Simon Charlton, AHAB’s chief restructur­ing officer.

“It will send a signal that Saudi Arabia has a mechanism for resolving complex restructur­ing and debt defaults and is committed to the equal treatment of Saudi and internatio­nal creditors.”

If successful, the move would give creditors an immediate return of 10-15 cents on the dollar, with the potential for further asset recovery after that, Charlton said.

AHAB’s settlement plan currently has the support of 70 percent of creditors by number and 52 percent by debt value. Saudi banks and some internatio­nal creditors are among those not in agreement.

Under the bankruptcy law, AHAB needs two thirds of creditors by value to approve the deal.

Government efforts to disentangl­e the AHAB and Saad debt dispute have intensifie­d since 2016, when it formed a three-judge Joint Directorat­e of Enforcemen­t at the General Court in Al Khobar (JDEK). The court has handled creditor claims against AHAB and began a liquidatio­n process for Saad Group.

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