Wednesday, January 12, 2011

2011-2012 Dubai Futures Pictures

Burj-Dubai

For the past two years governments have spent close to US$12 trillion and central banks have held interest rates to near zero to end the financial crisis. Even so, as to be expected, most of the previous excesses were never quite worked off.

UAE

UAE and its neighbours

Dubai

Dubai is just a town at the north eastern part of UAE

In Dubai, residential real estate prices have dropped more than 50%. Across the UAE, some $450 billion of construction work had been scrapped.

Burj Dubai2

Dubai City at night

Recently, Dubai World, the UAE’s largest state-owned conglomerate, announced that it would impose a six-month standstill on debt repayments.

Dubai4Dubai Bridge

Dubai is not rich in oil. It borrowed heavily to fund its grand ambitions. Nakheel, a government-sponsored developer, used part of these borrowed funds to develop the Palm Islands and other spectacular land reclamation projects.

Palm

Palm Islands

Hyatt3

Burj Al Arab Hotel

Dubai’s sovereign and state-controlled companies’ debts could reach $80 billion, in excess of its GDP.

Dubai Towers1

Moving Towers

Dubai World was technically not government-backed, but investors had perceived it to be so and acted accordingly.

Dubai Aquarium

Aquarium

Wall Street tells us that government debt is “risk-free.” Don’t you believe it. History is littered with sovereign defaults.

Dubai Opera House2

Dubai Opera House

Dubai’s oil-rich neighbours – Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and Abu Dhabi – command two thirds of the world’s oil and 45% of gas reserves. Debts levels are very low and high oil prices have enabled them to accumulate more than $1 trillion in reserves.

However, it is always possible for oil to drop below $40 per barrel.

Dubai Skiing

Dubai Skiing

Dubai Sports City2

Dubai Sports Complex

Trump Hotel Dubai

Trump Tower, Dubai

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