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ADNOC Gas awards contracts

The $2.1bn contracts are aimed at enhancing LNG supply infrastructure.

ADNOC L&S buys stake in Navig8

The company will acquire the remaining stake in mid-2027.

DAE to acquire Nordic Aviation Capital

The terms of the transaction have not been disclosed.

Emirates’ first A350 takes flight

The airline operated the inaugural flight from Dubai to Edinburgh.

NDMC arranges $2.5bn credit facility

The Shariah-compliant facility spans a tenure of three years.

Creditors appoint financial advisers to oppose Emirates REIT $400 million exchange offer

    • Rothschild, Clifford Chance to challenge Emirates REIT’s $400 million exchange bid
    • Creditors likely to make a better counter offer

    A group of creditors has hired financial adviser Rothschild and law firm Clifford Chance to help oppose the terms of a proposal by Dubai-listed Emirates REIT to exchange $400 million in Islamic bonds for new instruments, according to a few media reports.

    Emirates REIT, a Sharia-compliant real estate investment trust, last week offered to exchange unsecured Islamic bonds, or sukuk, for secured ones to bolster its balance sheet.

    A group of bondholders including local and international funds, as well as regional banks, and representing around 40% of the sukuk holders, met on Sunday to appoint advisers and prepare a counter offer, three sources familiar with the matter said.

    The bondholders will revert to the company in the coming days to communicate their concerns and a committee of creditors plans to negotiate a better deal, one of the sources told a media company. Rothschild declined to comment and Clifford Chance did not immediately respond. REIT’s manage real estate assets that regularly generate profits, which are distributed to shareholders as dividends.

    The firm suffered after years of sluggish performance by Dubai’s real estate sector, which was exacerbated by the coronavirus outbreak. Last year, it appointed Houlihan Lokey to advise it on a strategic review. It plans to extend the existing bonds’ maturity to 2024 from 2022, as well as defer coupon payments for a year.

    Bondholders may instead try to re-set Emirates REIT’s management fees to improve cash flows, the three sources said. Emirates REIT is also asking bondholders to waive any past or ongoing dissolution events and breaches of transaction documents. Representatives of Equitativa, which manages Emirates REIT, and Houlihan Lokey reiterated on Sunday that the exchange offer was “investor-friendly” and that the new instruments would generate more market interest.