Mudah2an ga loncat kodok ya Mbah... Klo loncat kodok biasanya cuma di tempat.

Mendingan loncat harimau, klo loncat harimau kan jauuuuuhhhhh.....



 
Regards,...
DvD™

"In Te Domine, Speravi Non Confundar In Aeternum"
________________________________





________________________________
From: jsx_consultant <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, December 14, 2009 1:24:43 PM
Subject: [ob] Sesi 2 open bakal langsung loncat

  
Abu Dhabi Bails Out Dubai World With $10 Billion (Update1) Share Business 
ExchangeTwitterFace book| Email | Print | A A A 
By Haris Anwar

Dec. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Abu Dhabi provided $10 billion to help Dubai World, the 
state-owned holding company, meet its obligations, including $4.1 billion 
needed to repay an Islamic bond maturing today for the real-estate unit Nakheel 
PJSC. 

Dubai will use the rest of the money to pay "trade creditors and contractors as 
well as meet interest expenses and company working capital through April 30, 
2010 -- conditioned on the company being successful in negotiating a standstill 
as previously announced" on Nov. 25, the Dubai government said in an e-mailed 
statement today. 

Dubai World said Dec. 1 it's seeking to restructure $26 billion of debt, less 
than half the $59 billion of liabilities it had at the end of 2008. Nakheel, 
which is building palm tree- shaped islands off the emirate's coast, posted a 
first-half loss of 13.4 billion dirhams ($3.65 billion) as revenue fell and it 
wrote down the value of land and property. 

"It comes as a relief for the market, underpinning hopes that the implicit 
government support for Dubai corporate issuance is intact," said Jason Watts, 
head of credit trading at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney. "Whilst we 
are not out of the woods yet, it is definitely a step in the right direction." 

Market Reaction 

Asian stocks and U.S. index futures rose after the bailout announcement. The 
MSCI Asia Pacific Index increased 0.1 percent to 119.80 at 2:10 p.m.. in Tokyo. 
Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index advanced 0.6 percent.. The euro 
strengthened 0.1 percent against the yen, recovering from a drop of 0.8 
percent, and Treasuries lost gains that had sent yields on benchmark 10- year 
notes down three basis points. 

Nakheel's bond had surged 18 percent in the last two trading days to 53 cents 
on the dollar, according to Citigroup Inc. prices, on speculation the developer 
will seek to avoid a default. They traded as low as 45 cents on Dec. 9. Dubai's 
benchmark stock index tumbled 19 percent since Dubai World said it would seek a 
"standstill" agreement on its debt repayment. 

While Dubai's government owns 100 percent of Dubai World, it hasn't guaranteed 
the company's debt and creditors must help it restructure, Abdulrahman Al 
Saleh, director general of Dubai's Department of Finance, said Nov. 30. 

Nakheel Bond 

Nakheel's repayment on the $3.52 billion bond was the biggest maturity for a 
Dubai entity since global credit markets froze after the September 2008 
collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Nakheel accumulated debt during a 
five-year real- estate boom in Dubai, when the sheikhdom borrowed $10 billion 
and its state-controlled companies $70 billion to help diversify the economy. 
The company had liabilities of 73.3 billion dirhams, including term loans of 
16.3 billion dirhams. 

Nakheel's 2009 sukuk redeems at 115.52 cents, increasing the total payment to 
$4.1 billion. The amount includes a 6 percent premium to bondholders because 
the company didn't do an initial public offering during the life of the bond, 
and the remaining part of the annual coupon. 

Dubai's government will also announce a "comprehensive reorganization law, a 
framework that is based upon internationally accepted standards for 
transparency and creditor protection," according to the statement. "This law 
will be available should Dubai World and its subsidiaries be unable to achieve 
an acceptable restructuring of its remaining obligations. " 

Islamic bonds, known as sukuk, are governed by Shariah laws barring investors 
from profiting from the exchange of money. 


 


      

Kirim email ke