SHAKE IT UP: UAE share ownership rules change

The United Arab Emirates' market regulator unveiled a major overhaul of stock ownership rules in the Gulf Arab state, in a bid to force more disclosure in takeover deals and boost transparency.
June 12, 2012 5:47 by Reuters
The United Arab Emirates’ market regulator unveiled a major overhaul of stock ownership rules in the Gulf Arab state, in a bid to force more disclosure in takeover deals and boost transparency.
The new regulations by the Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) requires buyers to inform the stock market if they intend to buy 30 percent or more of a listed company in the UAE. It was not clear when the guidelines would come into effect.
The regulator can reject proposed transactions if it deems them to be against the interests of shareholders or the economy.
The move comes a month after Abu Dhabi state fund Aabar Investments said it had accumulated a 20.8 percent-stake in Dubai contractor Arabtec Holding through different subsidiaries.
Aabar’s chairman – who is also Arabtec chairman – was quoted by a local newspaper at the time as saying the fund had a 53 percent position. A stock market source told Reuters Aabar owned 53 percent of Arabtec.
The new rules require an investor pool together all holdings in a specific company – whether held by family members, companies and affiliates – and inform the regulator if the ownership is above the stipulated five percent mark.
“The board agreed during the meeting to make adjustments to the disclosure and transparency system in order to develop the legislation governing the functioning of financial markets,” the SCA said in a statement posted on state news agency WAM.
The UAE, classified as a frontier market by index complier MSCI, lacks a proper takeover code which makes mergers of publicly listed companies difficult. Gauging ownership levels in some listed companies is complicated by cross holdings through affiliates and separate vehicles which can belong to the same entity.
Calls for more governance and transparency heightened after the Aabar/Arabtec moves with the construction firm’s shares more than doubling this year.
Aabar, which tried to buy Arabtec for $1.7 billion in a failed 2010 takeover, has not disclosed what its intentions are with regard to the stock build up and minority investors have been concerned their interests would be overlooked.
Last year, the UAE postponed draft regulations on its nascent asset management industry, which were seen as a key step for investor protection and boosting market confidence, after market players voiced concerned that some of the proposals lacked clarity, sources said.
(Reporting by Isabel Coles, Dinesh Nair; Editing by)
More on Analysis
-
Over 90% of passwords vulnerable to hacking
-
‘Renewable energy absolutely necessary’ – Saudi
-
Real cost of sending your child to a Dubai school
-
BurgerFuel rockets its way across Dubai
-
Middle East deadly virus – what do we call it?
-
BurgerFuel’s aggressive expansion plans
-
Qatar’s Leverage Over Banks Is On The Wane
-
First report by Etisalat covering global footprint
-
Qatar Should Consider More Flexible Exchange Rate – Central Banker
-
Yahoo on Tumblr: ‘we promise not to screw it up’
-
Arabtec workers: strike will continue
-
Kuwait: expats sent packing
-
Dubai Labourers on ‘rare’ labour protest
-
Tumblr officially off the market
-
A major step for Turkey
-
Dusting off the Emirates ID card
-
Turkish Airlines Can Ride Out Turbulence
-
Air Berlin doesn’t need Etihad’s help
-
Turkey’s IMF emancipation deserves cautious cheer
-
Nokia charging back with full force
Lately on Kipp
-
Dubai ruler makes horse doping illegal
-
CEO-elect of UAE’s fraud-hit RAKBANK has quit
-
Over 90% of passwords vulnerable to hacking
-
‘Renewable energy absolutely necessary’ – Saudi
-
NEC Display Solutions launches Full HD 3D ready compact meeting room projector
-
Saudi Arabia confirms another death from SARS-like virus
Gold iPad at Burj Al Arab
Minimum wage ‘unfair’ for employers?
Taking on Abercrombie & Fitch
Fake pilot ‘on the run’
“Your customers aren’t fools”
Behind the curtain of Simone Heng
Chatting with the man behind Dubai City Pass
A business discussion with the author of ‘Connect The Dots’
































