Emaar Q1 Net Profit Beats Forecast

Dubai's Emaar Properties reported a 44 percent rise in first-quarter profit on Saturday; made a profit of 606 million dirhams ($165 million), compared to 421 million dirhams during the same period last year
April 29, 2012 9:01 by kippreport
Dubai’s Emaar Properties reported a 44 percent rise in first-quarter profit on Saturday, beating analysts’ forecasts, as the developer shifted away from the battered property market and booked gains in its retail and hospitality operations. The builder of the world’s tallest tower made a profit of 606 million dirhams ($165 million), compared to 421 million dirhams during the same period last year, it said in an emailed statement. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast an average profit for the quarter of 496.75 million dirhams.
Revenue was 1.8 billion dirhams, with malls and retail businesses contributing 651 million dirhams and hospitality contributing 403 million dirhams, the company said in its statement. Revenues from the firm’s malls and hospitality segments grew 25 per cent compared to the same period in 2011. Emaar, which saw sales of apartments plunge 85 percent last year, is gradually shifting its focus from the bleak Dubai property market towards the more profitable hospitality and retail sectors.
Dubai’s largest developer by market value sold 158 residential units during the period, of which 117 were in Dubai and 41 units in the international markets. New unit sales in Dubai exceeded 620 million dirhams in the quarter, the company said.
House prices in Dubai have tumbled about 60 percent from a 2008 peak and no turnaround is expected this year, with supply continuing to outstrip demand.
Emaar’s 2011 earnings report showed it was owed 595 million dirhams by troubled mortgage affiliate Amlak, in which it has a 48 percent stake – Emaar claimed the amount was fully recoverable. The federal government cut Amlak’s debt burden by $1.1 billion, in a renewed effort to revive the lender, whose stock has been halted since 2008.
(Additional reporting by Rania El Gamal; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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