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- Is Dubai a Better Play on Real Estate Recovery Than the U.K. or U.S.?
- Peter Cooper submits: Dubai property prices have slumped this autumn and villas that sold for AED13m in the spring have dropped by almost half of that. Luxury apartments are difficult to shift at any price while even affordable units are not easy to sell. Off-plan is as dead as...
- External links 2008-12-17
- UAE Keeps Market Intervention Down, Trusts Economic Forces
- Peter Cooper submits: It is interesting to compare and contrast the approach of the UAE Central Bank to the global economic crisis with that of the Federal Reserve and Bank of England. Local bank interest rates have been allowed to rise in the UAE because the real estate...
- External links 2009-01-14
- Did Emerging Markets Enter a New Bull Market?
- Peter Cooper submits: Templeton Asset Management chairman Mark Mobius has had a long, and at times successful career as a specialist in emerging markets. He says the next bull rally in emerging markets has just started. Should he be believed? A Reuters report from Shanghai boldly claimed that Dr....
- External links 2009-03-24
- Could This Crisis Have a Middle East Peace Dividend?
- Peter Cooper submits: A presentation from Citi C to its private banking clients in the UAE yesterday highlighted the possibility that President Obama’s peace mission in the Middle East could bring a new era of peace and prosperity to the region. This proposal will be ridiculed by older hands...
- External links 2009-05-19
- UAE-Saudi Border Delays: Bad for Business
- Peter Cooper submits: Over the past month, trucks heading into Saudi Arabia from the UAE have faced new border checks that have resulted in a 24-kilometer tail back and long delays in the summer heat, reported Gulf News today. This situation is not good for business. Delays...
- External links 2009-06-11
- $59 Billion Dubai Debt Default Could Have Much Wider Implications
- Peter Cooper submits: Emerging stock markets around the world will undergo a risk reassessment after the news of a $59 billion debt payment suspension in Dubai, and a correction from current market highs looks inevitable. These overbought markets are very vulnerable to sudden shocks. S&P told the Financial Times...
- External links 2009-11-26
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