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Business / Middle East Business

Gulf Capital to raise $360m Islamic loan

Published: 21 May 2013 - 12:28 am | Last Updated: 01 Feb 2022 - 12:58 pm

DUBAI: Abu Dhabi private equity firm Gulf Capital is close to signing a Dh1.32bn ($359.38m) Islamic loan for its company Gulf Marine Services, some of which will be paid out to investors as dividends.

Gulf Marine, the largest operator and owner of jack-up barges in the Middle East, said yesterday it was due to sign the syndicated Islamic loan with Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank.

“The funds we are raising will partly be used to buy a new vessel, refinance debt and pay investors dividends. It’s a good time to refinance debt,” Gulf Capital’s Chief Executive Karim El Solh said.    

Gulf Capital, which owns 79 percent of Gulf Marine, had hoped to receive about $500m from the sale of the group but talks collapsed last year partly due to financing issues and differences over valuation. 

The chief executive reiterated that Gulf Capital was still exploring a potential stock market listing for Gulf Marine — one of the biggest assets in its portfolio — on a major stock market such as London or Singapore in two years’ time.   

Private equity firms buy companies with the aim of selling or listing them later at a profit.

Two industry sources close to the company said that Gulf Capital would use the loan to pay out $100m to shareholders through a dividend recapitalisation. El Solh said the dividend recapitalisation portion was less than a $100m but he declined to specify the value. 

Dividend recapitalisations, a process that adds to a company’s existing borrowings so it can pay a dividend, are becoming more common among European and Middle East private equity firms as a lack of M&A activity has prompted them to look for other ways to get value out of assets. 

Gulf Capital’s dividend recap deal follows a similar move by Bahrain’s Investcorp for its Berlin Packaging business, in which the firm raised a new $610m loan to fund a payout to shareholders and existing management.

In the first quarter of 2013, UK pet-shop chain Pets at Home  and Spanish metal packaging firm Mivisa  both did dividend recapitalisations.  

Gulf Capital, which has around $2bn in assets under management, plans to double them 2018, El-Solh said earlier in the year.

Reuters