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Dubai Financial Market
Investor PresentationQTR 3, 2013
www.dfm.ae
iCONTENTS
MENASA Region : Macroeconomics ………………………. 1
Dubai : Middle East’s Financial Hub ………………………. 5
UAE Capital Markets : DFM / ND / ADX ………………………. 9
Two Exchanges, One Market : DFM & ND …………………….... 14
Corporate Strategy : Going Forward …………………….... 24
THE REGION – MENASA / GCC/ UAE
AN ECONOMIC POWERHOUSE
www.dfm.ae
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 f
-5.0%
0.0%
5.0%
10.0%
15.0%
20.0%
25.0%
0
1,000,000,000,000
2,000,000,000,000
3,000,000,000,000
4,000,000,000,000
5,000,000,000,000
6,000,000,000,000
7,000,000,000,000
8,000,000,000,000
GDP Growth (%)
2
Iran
GDP 2012 (USD Millions)
7% of global GDP
MENASA REGION :SOLID ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS-PROMISING GROWTH
Source: IMF, World Bank
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 f
1.4%
1.6%
1.8%
1,750,000,000
1,800,000,000
1,850,000,000
1,900,000,000
1,950,000,000
2,000,000,000
2,050,000,000
2,100,000,000
2,150,000,000
Population Growth (%)
Population Projections29% of Global
Population
MEN
ASA
MEN
A
North
Am
erica
Sout
h Am
erica
Euro
pe
59
%
45
%
15
%
9%
10
%33
%
29
%
15
%
8%
8%
Oil Reserves Oil Production
Oil Reserves and Production (% of Global Total)
FDI Projections 2006 - 2013
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
e
2013
f
2014
f
2015
f
0.0%0.5%1.0%1.5%2.0%2.5%3.0%3.5%4.0%4.5%
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
FDI % of GDP
MENASA region is
emerging as a powerful
economic bloc with
tremendous growth
potential, combining the
sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) of the Mena region
to the economic
growth story of, say, India,
hence, the economic paradigm
shift towards this region from other emerging markets
www.dfm.ae
3
Iran
GCC REGION :LIQUIDITY ON THE BACK OF HIGH OIL PRICES –KEY EMERGING MARKET
Source: IMF, World Bank
Region was able to quickly recover from the
global crisis on the back
of strong fundamentals and high oil prices
The UAE, the second biggest Arab economy, is set to record 4% growth in GDP in 2013, led by a focus on adopting industrial policies that will drive sustainable development across the UAE.
-IMF 2013 Forecast
Country 2010 2011 2012 e 2013 f
Bahrain 4.1% 1.5% 3.6% 4.8%
Kuwait 3.4% 5.7% 4.5% 5.1%
Oman 4.1% 4.4% 3.6% 3.8%
Qatar 16.6% 18.7% 6.0% 4.3%Saudi Arabia 4.1% 6.8% 3.6% 4.4%
UAE 3.2% 3.3% 3.8% 4.0%
GCC – GDP Projections 2010 - 2013
UAE18%
Saudi Arabia62%
Qatar13%
Oman5%
Kuwait1%
Bahrain2%
GCC – FDI Share by Country 2011-12
Country S&P Moody's Fitch
Bahrain BBB Baa1 BBB
Kuwait AA Aa2 AA
Oman A A1 A
Qatar AA Aa2 AA-
Saudi Arabia AA- Aa3 AA-
UAE AA Aa2 AA-
GCC – Country Ratings 2011-12
GCC region accounted for US $ 70 Bn of FDI funds inflow
GCC Euro Area South Asia MENA
Competitiveness Ease of Doing Business
GCC Ranking 2011-12
GCC region rated most promising region under WEF & World Bank rating
25th 30th
26th 39th
32nd 80th 36th 99th
www.dfm.ae
UAE:GROWTH PROSPECTS
• Recovery in oil prices
• Strong growth in the non-hydrocarbon sector
• UAE’s service driven economy benefitting from the global trade
• USD 50 billion worth of infrastructural projects still under construction in UAE
UAE Import/Export Projections (% Growth)
Key C
on
trib
uto
rs t
o G
row
th
Oil / Gas as % of GDP (2012)
QATAR
UAE
SAUDI ARABIA
OMAN
BAHRAIN
61%
45%
41%
41%
21%
Source: Dubai Chamber of Commerce
4
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 (f) 2013 (f)
14
.4
8.3
35
.9
22
.4
-8.9
-1.5
9.2 9.8
5.0
10
.4
11
.2
12
.8
12
.6
-1.9
-4.2
10
.5
6.8
6.1
Imports Exports
DUBAI
THE FINANCIAL HUB OF MIDDLE EAST
www.dfm.ae
Strengths Reasoning
Highly sophisticated financial centre Dubai is ranked 7th as per ‘International Financial Centres Competitive Assessment Report’ , a competitive study of 15 key global and regional financial centres done by KPMG
Favorable business environment Dubai has been rated very high in ease of doing business ranking 19th globally -World Competitiveness Index
Strategic location with a strong logistics infrastructure to bolster trade
Trade capacity in UAE has tremendously improved over the years with free-zones like JAFZA and trade growth at 15% YTD 2013
Solid tourism sector Hotel occupancy rates remained high throughout 2012 at 90%, benefitting both tourism and trade activities.
- DSC, 2012 Report
Dubai’s core strengths
remain fundamentally
sound
Dubai GDP Share Breakdown by Economic Sectors – 2012
Source : Dubai Chamber of Commerce
“Our vision is clear, our goals are obvious, our strengths are great, our will is strong and we are ready. We want Dubai to be a global center of excellence, creativity and leadership”.
-HH Sh. Mohammed Ruler of Dubai
Well diversified economy based on international trade, banking and finance, tourism, information technology and infrastructure.
DUBAI:VISION & ECONOMIC STRENGTHS6
Government Sector5.2% Financial
Sector10.3%
Trade28.2%
Hotel & Restaurants4.2%
Real Es-tate &
Construc-tion
18.9%
Manufacturing14.3%
Trans-portation
13.4%
Others5.6%
www.dfm.ae
• Organizational restructuring of government departments & related entities
• Successful debt restructuring across all sectors with zero defaults
• GDP is projected to grow at 4% and above going forward, as per IMF, way above the average GDP growth of western counterparts
Key Achievements in 2013 :
• Dubai GDP growth for 2012 is recorded at 4.5%.
• 15% growth in direct foreign trade
• 8.5% growth in tourism as of YTD 2013 with 2012 recording 13% annual growth
• Dubai is ranked 19th in world competitiveness index up five positions from last year
• UAE ranks 14th in AT Kearney FDI Confidence Index serving as main hub for regional investment
• Real estate market is back on track with 9.1% growth in Q1-Q2, 2013 –making Dubai – the best growth performance internationally.
Seems like the stars
are aligning for Dubai
once again
While challenges remain, the Dubai economy is on a much sounder footing especially as much of the excesses and speculative elements of the economy have been weeded out. What Dubai is now left with is an unparalleled logistics, commercial, retail, communications and transportation infrastructure in the region - and ready for business in a region that is sitting in a fresh pile of cash thanks to high oil prices.
DUBAI:RECENT EVENTS7
www.dfm.ae
Strong
Oil and gas
Manufacturing
Agriculture
Electricity/Water
Communication
Governmentservices
Construction
Trade
Professionalservices
Financial services Tourism
Transportation and storage
Very weak Average
Dubai’s strength by international standards
Globally fast growing industrieswith a strong position in Dubai
Globally fastergrowing sectors
Future globalgrowth
2010– 2015
Globally slowergrowing sectors
Average globalGDP growth
Sectors qualified to be part of futuregrowth path
Source : DSP 2015
DUBAI:GROWTH PROSPECTS8
CAPITAL MARKETS
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
www.dfm.ae
Casablanca Stock Exchange
Algiers Stock Exchange
Tunis Stock Exchange
Libya Stock Exchange Egypt Stock
Exchange
Sudan Stock Exchange
Istanbul Stock Exchange
Tadawul
Tehran Stock Exchange
Qatar Exchange
Palestine Stock Exchange
Beirut Stock Exchange
Damascus Stock Exchange
Iraq Stock Exchange
Kuwait Stock Exchange
Muscat Stock Market
Karachi Stock Exchange
Amman Stock Exchange
Cash & Fixed Income Equity,
Index & Commodity
Futures Only UAE offer a wide array of trade exchanges/products in
the entire MENA region
CAPITAL MARKETS:KEY EXCHANGES IN THE REGION1
0
www.dfm.ae
55,4
25 1
36,7
07
420,4
74
319,1
56
507,4
74
239,1
83
213,3
77
199,0
86
180,0
93
183,8
37
249,1
65
END-OF-PERIOD MARKET CAPITALIZATION
(2003 – YTD Q3, 2013)
Source : DFM/ND Analytics
MARKET CAPITALIZATIONLIQUIDITY REVIEW1
136% growth in market cap
in the first 9 months of 2013
www.dfm.aeSource : DFM/ND Analytics
TRADED VALUE - DFM (2003 – YTD Q3, 2013 )
DFM exchange has seen a
surge in trading volumes driven by improved domestic economic
environment and
enhanced banking system
liquidity. The YTD trading
volumes are up 166%
YoY on the DFM
exchange
TRADE VALUES :DFM PERFORMANCE1
2
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD Q3, 2013
3,9
97 5
1,0
56
405,1
61
347,9
80
379,4
10
305,2
02
173,5
08
69,6
65
32,0
88
48,7
74 1
07,8
63
www.dfm.ae
VELOCITY(2003 – YTD Q3, 2013)
MARKET VELOCITYDFM PERFORMANCE
Source : DFM Analytics
13
7.2%
37.3%
96.4%
109.0%
74.8%
127.6%
81.3%
35.0%
17.8%26.5%
58.1%
DFM / NASDAQ DUBAI
TWO EXCHANGES, ONE MARKET
www.dfm.ae
Regulatory Authorities
Stock Exchanges ADX DFM NASDAQ Dubai
SCA(UAE Regulations)
DFSA (International Regulations)
19
.9%
79.62%
1%
19.38%
66.67%
33.33%
Public Stake
Ownership Structure
100%
Government of
ABU DHABI
UAE MARKETS :REGULATIONS & OWNERSHIP1
5
www.dfm.ae
02/0
110/0
118/0
126/0
103/0
211/0
219/0
227/0
206/0
314/0
322/0
330/0
307/0
415/0
423/0
401/0
509/0
517/0
525/0
502/0
610/0
618/0
626/0
604/0
712/0
720/0
728/0
705/0
813/0
821/0
829/0
806/0
914/0
922/0
930/0
908/1
016/1
024/1
001/1
109/1
117/1
125/1
103/1
211/1
219/1
227/1
2
1200
1400
1600
1800
2000
2200
2400
2600
2800
3000
70% Index growth in YTD Q3, 2013 as
compared to 2012
DFM : GENERAL INDEXPERFORMANCE AS OF YTD Q3, 2013
INDEX PERFORMANCE
-- 2012 -- 2013
16
2762.5
Source : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
www.dfm.ae
TRADING ACTIVITY BY CATEGORY
Trading Activity :
Client type Mix
2013 has been a
stabilizing year with
institutional investor trading
hovering around to
24%, however with the MSCI
upgrade to emerging market
status, a surge in
institutional activity is
expected in last quarter of
the year
YTD Q3,2013 – TRADING ACTIVITY PATTERN
AVERAGE RETAIL TRADING = 75.98%
AVERAGE INSTITUTIONAL TRADING = 24.02%
DFM : TRADING PROFILESRETAIL VS. INSTITUTIONAL MIX1
7
Source : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD Q3, 2013
85.4
0%
77.6
0%
70.7
0%
79.1
0%
77.6
0%
73.0
0%
75.4
7%
75.9
8%
14.6
0%
22.4
0%
29.3
0%
20.9
0%
22.4
0%
27.0
0%
24.5
3%
24.0
2%
RETAIL INSTITUTIONAL
www.dfm.aeSource : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
UAE VS. Non UAETrading Activity
Non UAE Trading Activity
DFM : TRADING ACTIVITYLOCAL VS. FOREIGN INVESTMENT1
8
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD Q3,2013
69% 70% 63% 60% 56% 52% 54% 57%
31% 30% 37% 40% 44% 48% 46% 43%
UAE Non-UAE
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD Q3,2013
9% 6% 5% 6% 6% 6% 6% 7%
17%
12%14%
22% 23% 22%25% 22%
5%
12% 18%12% 15% 20%
15% 14%
GCC OTHER ARABS OTHERS
www.dfm.ae
Trade Activity – By SectorYTD Q3,
2013
Source : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
DFM : TRADE MATRICESSECTOR MIX1
9 TELECOM3.2% FINANCE &
INVESTMENT16.7%
BANKS19.7%
INSURANCE1.9%
SERVICES7.0%
REAL ESTATE43.9%
TRANSPORT7.6%
www.dfm.ae
Distribution of Share
Ownership YTD Q3,
2013
BY TYPE OF INVESTOR BY NATIONALITY
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP AS % OF MARKET CAPITALIZATION
DFM : OWNERSHIP SHARE OWNERSHIP RATIOS2
0
Source : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
29%
71%
RETAILINSTITUTIONAL
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD Q3,2013
10%13%
8%12% 12% 11% 12%
16%
Foreign Ownership
3.21% 5.12%
7.33%
84.34%
ARABGCCOTHERSUAE
www.dfm.ae
02/01/2013 3/2/2013 4/3/2013 2/4/2013 1/5/2013 30/05/2013 1/7/2013 30/07/2013 1/9/2013 30/09/20130
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
DFM Share Price
Movement
YTD Q3, 2013
Trade Volume
YTD 2010
AEDAED 2.05
DFM : MARKET ACTIVITY DFM SHARE PRICE2
1
Source : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
www.dfm.ae
Revenue Breakdow
n2008-
Q3,2013
DFM : REVENUE MIX 2
2
Source : Reuters / DFM / ND Analytics
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD Q3, 2013
63.2%75.3%
60.2%
43.0%
58.2%
84.3%
32.0%18.4%
28.5%
30.6%
21.0%
10.0%
4.8% 6.3%11.3%
26.4%20.8%
5.7%
Trading Fee & Commisions Investment Income Other Income
www.dfm.ae
• Easy accessibility
• No income and capital gains tax
• Non-restricted repatriation of capital
• Minimal foreign exchange risk
• Foreign ownership allowed for most listed companies
• Diverse base of listed companies
• Local and international regulatory framework
• Innovative trading capabilities
DFM : INVESTOR-CENTRICATTRACTIVE PLATFORM FOR LOCAL & INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS2
3
DFM : INVESTOR-CENTRICATTRACTIVE PLATFORM FOR LOCAL & INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS
CORPORATE STRATEGY
DFM – NASDAQ DUBAI
www.dfm.ae
• Upgrade to MSCI Emerging Market Status
• G30 Compliance and addressing the gaps
• Organizational restructuring and monetization of financial services
• Initiating investor –centric services to increase liquidity and trading activities post merger
• Smartphone based services
• IPO focus and listings
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES ADDRESSING FUTURE GROWTH2
5
www.dfm.ae
Key criteria's
for Emerging market status
Key Features
DFM has met all
eligibitly criteria's for MSCI upgrade and is been
moved to Emerging
Market status
effective June 2014
CRITERIA
A. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
A.1 Sustainability of economic development
B. SIZE AND LIQUIDITY REQUIREMENTS
B.1 Number of companies meeting the following standard index criteria
i) Company size ( Full market cap )
ii) Security size ( Float market cap )
iii) Security liquidity
C. MARKET ACCESSIBILITY CRITERIA
C.1 Openness to foreign ownership
C.2 Ease of capital inflows/outflows
C.3 Efficiency of operational framework
C.4 Stability of the institutional framework
Emerging
No requirement
3
USD 873 Mn
USD 436 Mn
15% ATVR
Significant
Significant
Good & tested
Modest
DFM / ND
Strong economic fundamentals with expected GDP growth of
4.5% for 2013-14
12
USD 68 Bn
USD 18 Bn
55%
49% (Current Foreign
Ownership – 16%)
Significant
Good & tested *
Good ** Successful DVP implementation and introduction of SBL as part of G30 compliance
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES MSCI UPGRADE2
6
www.dfm.ae
Delivery Vs. Payment :
Implementation
Key Features
UNCHANGED
1. T+2 settlement cycle;
2. Pre-validation of sell orders will be maintained. This means a seller’s agent trading account with local custodian must have securities balances for pre-validation before a sell order can become a valid order.
CHANGED
1. Permitting Local Custodians ability to reject cash and securities settlement of sell trades back to executing Broker for settlement if Local Custodians do not receive (matched) settlement instructions from clients – Local Custodians now have full control of assets [unnecessary to operate dual accounts].
2. Enhancing current rejection process for settlement of purchase trades;
3. Introduction of a Late Confirmation Period of T+4
4. Securities fails handling mechanisms which comprises:
a. Optional buy-in [between T+2 and T+3]
b. Mandatory buy-in by DFM on T+4.
c. Cash close out against the Local Custodian client [if mandatory buy-in against selling Broker by DFM fails on T+4].
5. Penalties for Late Confirmation.
Reasons for adopting the changes
1. Reduce risk in Local Brokers having unlimited access to the Local Custodian Client Agent Trading Account.
2. Eliminate the requirement to use a dual account structure.
3. Progression in meeting international best practices under a pre-validation of sale market infrastructure.
4. Facilitate the achievement of Emerging Market status under the MSCI market classification.
DvP methodology
has been successfully implemented at DFM as of
2012
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES G-30 COMPLIANCE2
7
www.dfm.ae
New organizational
structure
DFM
DSX ND
Financ
ial
Ser
vic
es
Bu
siness
De
vel
op
me
nt CSD
EXCHANGES
Key Growth Initiatives
• Trading Enhancements• Margin Trading• Equity Swaps• Warrants
• Enhanced Brokerage Services
• iVESTOR Cards
• Dividend Distribution• Market Data
Feed
• Web Advertizing• Online Subscription• IPO initiatives
• e-Reports & e-Services• DVP• SBL
• In-house IPO System
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES ORGANIZATIONAL RESTRUCTURING2
8
www.dfm.ae
DFM has
commissioned Independent
Research Consultants
forintensive
IPO study
2009Research over 500 companies
in the UAE
2011Research over 500 companies in the region, CIS, and Africa
2010 -2013Dialog with top 100 companies
in prime position of going public on DFM & NASDAQ Dubai
Targeted IPO marketing
campaign to attract issuers
through out the period
2009 Step by Step “ DFM Guide to going public” launched 2010 IPO Market Study Results from one on
one with 40 potential IPO candidates 2011 -IPO Retreat for private, semi-government and family owned businesses.
-MOU with JAFZA (JABAl Ali Free Zones
- Access to Capital Seminar for JAFZA 2012 -Regional IPO Market Study for NASDAQ Dubai
-MOU with Dubai SME -2nd Access to Capital Seminar for SME
2013 -NASDAQ Dubai IPO Guide-Road show for IPO in India & Kuwait.-2nd IPO Retreat on November 19th.
The following initiatives have been taken to support campaign:
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES PIONEERING IPO STUDY2
9
www.dfm.ae
In-depth market intelligence and value
added services
Investor and consumer visibility
One of the most liquid markets in the G.C.C.
Free accessibility of international investors
In-depth IR and trading analysis
Robust and reliable trading environment
STRATEGIC INITIATIVES ROBUST ENVIRONMENT FOR FUTURE LISTINGS
30
www.dfm.ae
Racha Al ChamutManager, Investor Relations
P.O.Box: 9700, Dubai, UAE Tel: +971 4 305 5650Fax: +971 4 331 [email protected]
Areej Al SaeedOffice ManagerExecutive Chairman's Office
P.O.Box: 9700, Dubai, UAE Tel: +971 4 305 5607 Fax: +971 4 331 [email protected]
CONTACTS :
ii