Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Drake & Scull gains approval to resume trading on Dubai bourse

Drake & Scull's projects include the Louvre Abu Dhabi Reuters
Drake & Scull International's projects include the Louvre Abu Dhabi
  • Share capital rising by AED600m
  • 2.4 billion shares at discount
  • ‘Covered by future profits’

Drake & Scull International has been given the green light to resume trading on the Dubai Financial Market, after an absence of more than five years.

The decision from the Securities and Commodities Authority follows the Dubai contractor agreeing to increase its share capital by up to AED600 million ($163 million), as part of a court-approved restructuring plan.

Under a special resolution to be discussed at a general assembly meeting on March 27, shareholders will be asked to agree to the issuing of 2.4 billion new shares at a heavily discounted price of AED0.25 – Drake & Scull International shares have a nominal value of AED1.



This would lead the share capital of the company to become the equivalent of up to AED3.5 billion, up from AED1.1 billion.

In a note to the Dubai bourse on Wednesday, Drake & Scull said the difference in the share prices would “be covered by the company’s future profits” and the company would “not distribute any profits until this reserve is covered”.

The resumption of trading on the Dubai market will also be discussed at the general assembly meeting.

Shafiq Abdelhamid, chairman of Drake & Scull, said this was an “important phase of bringing the company back stronger”.

Under the restructuring plan agreed with the Securities and Commodities Authority, any capital increase must be no less than AED300 million.

Trading in the contractor’s shares has been suspended since November 2018, after it announced losses that exceeded 75 percent of its capital.

At the time of its suspension, its stock was down 64 percent on its 2008 IPO price of AED1.02 per share and its market cap was AED396 million.

During a lengthy legal battle, a lower court had ruled that the company should be placed into liquidation. This was overturned and the business was given one year to turn things around.

The restructuring was backed by creditors and shareholders in April last year under UAE bankruptcy law. It agreed to write off 90 percent of the company’s debts. The remaining 10 percent will be changed into a sukuk offering.

Sukuk are shariah-compliant bonds that were developed as an alternative to conventional bonds, which are not considered permissible by many Muslims as they pay interest and may finance businesses involved in activities not allowed under Islamic law.

In its preliminary financial results for 2023, Drake & Scull reported a net loss of AED352 million, 57 percent worse than the AED224 million loss the previous year.

Latest articles

Opec predicts global crude demand will rise by around 2 million barrels a day in both 2024 and 2025

Opec maintains stance on oil demand predictions

Opec has kept its global oil demand prediction unchanged for this year as the global economy showed resilience, surpassing initial projections in some instances. The oil producers block said in its monthly report on Tuesday that it believed global crude demand would increase by 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024 and by 1.8 […]

Dnata staff load cargo into a plane at Cointrin Airport in Geneva. The company's expansion into Rome will need a €20 million investment

Dnata CEO confident of victory in Rome airport case

The Group CEO of Dnata, the Dubai-based global air and travel services provider, is “very confident” the company will soon begin operations in Rome. “We’re certainly planning to be operating this year,” Steve Allen told AGBI at a media event on Tuesday, referring to an appeal ruling on the decision to award ground-handling contracts due […]

Prime minister of Qatar Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said GCC states need to coordinate their efforts in sectors such as AI

Qatar calls for greater GCC cooperation as it diversifies economy

Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund will continue a policy of diversification, investing in Central Asia and Africa, but Gulf countries need to do more to unify their economic growth plans to face rising geopolitical risks, Qatar’s prime minister said on Tuesday.  “Our focus in terms of the sovereign wealth fund and investment continues following the strategy […]

Workers at a semiconductor plant in the Netherlands. Qatar's investment in France's Ardian comes as global demand for semiconductor chips is surging

QIA invests in French semiconductor fund Ardian

Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), the country’s sovereign wealth fund, has announced plans to make an anchor investment in Ardian Semiconductor, a new entity established by the French private equity firm Ardian.  The move underscores the Gulf state’s bet on the crucial role of semiconductors in powering digital and green transformations in key areas such as […]