Dubai: Emaar Properties will launch its highly anticipated initial public offer of at least 15 per cent of its shopping malls and retailing unit on Dubai’s main stock market in September, and plans to list the shares in October.

The offer would be one of the largest equity sales in the Middle East since 2008, underlining Dubai’s recovery from a credit crisis that forced many state-linked developers to stall projects, and some — though not Emaar — to restructure debt.

The announcement of the IPO on Sunday sent the share price of the parent firm up 6.3 per cent to a 15-week high in early trading. Emaar Properties had initially revealed in March its intention to sell up to 25 per cent of the unit in an offer likely to raise Dh8 to Dh9 billion ($2.18 to $2.45 billion).

Emaar Properties, the emirate’s biggest real estate developer, will earmark 30 per cent of the offer of shares in Emaar Malls Group (EMG) for individual investors, and 70 per cent for institutional investors, it said in a statement to Dubai’s bourse on Sunday.

Ten per cent of the offer would be reserved for Emaar Properties shareholders as of September 10, while 5 per cent would be reserved for state fund Emirates Investment Authority.

A spokesman for the company said that subscriptions would open next month and the shares would be listed in October.

“The IPO of EMG is a milestone for the development of the UAE capital markets as, for the first time, it combines institutional and individual shareholders in the same offering on the DFM,” said Mohammad Alabbar, chairman of Emaar Properties.

Pre-marketing

The marketing process has begun and a price for the IPO will be determined via a book-building process. While no formal pre-marketing took place, the spokesman said some conversations had been held with key Emaar Properties investors about the offer.

The developer, in which the Dubai government owns about 30 per cent, will pay a dividend totalling around Dh9 billion to its shareholders; Dh5.3 billion of that amount will come from the IPO proceeds, and Dh3.7 billion from a dividend already paid by EMG to its parent.

Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, JP Morgan Chase

and Morgan Stanley are joint global coordinators of the offer, with four other banks acting as joint bookrunners.

EMG posted revenues of Dh1.25 billion during the first six months of 2014, up 13 per cent from a year earlier.