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Business Markets

Middle East’s biggest port prompts rare private debt deal

The transaction garnered as much as $1.5b in demand from institutional investors



Jebel Ali Port helped transform the city into a global trade hub and is majority-owned by state-controlled DP World.
Image Credit: Twitter/Dubai Media Office

Dubai: Pension manager Caisse de Dépôt et Placement du Québec financed its stake in a Dubai port with $900 million in private debt.

Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase & Co. arranged the private-bond sale, according to people with knowledge of the deal, who declined to be identified as they are not authorized to discuss the matter.

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The debt will be primarily used to refinance bridge loans put in place to finance CDPQ’s 21.9 per cent stake in the entity controlling Jebel Ali Port - the biggest in the Middle East - and two industrial zones, the people said.

Montreal-based CDPQ last year agreed to invest $5 billion in the three assets through a joint venture, DP World Jebel Ali Terminals and Free Zone FZCo. Moody’s ratings agency assigned a Baa3 rating on the proposed senior secured notes in February this year. The notes were issued by a special purpose vehicle indirectly owned by CDPQ.

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The deal was struck as Dubai sold stakes in some of its most prized assets. Jebel Ali Port helped transform the city into a global trade hub and is majority-owned by state-controlled DP World.

The deal’s geography is notable in a private debt market typically dominated by US, European and Australian businesses. The transaction garnered as much as $1.5 billion in demand from institutional investors, the people said, which typically include insurance companies, pension funds and asset managers.

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