UAE’s Arabtec plans to reduce costs, focus on construction

Arabtec Holding Co., the biggest-listed construction company in the United Arab Emirates, plans to cut costs and focus on its core business after reporting its first annual loss in February amid a building slowdown in the country. “There is fat to be taken out, there is room for cost cuts,” Mohamed Thani Al Rumaithi, the company’s chairman told reporters Wednesday after its annual general assembly in Abu Dhabi. Asked whether there will be job cuts, he said, “What is extra will be taken out.” He said the project pipeline makes him “confident” that the company will return to profit in 2017. “Maybe we break even in 2016,” he said. Shares of the company, which is building a branch of the Louvre museum in Abu Dhabi, have rebounded since their 2015 low in December but remain 75% below their May 2014 high. Arabtec was at the centre of a stock selloff that wiped a fifth from Dubai’s benchmark index in June 2014 amid a reshuffle of senior management and investor concern that the company was losing support from the Abu Dhabi government. Al Romaithi, who represents the company’s biggest shareholder, Aabar Investments PJSC, said Arabtec will focus on its core construction business as it eyes entering the Indian market and strengthening its presence in Saudi Arabia. “We are a construction company, we will concentrate on construction,” he said. (By Mahmoud Habboush/Bloomberg)

More from Business

  • Disney settles suit over women's pay for $43 million

    Walt Disney has agreed to pay $43.3 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that its female employees in California earned $150 million less than their male counterparts over an eight-year period, the plaintiffs' lawyers said in a statement on Monday.

  • Etihad Airways adds ten new destinations for 2025

    UAE carrier Etihad Airways is set to introduce ten new destinations starting in 2025, expanding its global presence as it brings tens of thousands of new visitors to the capital.

  • Trump pledges new tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China

    US President-elect Donald Trump on Monday pledged a 25 per cent tariff on all products from Mexico and Canada from his first day in office, and an additional 10 per cent tariff on goods from China, citing illegal immigration and the trade of illicit drugs.

  • UAE and Bahrain finalise ICV programmes procedures

    The UAE and Bahrain have finalised the procedures required to implement an MoU, signed last January, that fosters cooperation between the National In-Country Value (ICV) Programme and Bahrain’s Value Programme in Industry, known as Takamul.

Coming Up