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Bloom Holding eyes IPO amid plans for Dh5bn Abu Dhabi mega-project

Abu Dhabi-based private real estate developer Bloom Holding is eyeing an initial public offering (IPO) next year or in 2020, in part to finance its biggest project to date – a Dh5 billion ($1.3bn) mixed-use community near Abu Dhabi International Airport.

“We have a giant plot of land next to Abu Dhabi Airport that we are in the master-planning phase for and recently received the green light from the municipality to proceed. Hopefully we’ll be able to launch it early next year,” Sameh Muhtadi, chief executive of Bloom Holding, told The National at the Cityscape conference in Abu Dhabi this week. “This is a very long term project for us, but it’s going to be our biggest undertaking to date.”

The scheme spanning 24 million square feet of land, to be called Bloom District, would likely be built over six phases incorporating schools, healthcare facilities, shops, offices and housing. Bloom is in the final stages of determining the exact size of the scheme and how much GFA (gross floor area) would be built.

A potential IPO of the company, which is part of Abu Dhabi’s National Holding, was mooted last January as one of several ways of financing future projects. Mr Muhtadi said he is now targeting an IPO in the UAE or the London Stock Exchange. A dual listing is a possibility and the firm is also considering a bond issue.

“This [Bloom District] will be a significant project and it’s going to require significant investments…especially in the early stages where you need to develop infrastructure and roads without any revenue from them,” Mr Muhtadi said.

The listing which will help finance the project is slated for the end of 2019, or 2020, subject to approvals.

“I believe, internally, we should be ready for an IPO towards the end of 2018, for sure, but listing is not only dependent on our readiness, it’s dependent on market conditions, sentiment and appetite of investors to invest in the real estate market.” The company recorded 15 per cent year-on-year growth in revenues in the last financial year.

Like the rest of the UAE, Abu Dhabi’s real estate market slowed down in the wake of a three year oil price slump. Residential sales and rental prices in particular declined steadily and are not expected to pick up again until 2019, experts say.

The market is “slower than we’d like” but lower price points and growth of middle income housing are appealing to investors, Mr Muhtadi said.

Bloom plans to grow over the next five years in every sector it's in, and increase the company’s recurring revenue stream. Education, healthcare and overseas diversification are the priorities, with plans to open 15 children’s nurseries in the UAE in the next three years – two are already open, two are under construction and Bloom is in advanced negotiations to acquire eight others, Mr Muhtadi added.

The developer is also opening two schools in Dubai this September with a total capacity of 4,000 students. In Al Ain the company is planning its first standalone retail property. In Saudi Arabia, the Arab world's largest economy, Bloom is in advanced talks with the kingdom’s Royal Commission to build new housing for senior oil and gas employees working in Jubail and aims to complete a deal by June, Mr Muhtadi said.

In addition, Bloom is expanding in the US with plans for a $220m healthcare-led mixed-use project in Minnesota. It comprises a rehabilitation centre operated by US healthcare chain Mayo Clinic, as well as a 220-home senior living complex, a hotel and apartments.

Read more: https://www.thenational.ae/business/property/bloom-holding-eyes-ipo-amid-plans-for-dh5bn-abu-dhabi-mega-project-1.722765