Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The types of Business Licenses issued in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are professional, commercial, industrial and tourism. The professional license covers services offered by professionals, artisans and craftsmen; the commercial license covers all trading and commercial activities performed with an intention of making profit ; the industrial license covers all industrial and manufacturing ...
This is a list of government-owned companies of the United Arab Emirates. A Government-owned corporation is a legal entity that undertakes commercial activities on behalf of an owner government . Their legal status varies from being a part of government to stock companies with a state as a regular stockholder .
The formal name of the company is Nakheel PJSC (private joint stock company) and it was a subsidiary of Dubai World and a private state-owned enterprise. [4] [2] Nakheel was central to Dubai's debt crisis in 2009–2010. [5] The company has been reported to be the second-largest property developer in Dubai after Emaar Properties. [6]
More than 85% of the UAE's economy was based on oil exports in 2009. [2] [3] While Abu Dhabi and other UAE emirates have remained relatively conservative in their approach to diversification, Dubai, which has far smaller oil reserves, was bolder in its diversification policy. [4] In 2011, oil exports accounted for 77% of the UAE's state budget. [5]
Aldar Properties PJSC (Arabic: شركة الدار العقارية Sharikah al-Dār al-`Iqāriyyah) is a real estate development company owned by the Abu Dhabi government and with headquarters in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. [4] The company's shares are traded on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange.
Emaar Developments is the UAE-based property development arm of Emaar Properties. [1] The company develops residential and commercial property, shopping malls and other retail assets, as well as hospitality and leisure attractions.
Alternatively, a developer who is also a builder may purchase a property with the plans and permits in place so that they do not have the risk of failing to obtain planning approval and can start construction on the development immediately. The financial risks of real estate development and real estate investing differ due to leverage effects. [3]
In 2019, a UAE court ordered Dubai-based developer Limitless to pay Deyaar AED 411.9 million in a land dispute, AED 61.1 million in fees and compensation. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] In October 2022, Deyaar's board of directors approved an AED 500 million cash settlement made by Limitless.