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Last week, Dubai World (a largely state-owned entity with holdings in various Dubai companies) announced it required a six-month extension on a $60 billion loan.

The United Arab Emirate central bank (essentially the oil-richer than Dubai Abu Dhabi) stepped forward promising to provide the needed liquidity and back the debts. However, the markets viewed these developments as a matter of sovereign default with equities and commodities (including Gold) plunging as investors flew to short-term Treasuries and the Dollar.

On Friday’s shortened session, the Dow World Index fell 2%+. Gold went down: And the US Dollar went up: The situation in Dubai is of little surprise to anyone taking a big picture view of the world’s economies. What we’ve essentially seen in the last two years is a massive transfer of private debt onto public balance sheets. This has been most pronounced in the US and UK, but even relatively sensible countries like Switzerland have engaged in the scheme.

Because of this we’re now in a transitional period in the US as we wait for the world to figure out that moving junk from the private sector to the public sector has simply increased the systemic insolvency to our include sovereign balance sheet.

In contrast, economies like Dubai don’t have this “waiting” period due to the fact that their debts always were public (the country is owned by the Royal family via its various holding companies). Because of this (and the fact that Dubai’s economy is largely driven by tourism and real estate: two industries that have been decimated by the credit crisis), it’s not at all surprising that Dubai is the first sovereign debt domino to topple.

Indeed, Dubai can be taken as a kind of metaphor for the developed world’s financial status. Long-time readers know that one of my central themes is the fact that the over the last 30 years the US economy has shifted from production to financial speculation. In Dubai, the situation was even more pronounced seeing as that country went from semi-developed to developed almost entirely on the back of financial speculation: at its peak, real estate and construction accounted for more than 22% of Dubai’s economy.

Financial speculation, whether it be in tech stocks in the US or high-end condos in Dubai, can create the illusion of wealth, but ultimately it is a ponzi scheme that requires a never ending line of bigger fools willing to pay higher prices for the underlying assets. And Dubai as a country was built on financial speculation: most of the construction and projects were built based on the hope that millions would flock to the Emirate to buy its luxury real estate, shop at the world’s largest malls, drink its expensively desalinated water (it is in the desert after all) and party at its luxury night clubs.

I spent time in the Emirate during its peak in 2007. At that time, the cracks were already beginning to show up in its capitalist illusion. Much of Dubai was a reverse ghost town with massive empty skyscrapers awaiting owners and businesses that would never arrive. And like any rushed, loosely regulated enterprise, the work wasn’t of the highest quality: a streetlamp caught fire while I was there.

Remember, this was a former desert town turned cosmopolitan metropolis within a 10-year time period. And it didn’t come from oil money (oil only accounted for 6% of the Dubai’s economy). Again, the entire economy was financial speculation: foreign investors and institutions setting up shop, drawn by the Emirate’s 0% corporate tax rate and the promise of 1.4 billion potential tourists within a six hour plane flight.

All of this came crashing down when the credit crisis began in earnest in 2008.

Since then, real estate prices have plunged more than 60%, entire projects have been brought to a halt and work visas revoked: 1,500 per day in fact. Expats fled the company, leaving 3,000 abandoned cars at the Dubai international airport’s parking lot (as of Feb. 2009).

The Emirate’s future-world development projects began crumbling… literally. The famous “world,” (a group of 45 man-made, private islands shaped like the globe) has begun melting back into the Persian Gulf. Other unfinished projects stayed that way… unfinished.

Indeed, Dubai as an economy was crashing. But you wouldn’t know it from the news: the Emirate passed a law making the publishing of any material that could damage it or its economy an offense punishable by $250,000 and jail-time.

However, those of us who read between the lines (any country that could have its economy “damaged” by a news article is in dire straits indeed) knew that something was up. And yet, it took a full six to eight months and a potential sovereign default for the world to catch on.

Which brings us to today: most of the policies enacted by the world’s central bankers have consisted of pretending that bad debts don’t exist. The biggest perpetrators of this are the US and the UK, but just about everyone has engaged in profligate monetary schemes in the last two years. This policy will work… until it doesn’t. The only problem is that when it doesn’t we’re going to see a second round of the financial crisis. However, this time it will be countries going bust, not just banks.

Put another way, the Dubai default is just the beginning. We’re likely to see more sovereign defaults in the coming years. The most likely candidates will those countries whose economies are based on financial speculation and easy credit -- this includes the US.

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Comments
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  • The transition from banks' going bust to COUNTRIES' going bust will be a scary one. Walter Wriston, former chairman of Citibank, will be proven wrong time and time again.
    2009 Dec 01 12:08 PM Reply
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  • When Ben's helicopter crashes we can only hope that there are numerous politicians and Timmy aboard. We need to ensure he has a CH53 heavy lift helicopter affording him room for lots of politicians as passengers.

    To tell the truth he would do this country a lot more good tossing politicians out instead of money.
    2009 Dec 01 12:19 PM Reply
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  • Although I agree with the majority of this article, the issue I have is that "Dubai World" is NOT sovereign default in that UAE never explicitly guaranteed Dubai World's debts.

    If the UAE defaulted, then there would be a sovereign default. But that is not the case here, Dubai World is a company, not a state.

    Many out there ASSUMED that the UAE would not let Dubai World default, but that is why you make an ASS of U & ME to assume.
    2009 Dec 01 12:25 PM Reply
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  • Interesting read.

    Bye, bye, Dubai!
    2009 Dec 01 01:17 PM Reply
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  • I've lived in Dubai long enough to have witnessed the true history of this place. Here are facts you'll never find in any history books. Sh. Mohammed (3rd Son) became Dubai’s ruler because Maktoum (oldest son) is an alcoholic & Hamdan (2nd son) is a compulsive gambler. Sh. Khalifa (current Abu Dhabi ruler) used to be a full blown alcoholic. Sh. Rashid (current ruler's father) sponsored smuggling operations to India. “Dubai has a free trade in gold and until the 1990s, was the hub of a "brisk smuggling trade"[73] of gold ingots to India, where gold import was restricted." excerpt taken from wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...). Watch the CBC documentary "Dubai's dirty little secret" and you'll see horrific atrocities committed in Dubai. I'm in finance & work for Singapore's Sovereign Wealth Fund (subsidiary in Dubai), which is the next domino to fall & I know for certain, Dubai debts are exponentially more than the claimed US$80 billion. Their creative accounting & off book transactions puts Tyco & Worldcom to shame. With Sh. Mohammed & his cronies bald faced lies about their true financial situation to their creditors and the media, their reputation is mud. Dubai has no natural resources (except a small oil well that will run dry in a couple of years), it is hard to fathom how Dubai's economy will ever recover. Abu Dhabi will keep Dubai afloat to salvage UAE’s reputation, but it will force Dubai to hand over its prized assets like DP World, Emirates Airlines, Dubal, Burg Al Arab, Burg Dubai, the Palm Islands, Barney's and many more. There is a prophecy in Dubai, My grandfather rode a camel, I drive a Cadillac, my grandson will ride a camel. This prophecy is on its way to being fulfilled. Dubai RIP.
    2009 Dec 01 01:51 PM Reply
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  • LaRouche has an article about such.

    www.larouchepac.com/no...

    "These are the days when the world system of the International Monetary Fund is slipping into a chain-reaction pattern of sovereign fiscal defaults," Lyndon LaRouche stated on Monday. The Queen's November 27 speech to the Commonwealth summit, coinciding with the announcement of Dubai's default, was the umbrella under which the wave of sovereign defaults was announced."
    2009 Dec 01 01:52 PM Reply
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  • The default of sovereign debt is a clarifying moment because it is a moment of truth. It exposes the delusions, frauds and deceits of corrupt, greedy and vain rulers. It can be a moment of liberation ,if the rulers fall or reform themselves and begin to reallocate resources more productively and equitably and focus on genuine wealth creation rather than gratuitous consumption. It can also be a moment of accelerated enslavement when entrenched rulers preserve their power and luxury by further oppressing the common people, economically and politically.
    It is too soon to tell whether the rulers of Dubai will admit and be changed by the truth or deny and perpetuate their lies and diseased fantasies. If the latter, then there will be a second moment of truth and it will a violent and bloody one. It is Dubai's good fortune that it does not have a fiat currency and must accept the judgment of the global financial market and, if it wishes to retain global economic connectivity, also bow before the discipline of the global market.

    It is now a profound misfortune for ordinary Americans that the US Regime has a fiat currency: the dollar is now the biggest economic lie in the world because the US Regime is the greatest financial fraud in the world. The fiat dollar has delayed by years America's own moment of economic truth....but it too will come.
    Truth and reality are more sovereign than any Regime and more sovereign than the false debt of any Regime.
    2009 Dec 01 02:28 PM Reply
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  • Dubai's de facto debt default, exposes a demographic fact in the number of expensive cars that have been abandoned at Dubai's airport by fleeing expats. Giving a new meaning to 'long term parking'!
    These are early days in this sad saga of overindulgence and will surly bring to light further losses.
    2009 Dec 01 03:15 PM Reply
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  • When your right, your right. Nuff sed.
    2009 Dec 01 06:30 PM Reply
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  • LBO ECONOMIES over a global bubble of financial paper all speculating on the value on the next turn of the paper AND BEING CALLED AN "INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM".
    The growth of private equity and sovereign wealth funds over the last decades was a product of 30 years of monetary price theory. The questions of duplicity and manipulations will be the subject of historic inquiry for years to come but the course of history is being determined as we speak. This is the first article that has honestly addressed these facts in real time. The rest of selected and vested interests have a love/hate affair with theories that obfuscate and obscure the true facts and twist them to fictive conclusions that are termed rational. Of course these are all supported with bought and paid for Swiss Bank Nobel prizes to legitimate its economic significance to a proposition for an essential world order. A world order that is sold to us as real, but in the ultimate tally of any serious measure...simply does not exist.
    Unleash the hyeanas of finance and they will sell you the very fog they create and make you thank them for it as well.
    2009 Dec 02 08:32 PM Reply
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  • I tend to be a pessimist, but you have really outdone me. If life is really this bad, why do you bother to write about it? Just do away with yourself.
    2009 Dec 02 11:58 PM Reply