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Dubai plea for project financiers

14 August 2007

Anonymous

Project finance specialists are in such short supply in the Middle East that the oil-fired trajectory of infrastructure investment in the region risks crash landing.

Local recruiters say there are simply too few experienced project finance people to plan, oversee and execute the US$1.3 trillion worth of oil and gas, petrochemicals or infrastructure schemes lined up by Gulf Cooperation Council governments and companies between now and 2012.

Barbara Van Meir, director of financial services at WoodHamill Ingram, says: "As many teams in the region are expanding, and have often doubled in size over the past year or two, there is an increasing dearth of project finance professionals, particularly in Qatar, Abu Dhabi, and Saudi Arabia."

The result, says Alastair Chell, banking consultant with Charterhouse Partnership, is that candidates with no regional experience are being recruited from Europe to fill the void and local corporate and structured finance folk are being pressed into project finance roles.

Van Meir tells us she is recruiting suitable project finance expertise from mature financial centres such as London or Edinburgh, but equally from less well-known locations including Johannesburg or Sydney.

The varied backgrounds of candidates makes generalisations on the value of compensation packages difficult, say recruiters. But Chell tells us someone at director or VP level with six years' project finance experience can command a basic of US$165k to US$250k a year and a benchmark 100% bonus.

But he warns that while firms with deal flow from day one can guarantee bonuses, some start-up shops are struggling to gain deal traction which can leave bonus potential in doubt.

Comments (18)

Stop trying to convince us to go to Dubai and tell us the truth, that Gulf experience will destroy your career.

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Comments (18)

  • The article does not appear too convincing. There may not be such an acute shortage of skills locally as is being presented.

    Deva Duitta Dubey 14 Aug 2007

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  • i highly question the opportunity and the money (if indeed there is that kind of money in the middle east) - there simply isn't enough deal flow. Even Abraaj Capital - alleged to be the largest so called private equity firm hasn't got enough deal flow in the pipeline and is trying to buy assets in pakistan of all places. Come one efinancial, stop trying to convince us to go to Dubai and tell us the truth, that gulf experience will destroy your career.

    Anonymous 14 Aug 2007

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  • Your going to mid east can only because of:
    1. making money
    2. taking in new challenges - the capital markets are very primitive
    3. You just cannot a job elsewhere

    manadey 14 Aug 2007

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  • Actually, there are plenty of projects in Middle East, but not many banks or private investment firms willing to take the risk, many lack basic equity investment. Whilst growth has been substantial in recent years, exposure limits for such deals are full. Additionally, there is caution by the smarter experienced risk managers in the market, that a project may fail, which could be the start of collapsing the pack of cards. Dubai is expensive, one Japanese banker today claimed rents in Dubai are more expensive than Tokyo!

    Tom 14 Aug 2007

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  • here is another thing. friends in financial services in gulf say there is a big discrimination against brown skin. if you are white then its ok. The same attitude when it comes to bonus.

    Indian guy 14 Aug 2007

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  • the only reason they are looking for project finance is because they dont want to use their own money for this. the question is, if the project is good, then why not? they have plenty of their own money?

    Anonymous 16 Aug 2007

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  • I doubt very much the credibility of this story...

    J 16 Aug 2007

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  • The salaries quoted in this article seem to underestimate the desire and compensation for Project Finance in the Middle East. A top-tier VP with 6 years relevant experience will expect considerably more than $300k for his / her services, this could be why said individuals have problems finding them.

    Barnaby Mundell 17 Aug 2007

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  • It is true brown people are treated less favourably. Its so funny, we white people treat these dubai/arab folks less favourably in our Europe and yet we are king in dubai. Such a great way of living.

    White Guy 17 Aug 2007

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  • I'm in the UAE at the moment and I can definitely see the validity of this article. Most of you have got the wrong end of the stick - its talking about a lack of project finance experts within the public sector and very specific private sectors, namely Oil & Gas, utilities, and construction - Tom is pretty much on the ball. I think too many of you have been in finance for too long and look at everything job related from a financial services sector perspective! Snap out of it!



    I'm not convinced about those salaries though. I doubt very much that London based VPs with 6 years under their belt would move for salaries as low as that. The amount of money there is in the three countries mentioned above waiting to be invested by those governments is sick-making - recent research from a specialist boutique estimates double digit trillions, so please read the first paragraph again without your banker goggles on. Project financing is a very specialist area which most people in financial services are not appropriate for.

    KK 17 Aug 2007

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