Executive Special Report
The United Arab Emirates is positioning
itself as China’s gateway to the Middle East and Africa (MEA). The
action is focused on Dubai, where there are an estimated 200,000 Chinese
residents.
The Dubai International Finance Center
(DIFC) has been trying to market itself as a hub for Chinese
corporations — public and private alike — to base their MEA headquarters
in the emirate, and it has had moderate success. “Dubai is two-thirds
of the way to Africa from China, so given Dubai’s stability and that
many Chinese firms’ international expansion is in its early days, it
makes sense for most Chinese banks to bank for Africa out of Dubai,”
said Ben Simpfendorfer, managing director of Hong Kong-based consultancy
firm Silk Road Associates.
The DIFC has attracted a handful of
financial institutions — ICBC, Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China
and the China Construction Bank — that essentially operate as trade
facilitators. The DIFC is however working to address this shortcoming
through its “New Silk Road” conferences, held since 2010, aimed at
bolstering investment and financial ties between the two regions. But
there is a long way to go.
“Talking to people at DIFC, that area
remains weak, as it is confined to state-related entities. An area with
potential growth there,” said Ghanem Nuseibeh, founder of Cornerstone
Global Associates. “Chinese banks’ presence is growing, and certainly
from what I hear with those dealing with the banks, the staff and
operations are growing, but primarily servicing Chinese firms.”
Away from finance, Chinese are flocking
to Dubai. The year 2012 saw a 28 percent increase in tourists, and
retail outlets hired Mandarin speakers to tap into demand for luxury
products that are more expensive in mainland China. “The number of
Chinese flying through Dubai is growing. It is a popular place for a
vacation, and up to a third of the sales staff at Dubai International
Airport are Chinese speakers,” said Simpfendorfer.
China’s mercantile side is largely
confined to Dragon Mart, the largest concentration of retailers of
Chinese products outside of China with just under 1,200 stores. The
mall, with has an exterior shaped like a Chinese dragon, is considered a
model of sorts that could be replicated elsewhere as an outlet for
Chinese goods and traders. However, while the management claims up to 99
percent of retail is space is Chinese, a $272 million expansion
currently under way that will double the mall’s size to 335,000 square
meters is to be evenly split between international and Chinese
retailers. And curiously, it is not a Chinese state linked firm behind
Dragon Mart but Nakheel Properties, and the contractors — Kele and
United Engineering Construction — are all Emirates based.
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