ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 28 October 2006, ArabianBusiness/News
Leighton Holdings has been awarded a US $236 million (AUD300 million) contract by OneSteel to manage iron ore mining operations in the Middleback Ranges
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 06 January 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Germany's Hochtief has announced that a consortium led by its Australian unit, Leighton Holdings, has won a contract worth around US $175.9 million (AUD224.4 million) from the Australian government for the construction of a 35km stretch of the Hume Highway in New South Wales
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 20 January 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Australia's largest construction firm, Leighton Holding, is looking to form partnerships with Gulf construction companies in a bid to target several projects within the region.
Leighton Holdings is to build a 6.5 kilometre, 10-lane highway with six bridges in the emirate of Abu Dhabi.
Reuters, Thursday, 16 August 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Leighton to acquire 45% of Dubai construction firm as it expands in Gulf.
Reuters, Monday, 03 September 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Leighton International has won a US $550 million (AED2.1 billion) infrastructure contract for the Saadiyat Island expressway from the Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC).
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Sunday, 07 October 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Australian construction firm to build convention centre in Dubai and hotels in Abu Dhabi.
Reuters, Wednesday, 05 December 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Abu Dhabi's Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC) has formed a joint venture with contractor Gulf Leighton.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 15 December 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
A joint venture of Leighton International and Al Habtoor Engineering has won a US $350 million (AED 1.2 billion) contract for the construction of a mixed-use development in Abu Dhabi.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 02 February 2008, ArabianBusiness/News
Angela Giuffrida takes a look at two of the biggest locally-based construction companies, and their plans for overseas expansion.
Al Habtoor Leighton aims to generate US $3.2 billion (AED12 billion) in revenue in its first year as a new entity.
Australian construction group Leighton Holdings could increase its stake in the local Al Habtoor Engineering to 51%.
Main indexes end day down, with Qatar down 6%, Abu Dhabi and Dubai down 3%.
UPDATE 7: Markets end down, Dubai, Abu Dhabi recover sharp losses as foreigners bail.
US investment banks become latest victims of deepening financial crisis on Wall Street.
Mubadala and Qatar Investment Authority unlikely to step in as US financial crisis grows.
Price of crude plunges $7 as investors flee to safer havens due to turmoil in the US financial system.
Lehman Brothers' collapse makes investors ditch oil for safe-haven assets.
UPDATE 6: Volatility continues with real estate and bank shares rebounding after early losses.
Dylan Bowman, Tuesday, 16 September 2008, ArabianBusiness/News
Comments 1-4 of 4
Posted by jack, London, England on 21 June 2009 at 21:42 UAE time
Geraint has a point, having joined the 'failed' JV from a global multi-disciplined consultancy who, through due diligence of this particular Client, politely declined the offer to enter into a partnership, I can foresee future hesitation of similar relationships by 'quality' consultancies and contractors in light of the debt now effected on these ventures.
As awesome and inspiring many of these projects have been, the effort, cost and risk to achieve them has been hugely under estimated by key decision makers who have not experienced similar historical events such as Asia '98/99, whose exuberance and 'dollar' influenced blindness overrode the 'caution' expressed by those who where there.
Posted by Geriant, Dubai, UAE on 21 June 2009 at 14:24 UAE time
Jack has a point here, that money can be saved by bringing the nitty gritty in-house, but that is a bad precedent for a country dependent on foreign expertise even now. If and when the economy turns, these same fairweather friends will have the dosh to bring in the "consultants" and foreign experts again. Who will be interested when they see how quick the sheen wears off the partnership and how one-sided the deals really are? The leadership should be look at long-term reputation, not just saving a buck in the short term.
Posted by Jack, London, England on 21 June 2009 at 12:51 UAE time
The whole point of a JV in this industry is to minimise the cost of the design and build process and maximise client profit.
I was in a JV consulting operation with a semi government client that was wound up earlier this year, the failure was not the relationship, though it was 'strained' at times, but a significant lack of funds to cover project costs, with some consultants and contractors not being paid for over a year at the time of close out.
TDIC has always operated as a high level client manager and steared cleared of getting into the 'nitty gritty' of project management. However, the knock that the UAE has taken with regard to investor confidence in mega projects such as Saadiyat Island, costs can be reduced considerably and control increased by bringing the 'nitty gritty' inhouse. No doubt this is an action to show investors they are on top of their game and Saadiyat is an impressive development with great components, but is the project now too much for the current market conditions...I would say it is...
Posted by Geriant, Dubai, UAE on 18 June 2009 at 08:47 UAE time
For Leighton to up stakes on this one indicates all is not well on the happy isle of Saadiyat. There is too much happening too quickly for too few and the numbers simply don't stack up when TDIC claims it will be a tourism magnet. Leighton isn't going home because it wants to, that is for sure, because it relies almost exclusively on these deals to survive as the market back home is dormant.