Hotels hedge bets as revaluation fever grips UAE

Sun Dec 2, 2007 1:23pm EST
 
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By John Irish

DUBAI (Reuters) - Hotels in the United Arab Emirates, including those owned by Dubai's ruler, have started changing dollars into dirhams at as much as 17 percent below the official rate in anticipation of a revaluation.

Money changers, used by expatriates in the UAE to send savings home, have also jacked up rates, in many cases overnight, on expectations that the central bank would allow the dollar-pegged dirham to appreciate.

"We changed last night, I can't remember the last time we changed the rate," said a member of the concierge staff of the Ritz Carlton in Dubai. The Ritz was selling dirhams at 3.3 per dollar compared with 3.5 on Saturday, the official said.

The central bank has held the dirham's rate at 3.7625 to the dollar since 1997. Central Bank governor Sultan Nasser al-Suweidi said last month he was under intense social and economic pressure to sever the peg to the tumbling dollar and track a currency basket to contain inflation.

"This is fuelling the debate about revaluation and adding to market speculation," said John Sfakianakiss, chief economist at SABB bank, HSBC's affiliate in Saudi Arabia. "Is it something legal for hotels to do this? Who is regulating this?"

Reuters called a dozen hotels across the UAE, the world's sixth largest oil exporter, and most said they were charging higher rates for the dirham.

The sail-shaped Burj al-Arab hotel, Dubai's most famous landmark, was selling dirhams at 3.2 per dollar compared with 3.45 on Saturday, a concierge staffer said.

The Burj is owned by the Jumeirah Group, controlled by Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, through his Dubai Holding investment arm.  Continued...

 

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