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As Dubai's super-luxury property boom sends land prices soaring, developers are turning to exotic financing. Islamic bonds (Sukuk) have become a critical tool, with issuance growing more than twelvefold to $6 billion since 2021, underpinning the current development cycle.
As traditional banks retreat from risky commercial property loans, private credit investors are filling the void. These new players, with higher risk tolerance and longer investment horizons, are expected to absorb a trillion dollars in commercial mortgages, reshaping the sector's financing.
The massive capital expenditure for AI infrastructure will not primarily come from traditional unsecured corporate credit. Instead, a specialized form of private credit known as asset-based finance (ABF) is expected to provide over $800 billion of the required $1.5 trillion in external funding.
Unlike destinations like Singapore that impose a specific social model, Dubai allows the ultra-rich to customize their lifestyle—be it decadent or pious—on the sole condition that they abstain from local politics. This unique, flexible social contract is a key driver of its appeal to a diverse global elite.
A financial flywheel, reminiscent of the pre-2008 crisis, is fueling the AI data center boom. Demand for yield-generating securities from investors incentivizes the creation of more data center projects, decoupling the financing from the actual viability or profitability of the underlying AI technology.
Unlike private equity (terminal value) or syndicated loans (interest-only), asset-based finance (ABF) provides front-loaded cash flows of both principal and interest. This structure inherently de-risks the investment over time, often returning significant capital before a potential default occurs.
Due to compressed credit spreads, investors are shifting their focus from sovereign bonds to local market opportunities like currency and local bonds. They perceive fewer opportunities in credit and are actively seeking value in countries like Nigeria, Egypt, and Kazakhstan, where local stories are more compelling.
The sheer scale of capital required to fund the AI and data center build-out dwarfs the capacity of the high-yield bond market. While billion-dollar deals happen, they are a "drop in the bucket." This massive need will force financing into other avenues like asset-backed securities.
Increasing political instability, crime, and social decay in major Western cities are causing a 'flight capital' phenomenon among the wealthy. They are relocating to places perceived as safer and better managed, such as Dubai and Hong Kong, driving up asset prices in those locations.
The rapidly growing field of Asset-Based Finance (ABF) is largely an evolution and rebranding of what experienced investors have long known as structured credit. This market, historically dominated by banks, is expanding into private markets and now includes financing for modern assets like GPUs and data centers.
While the trend of Westerners moving to Dubai existed before, the truly transformative influx of capital began in early 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. This wave of Russian wealth has fundamentally reshaped entire neighborhoods, creating a cultural and economic landscape that mirrors Russian-dominated areas of Miami.