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By David French and Stanley Carvalho

Emaar Properties has secured a $1.5 billion sharia-compliant loan from five local lenders, two banking sources aware of the matter said on Wednesday, the latest Dubai-based borrower to take advantage of buoyant markets to reprice debt.

A number of state-linked entities in the emirate have sought to refinance existing debts, even if the loans have years until maturity, as market sentiment towards Dubai improves after its debt crisis at the start of the decade and local banks look to focus excess cash on the emirate's best-quality borrowers.

Emaar, developer of the world's tallest building, has raised the seven-year facility which will pay 175 basis points over the London interbank offered rate (Libor), the sources said on condition of anonymity as the information isn't public.

This is half the rate of the existing loan, which was due to run until 2016 and had an interest rate of 350 bps over Libor.

The funds have been provided on an equal basis by three Dubai lenders - Dubai Islamic Bank, Mashreq and Noor Bank - and two from Abu Dhabi - First Gulf Bank and National Bank of Abu Dhabi.

The lenders plan to market the transaction to other banks in a syndication phase, which could begin in the next two weeks, one of the source said.

"In the context of the proposed public offering of Emaar Malls Group, the company is in the process of assessing and optimising its capital structure taking into consideration the best interests of all stakeholders," Emaar, 29 percent owned by sovereign fund Investment Corp of Dubai, said in a statement.

"The outcome of such process and relevant details will be included in the IPO prospectus and made available to the public."

The developer announced plans to list up to 25 percent of its malls business in March, which is expected to raise 8 to 9 billion dirhams.

The new loan replaces an existing facility worth $980 million which was raised in 2011 and was secured against Dubai Mall - one of the world's largest shopping malls - to help secure a lower borrowing rate.

The new transaction has no collateral to support it, the sources said, emphasising how far the market has shifted in terms of banks willing to lend to Dubai names.

Emaar's fortunes have been helped by a rebound in the local property sector, which has seen residential prices rise on average by 33 percent in the year to March 31, according to consultants JLL.

Emaar is not the first Dubai name to take advantage of the improved borrowing conditions for state-linked firms.

DP World is in talks with banks to triple the size of an existing $1 billion loan, as well as extend the lifespan and cut the interest rate, sources told Reuters last month.

Dubai Duty Free and a secured loan for the emirate's Roads and Transport Authority backed by revenue from the Salik toll network were also renegotiated down in the last 12 months, in some cases by more than half their original cost.

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