By David French
DUBAI, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Abu Dhabi's Aabar Investments
The firm, which owns a stake in commodities trader Glencore
Details about the structure of the new deal are still being worked out, although one London-based banker hinted it could be self-arranged by Aabar and have a similar structure to the current deal. The three sources spoke on condition of anonymity as the information is not public.
Aabar, a unit of Abu Dhabi sovereign fund International Petroleum Investment Company
However, aside from participating in UniCredit's rights issue and building a stake in Dubai-based builder Arabtec
Its chief financial officer and general counsel both left the investment firm in the second half of last year, sources told Reuters in November.
Aabar relinquished its Daimler stake in October to the banks behind a March 2009 derivatives deal underpinning the purchase after the investment firm failed to keep up its funding.
The existing $2 billion loan is split between a $1.4 billion loan and a $600 million revolving credit facility and was agreed in 2010. It paid a margin of 150 basis points over the London interbank offered rate (Libor).
In total, 11 banks backed the deal, which was arranged by Deutsche Bank
(Editing by Pravin Char)
((davidj.french@thomsonreuters.com)(+971 4 362 5864)(Reuters Messaging: davidj.french.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
Keywords: EMIRATES AABAR/LOAN




















