Dubai may consider selling parts of government-owned companies as it continues to restructure those hit hard by the financial crisis, top financial officials said on Sunday.
"Dubai World is now on sound financial footing," Sheikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, chairman of Dubai Supreme Fiscal Committee, told a news conference.

In the past year, Dubai World managed to reach a restructuring deal with creditors, allowing the government to tap into improved investor confidence to issue a $1.25 billion bond in September.
Prized assets such as DP World, the Atlantis Hotel and leisure hotel operator MGM Resorts International were presented under the restructuring as potential assets that could be sold to the public to help raise cash. There is also keen interest in other state-linked assets such as Emirates airlines and Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (Dewa).

"We are working on opening up the capital of leading companies to our public," he said.

Property developer Nakheel,which is trying to reach agreement on a proposed restructuring plan, is also returning to health, said Faisal Mikou, the executive vice president of the Investment Corporation of Dubai.

"We are making very good progress on the restructuring... Nakheel's financial and operational restructuring is going according to plan," Mikou said.

Nakheel plans to issue a sukuk, or Islamic bond, to its trade creditors in the first quarter of 2011, he said.