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Iranian Missiles Hit Dubai: What Indian Families and Businesses Should Do Now

As a virtual CFO who has helped dozens of Indian entrepreneurs navigate international expansion, cash flow crises, and unexpected shocks, let me be direct:

Dubai is still Dubai. But the risks just got more real.

The Iranian missile and drone strikes that hit Dubai Airport, Palm Jumeirah, and Jebel Ali Port are a wake‑up call for the 3.5 million Indians living in the UAE—and for those planning to move there for business or investment.

You don’t need to panic or pack your bags. But you do need a plan.

Here’s what I’d do with my own family and clients if I were in your shoes.

1. Immediate Personal Safety (First 48 Hours)

Protect your family, don’t speculate.

  • Follow UAE authorities first: UAE’s SMS alerts and Dubai Civil Defence instructions are your single source of truth. When they say “stay indoors,” do it. When they say “all clear,” resume normal life.
  • Know your shelter: Identify your building’s safe zone. Dubai’s high‑rises are built to withstand blast waves, but windows and balconies are vulnerabilities.
  • Emergency kit: Have 72 hours of water, non‑perishable food, medicines, cash (AED), chargers, and documents ready.
  • Family check‑in: Establish a daily 8 PM call or WhatsApp status update with your family group—location, status, needs.

For kids/schools: Most international schools have solid protocols. Trust them unless instructed otherwise.

2. Financial Continuity for Businesses (Week 1–4)

If you run a business in Dubai, your priority is staying solvent while the fog clears.

A. Cash Flow Emergency Review

Run this today:

  1. How many weeks of runway do you have?
    Calculate: Bank balance ÷ weekly operating burn (salaries, rent, key vendors).
    If less than 8 weeks, we need to act.
  2. Who can you pay late without breaking?
    • Landlords (negotiate 1–2 months grace)
    • Non‑critical vendors
    • DEWA/Du (utilities—often more flexible than you think)
  3. Who must be paid now?
    • Salaries (priority 1)
    • Critical suppliers (no stock = no business)
    • Statutory (VAT, corporate tax filings if due)

Virtual CFO action: We can do a 30‑minute Zoom + shared Google Sheet to map this out and prioritise.

B. Revenue Contingency

  • Airport/port disruption: If you’re tourism, logistics, or import‑dependent, model 50–75% revenue drop for 2–4 weeks.
  • Remote pivot: Can you shift to delivery/virtual services? (Many F&B, retail, and consultancies can.)
  • India backup: Activate any India‑side operations or partnerships.

C. Banking and Payments

  • Keep AED cash: ATMs may have queues; keep 1 month’s expenses in physical cash.
  • Multi‑currency accounts: If you have India exposure, keep some INR liquidity accessible.
  • Digital payments: Most UAE banks (Emirates NBD, ADCB, Mashreq) stay operational even during alerts.

3. Investment Portfolio Protection (Immediate)

A. Real Estate (Your Biggest Exposure)

Most Indians in Dubai have property exposure. Here’s the plan:

  1. Don’t sell in panic: Dubai property has historically rebounded strongly post‑crisis.
  2. Pause new buys: Wait for clarity before committing.
  3. Review rentals: Confirm tenants are still paying; negotiate grace periods if needed.
  4. Insurance check: Confirm your policy covers “civil unrest” or “missile damage” (most comprehensive home insurance does).

Handover risk: If you have off‑plan properties nearing completion, check with developer for delays.

B. Financial Markets

  • Fixed income first: Shift to UAE liquid funds, money market funds, or short‑term sovereign sukuk.
  • Reduce equity exposure: UAE indices already down; don’t catch falling knives.
  • Gold: UAE gold souks remain operational; physical gold is a classic hedge.
  • India diversification: Move some liquidity to Indian debt funds or liquid funds if you have India accounts.

Virtual CFO tip: We can rebalance your portfolio in 24 hours across UAE/India accounts.

4. Family and Lifestyle Contingency (1–3 Months)

A. If You Stay (Most Likely)

  • Schooling: Schools will likely resume quickly; have backup online learning ready.
  • Healthcare: Stock 1–2 months of prescriptions; most hospitals stay open.
  • Groceries: Supermarkets (Lulu, Carrefour, Spinneys) prioritise continuity.

B. If Things Escalate (Low Probability)

  • India return plan:
    • Documents: Passports, visas, attested education certificates, rental agreements.
    • Finances: India bank accounts pre‑funded; UPI linked.
    • Housing: Family contacts ready to host.
  • Temporary relocation: Sharjah/Ajman (less impacted) or Abu Dhabi (better defended) as short‑term options.

5. Business Owners: 3‑Month Survival Framework

If you run a company, here’s your 90‑day action plan:

Week 1: Stabilise

  • Cash flow mapping (done).
  • Staff communication (transparent, calm).
  • Vendor prioritisation.

Month 1: Adapt

  • Revenue pivot (digital/delivery/local).
  • Cost audit (30% discretionary spend cut).
  • Government relief (check Dubai SME, Khalifa Fund support).

Month 2–3: Rebuild

  • India diversification (activate backup markets).
  • New client outreach (GCC alternatives).
  • Financial restructuring (if needed).

Virtual CFO role: We handle the numbers, scenarios, and lender negotiations so you focus on operations.

6. Longer‑Term Strategic Shifts

A. Dubai/UAE Remains Attractive (But With Eyes Open)

  • Dubai’s resilience is proven: COVID, 2022 Houthi strikes, now this—they bounce back.
  • But geopolitical risk pricing will rise:
    • Higher insurance
    • Higher logistics
    • Slightly higher cap rates

B. Diversify Your UAE Bet

  • Multi‑emirate: Abu Dhabi (more secure), Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah.
  • India backup: Keep India operations robust.
  • Other hubs: Singapore, Riyadh for diversification.

C. Business Continuity Planning (Mandatory Now)

Every Indian business in UAE needs:

  • Remote work capability
  • India mirror operations
  • 3–6 months cash buffer
  • Multi‑location banking

We can set this up for you in 2 weeks.

The Bottom Line (From Your Virtual CFO)

Dubai isn’t becoming “unsafe” overnight.
It’s becoming “realistic”.

The missile strikes remind us that UAE’s “safe haven” status now comes with a geopolitical risk premium you didn’t have to pay 5 years ago.

For families: Follow instructions, stay calm, prepare but don’t panic.
For businesses: Stabilise cash, protect liquidity, pivot revenue, and use this as a trigger to build proper business continuity.

The best hedge isn’t gold or diversification.
It’s having a financial system that can handle surprises—because surprises always come.

If you’re an Indian family or business in Dubai/UAE and need:

  • A 30‑minute cash flow audit
  • Investment portfolio rebalancing
  • Business continuity planning
  • Or just a sanity check on your numbers

Reach out. We’ve helped businesses through COVID, elections, and now this. We can help you through whatever comes next.

Your virtual CFO,
Abhineet Bhardwaj
21DEGREES Advisory Services

P.S. If you’re planning to move to Dubai after this incident, the calculus has changed slightly. Dubai is still a world‑class city, but now factor in 1–2% higher risk premium on your decisions. Happy to run the numbers with you.