QUWAIN, UAE: Gulf Craft, the largest Gulf Arab yacht maker, projects modest sales growth in 2011 but hopes a new emerging market elite will spur its luxury boat business, its chief executive said. The United Arab Emirates is home to some of the most exclusive harbors in the world. In the Dubai Marina, residents of luxury apartments look out onto a sea of gleaming yachts, while neighboring emirate Abu Dhabi has been holding an annual yacht show showcasing the latest superyachts since 2009. But the global financial crisis and the regional disasters it triggered are still bearing down on the luxury boat industry. Chief Executive Nasser Al-Shaali said Gulf Craft's sales could rise by as much as 15 percent in 2011, but that there was a risk that there could be no growth at all. "We are very cautious for 2011 because we see indications of a double-dip. We see also indications of dwindling corporate reserves in the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council). In 2011, we have the prospects of more bankruptcies coming our way," he said. Shaali said 2010 had been a good year for the company, whose main competitors are Italy's Ferretti and Benetti, two of the world's most exclusive yacht brands. Sales soared by as much as 40 percent, boosted by a rebound in the luxury sector that was largely helped by clients who had pre-crisis plans to buy luxury goods and who returned to the market with the first signs of recovery, he said. But the global financial crisis hit some Gulf Arab countries hard and, like elsewhere in the world, left behind some major changes to the business environment. The whole customer base of luxury markets is undergoing a shift. "The changing dynamic of the luxury buyers is very interesting. Luxury markets in London, in the south of France, have been boosted from buyers from emerging countries more than even buyers in developed countries," Shaali said.