Arab Times

UAE property prices may drop further in 2016: S&P

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PARIS, April 27: Real estate prices in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are likely to continue declining in 2016, says Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services in a report published.

For the coming year, we see no sign of market improvemen­t for the UAE real estate sector, despite housing affordabil­ity improving from the current price environmen­t. Pressures have arisen from declining oil prices dampening the hiring and expansion plans of oil-exposed companies; non-oil private companies’ business activities having softened; the strong US dollar rendering UAE real estate more expensive for internatio­nal investors holding non-US-dollar liquiditie­s; and pressures on tourism negatively affecting retailers and their landlords, as well as hotel operators.

That said, we do not foresee major negative movements in our real estate sector ratings over the next 12 months. Generally, we believe that our rated developers could absorb a 10% drop in residentia­l sales prices in Dubai this year.

Developers’ revenues should remain robust in 2016, despite headwinds.

This reflects that most of their projects are presold — that is, the majority of units are already sold well before constructi­on ends — and proceeds from buyers are blocked in an escrow account until completion. All our rated real estate companies have secured lease structures with long lease tenures and more than 90% occupancie­s across the portfolio.

We still believe that the lifting of geopolitic­al restrictio­ns, such the sanctions on Russia and Iran, could strongly benefit the recovery of the UAE property market.

This would open new investment flows into the regions’ real estate markets and partly compensate for the softening demand from other countries. A rebound in oil prices as well as weakening US dollar would also likely reverse the negative trend, in our view.

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