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Visa extension a boon for sick UAE property market

Move will stimulate demand for residentia­l and commercial assets

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DUBAI: As homebuilde­rs in Dubai and Abu Dhabi think up extravagan­t incentives to shake the property market out of its long slumber, the government will offer potential buyers something the companies can’t: the right to stick around.

A decision to extend visas to 10 years for some profession­als is seen as a boon for a foreigner-dependent United Arab Emirates’ property industry that has been in the doldrums longer than anyone had expected.

“The landmark visa changes are undoubtedl­y going to go some way in helping to stimulate demand for both residentia­l and commercial property,” said Faisal Durrani, global head of research at property broker Cluttons.

“The property markets across the UAE have been dogged by challenges ever since oil prices collapsed nearly four years ago, ranging from the threat of oversupply, to the lack of affordable housing.”

The extension announced by UAE Prime Minister and ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid on Sunday is part of a package of measures approved by the cabinet to stimulate the economy.

The rules are expected to come into force this year and visas lasting as long as a decade will be offered to specialist­s in medical, scientific, research and technical fields and top students. The country is also abandoning decades of restrictio­ns on foreigners owning companies.

Shares in several property companies in the country jumped on the news. Dubaibased developers Emaar Properties PSJC and Damac Properties Dubai Co climbed for a second day yesterday after gaining 2.9% and 4.8% respective­ly on Monday. Abu Dhabi’s Aldar Properties PJSC was unchanged over the two days.

Dubai’s property market has become more oriented toward local residents after a bubble fuelled by foreign speculator­s brought the country to the brink of financial collapse in 2009.

That prompted the government and the UAE central bank to take steps to restrict the highly leveraged purchases and property flipping that had fuelled price increases. As a result, the longer-term security of foreign residents has become a more important factor in finding willing buyers.

Home prices have been steadily falling in both Dubai and Abu Dhabi, defying widespread prediction­s of a rebound in 2017. That has led developers to offer incentives ranging from luxury cars to an apartment thrown in with the price of a villa.

The decline has also prompted developers in the country to seek the benefits of scale though acquiring assets from other property companies or cooperatin­g on projects.

Abu Dhabi’s Aldar Properties bought US$1bil of real estate assets from Tourism Developmen­t & Investment Co earlier this month, while Emaar, the Dubai-based developer of the world’s tallest tower, and Aldar in March agreed on a partnershi­p to develop 30 billion dirhams (US$8.2bil) of real estate projects in the UAE and abroad.

Prices across Abu Dhabi fell 7% last year, according to Cluttons. The picture in Dubai hasn’t been much better. The value of real estate sales in the first quarter was 18.8 billion dirhams, about half of what it achieved in the same period a year earlier, according to data from the Dubai Land Department. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? On downtrend: Visitors look at a scale model of the city of Dubai during a real estate show in Cannes, France. Home prices have been steadily falling in both Dubai and Abu Dhabi, defying widespread prediction­s of a rebound in 2017. — AFP
On downtrend: Visitors look at a scale model of the city of Dubai during a real estate show in Cannes, France. Home prices have been steadily falling in both Dubai and Abu Dhabi, defying widespread prediction­s of a rebound in 2017. — AFP

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