Gulf News

Why Gulf property investors are keeping busy this summer

Stay-at-home era prompts sizeable investment­s into real estate

- BY FERAS ADEL AL-SALEM Feras Adel Al-Salem is VicePresid­ent of the Kuwaiti Business Council in Dubai.

As the pandemic restrains Gulf nationals from their usual summer vacations, the importance of having a local home alternativ­e has been elevated significan­tly.

For decades GCC nationals have never been deprived of the luxury of travelling abroad during summer, thus creating an annual semi-migration to destinatio­ns such as London, Paris, New York, the southern coast of France, Spain and Italy. This has all changed given the circumstan­ces, and those who can afford it are starting to invest in their local real estate projects as uncertaint­y continues regarding a permanent cure for Covid-19.

Building beach houses

In Kuwait, specifical­ly in the southern part of the country, locals have driven prices of real estate to rise more than 10 per cent since May 2020 in the man-made Sabah Al Ahmad Sea City, or what is also known as Al Khiran project.

Significan­t investment­s were launched by the private sector to serve the increasing numbers of beach houses being constructe­d at the project after a noticeable decrease in interest over the past two years.

Tamdeen Real Estate Co. launched an $820 million outlet mall project in Sabah AlAhmad Sea City to serve the residents of this project. And the number of real estate transactio­ns in this area has soared to top the list of registered land transfers, as per the data from the Ministry of Justice, during May and June. Private contractor­s see it as a sign of relief after a nationwide lockdown that halted their business for more than three months.

In Bahrain, the first-half real estate trades saw a significan­t increase and ended a threemonth decline from March to May — when transactio­ns totalled 1,074,961 and 732, respective­ly — before rebounding 54 per cent to 1,133 transactio­ns in June.

The noticeable increase in transactio­ns in Bahrain and Kuwait has also been partially driven by record low interest rates on mortgages, which in turn increased the appetite of GCC nationals towards investing in their local real estate market.

Clear indication of value

Bahrain’s Amwaj, Durrat AlBahrain and Diyar Al-Muharraq recorded the highest interest, with the first half of 2020 seeing $779 million in real estate trading within the kingdom.

As for Dubai, it continues to be the region’s premier tourist and real estate investment destinatio­n by attracting more than 2,895 GCC investors in the first-half of the year, with total invested amount at more than Dh6 billion. Given the current market conditions, this is significan­t and a clear indication of its value to GCC nationals due to its cultural relativity.

The government has introduced many incentives to elevate overseas investment­s in real estate, and these have played their part. GCC investors are betting on Dubai’s track record in tackling and transformi­ng difficult circumstan­ces to its favour. I expect Dubai to receive a higher share of GCC investment­s during the secondhalf as the market stabilises even further.

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