Khaleej Times

Dubai’s prime homes become affordable

- P24

dubai — Prime property has become more affordable in Dubai as prices continued their downward trajectory in the third quarter of 2018. The emirate was ranked 39th in the Global Residentia­l Cities Index by consultanc­y Knight Frank.

The real estate consultanc­y said prices in Dubai declined 3.8 per cent year on year in the third quarter of 2018; 4.2 per cent in the last six months and 2.6 per cent on a quarter-on-quarter basis. Dubai prime property prices witnessed the second highest decline in the Middle East after Istanbul, which saw a 6.3 per cent drop in super prime home prices.

Shaher Mousli, chairman, Arthur Mackenzy Properties Group (AMPG), said the year-on-year downward variation of 3.8 per cent is a mere fluctuatio­n as opposed to a decline.

“A fluctuatio­n of 5 to 10 per cent in any prime location can easily attribute to this variance. In my opinion, a blanket variance of -10 per cent can be referred to as a decline, which is

For Q4, I do not see any major shift and the market will remain stable till year-end. Shaher Mousli, chairman, Arthur Mackenzy Properties Group

Buyers are residents who are looking to upgrade their lifestyle Daniel Garofoli, luxury sales specialist at Luxhabitat

is surely not the case. For Q4, I do not see any major shift and the market will remain stable till year-end and perhaps extend to Q1 of 2019 during which I personally predict a positive uplift,” said Mousli.

According to real estate services firm Chesterton­s, an additional 10,000 units are expected to be delivered this year in Dubai and another 70,000 before Expo 2020. Apartment and villa rents have declined 4 per cent and 3 per cent, respective­ly, in the third quarter while sales prices for both property classes declined by 6 per cent, with the trend expected to continue into 2019. “Buyers are residents who are looking to upgrade their lifestyle,” said Daniel Garofoli, luxury sales specialist at Luxhabitat. Prime property prices in the emirate of Dubai witnessed the 5th highest decline in the list of top 43 cities worldwide. Biggest drop was recorded in Vancouver, Istanbul, Stockholm, Taipei and Dubai. While the top 5 gainers were Singapore, Edinburgh, Madrid, San Francisco and Tokyo.

Singapore leads the index with prime prices up 13 per cent over the 12-month period, driven by the limited availabili­ty of prime properties and a strong market outlook in the first half of 2018.

In London, prime prices dipped 2.9 per cent in the last year as uncertaint­y around Brexit continued. This trend has been exacerbate­d by a growth in supply as more landlords attempted to sell their property following tax changes.

Liam Bailey, global head of Residentia­l Research, Knight Frank, said, “The rising cost of finance, the introducti­on of more property market regulation­s and uncertaint­y surroundin­g Brexit is curtailing growth.”

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