The National - News

Bahrain property sector grows 4.5% in first quarter

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

The Bahrain Economic Developmen­t Board said the country’s real estate sector grew 4.5 per cent in the first quarter of 2017, adding US$1.7 billion to the economy, as recent reforms to bolster investment in property sparked an increase in demand.

“Recent figures demonstrat­e the resilience of Bahrain’s real estate sector and highlight the increasing demand for housing, not only in the kingdom but across the wider region,” said Khalid Al Rumaihi, the chief executive of the economic developmen­t board.

“Strong growth in this sector has been supported by the implementa­tion of economic and legislativ­e reform and forward-thinking policies such as the public-private partnershi­p model by the ministry of housing and the recently issued real estate law.”

The Bahrain Economic Board said that real estate transactio­ns in the country were valued at $770 million in the first quarter of 2017, an 8.1 per cent increase over the same period last year.

The hotels and restaurant­s sector grew 12.3 per cent yearon-year.

Demand for residentia­l units in Bahrain is growing at a rate of 5,000 units a year, according to the ministry of housing.

Visitors have also been increasing, bolstering demand for tourism and retail facilities. Some 5.6 million tourists visited the country in the first half of the year, a 14 per cent increase on the first half of 2016, according to the Bahrain Tourism and Exhibition­s Authority.

More than $11bn of mixeduse projects in Bahrain are being marketed at the Cityscape Global property exhibition in Dubai this week.

That includes Bahrain Bay, a 450,000 square metre $2.5bn waterfront district on the outskirts of the business area. Bahrain Marina, another mixed-use developmen­t on the Manama coast, is expected to also boost tourism when it is completed by 2021.

“Cityscape Global is an excellent platform for developers to showcase their world-class projects to interested investors and we think Bahrain has great

Figures demonstrat­e the resilience of Bahrain’s real estate sector and highlight the increasing demand for housing, not only in the kingdom KHALID AL RUMAIHI Chief executive of Bahrain Economic Developmen­t Board

developmen­ts to offer and are pleased to be taking part for the third year in a row,” said Mr Al Rumaihi.

The GCC nation has also been busy building large-scale infrastruc­ture projects valued at $32bn throughout the kingdom and as well as physical projects the country has been undertakin­g regulation­s designed to boost growth in the real estate sector.

Bahrain, whose long-term issuer rating was cut by two notches to Ba2 by Moody’s Investors Service in July, has faced financial difficulti­es in the wake of a slump in oil prices over the past three years.

The kingdom, which is not a member of Opec, has turned to external borrowing and is running an austerity campaign to narrow the budget gap.

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