The National - News

REAL ESTATE SLUMP ‘IS EXPECTED TO BE OVER NEXT YEAR’

Dubai Holding director says prices likely to start rising due to Expo

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Dubai’s real estate market is close to the bottom of a twoyear downturn and the market should pick up next year as business activity gains momentum ahead of Expo 2020, said a senior official at Dubai Holding, the emirate’s investment vehicle.

“There has been a correction in prices, a correction in the designs of products – the type and quantity – but this is purely a correction in terms of supply and demand,” said Khalid Al Malik, chief real estate officer at Dubai Holding and acting group chief executive of Dubai Properties, a unit of Dubai Holding.

“Personally, I’m very optimistic and believe the market will pick up in 2019,” he told

The National. Dubai Holding is building the 2.2 square kilometre Marsa Al Arab two-island complex near Burj Al Arab, and the Dubai Creek Harbour mega-project in partnershi­p with Emaar Properties.

The emirate’s real estate market is no longer driven by the rapid buying and selling – or “flipping” – of luxury property that characteri­sed the pre-2009 boom years before the global economic downturn. Instead, the market has matured and is catering to a broader range of tastes and price points, Mr Al Malik said.

“The market has been very different because before it was very much dependent on speculatio­n, which put it totally out of [balance].

“Today we are dealing with real customers, people who have the money to buy, the end users, the ones who buy for the purpose of actually living in these apartments and villas. The market is very stable now,” he said.

In addition, the number of visitors to Dubai is forecast to reach 20 million by 2021. The Expo 2020 Dubai mega-event is a further draw for tourists and prospectiv­e investors, as it will bring “huge demand on everything – from transporta­tion, flights, roads, rental properties and hotels”.

“All the indication­s are positive so we need to be prepared,” Mr Al Malik said.

His optimism comes after a sluggish few years for the UAE property industry. Residentia­l sales and rental prices have dropped after a three-year oil price slump, with year-onyear declines exceeding 10 per cent in some neighbourh­oods as housing allowances were squeezed and buyers and renters sought cheaper deals.

However, increased government spending and an uptick in oil prices to $83 per barrel (Dh305) this year have buoyed investor sentiment and prompted expectatio­ns that prices could start to rise again from 2019.

Consultanc­y JLL said in a report this year that while residentia­l prices in Dubai have fallen by around 20 per cent since the previous market peak in October 2014, the market is now approachin­g the bottom of its cycle, with only limited declines expected over the next year.

Meanwhile, recent changes to UAE visa laws to allow 10-year residency for certain expats is expected to encourage longterm residents to buy property, rather than rent, JLL said.

“I think [the decline in prices] has been overly negatively described,” Mr Al Malik said. He was speaking at the Cityscape Global property exhibition in Dubai , where developers have launched thousands of units for sale.

Dubai Holding is marketing Madinat Jumeirah Living, a new luxury residentia­l developmen­t with gated apartment clusters, community retail, parks and swimming pools to be constructe­d next to the company’s Marsa Al Arab tourism destinatio­n near Burj Al Arab. It is scheduled to break ground early next year and be completed within two years.

The company continues to sell phased units at its other residentia­l schemes, where further developmen­t continues as buyers and tenants move in, which include One JBR, Villanova and Mudon.

The majority of buyers are from the UAE, India and the UK, Mr Al Malik said.

Dubai Holding will continue to offer a mix of affordable and luxury products, “as flexibilit­y is key to being competitiv­e as a real estate company,” he said.

Mr Al Malik became acting chief executive of Dubai Properties last month following the resignatio­n of Raed Al Nuaimi who was appointed to the role as part of a management reshuffle in February.

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