Imperial Valley Press

Dubai boom sees Russian cash,

High rents and reborn projects

- BY JON GAMBRELL

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Fourteen years after a financial crisis nearly brought Dubai to its knees, several major abandoned real estate projects are finally showing signs of life as part of a new economic boom in the citystate.

As with previous upturns in Dubai, war is a driving force. But this time it’s Russian investors fleeing Moscow’s war on Ukraine, rather than people escaping Mideast battlefiel­ds.

“There’s lots of parts of the world where there are real challenges and people looking for a safe haven,” said Richard Waind, group managing director for Betterhome­s, a real estate brokerage in the emirate. “I think that’s a safe haven both for the capital but also for their families.”

While there’s no sign the market could be in similar trouble as in 2009, some concerns have started to surface. Skyrocketi­ng rental costs are worsening a cost-of-living squeeze for the foreign workforce that powers the emirate.

Meanwhile, the U. S. Treasury is worried about the amount of Russian money flowing into the real estate market of the most populous city in the United Arab Emirates.

“In theory, there should be significan­t reputation­al risk with the UAE apparently acting as a willing bridge, enabling Russian oligarchs to use the Emirates as a waystation between the Russian financial system and that of the West,” said Jodi Vittori, a nonresiden­t scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for

Internatio­nal Peace who has written extensivel­y on Dubai being a money-laundering haven.

“But the reality seems to point otherwise,” she said.

Dubai’s government and the UAE’s Foreign Ministry did not respond to detailed questions from The Associated Press.

It’s hard to overstate just how much the Emirates has changed over the last half century. Since 1968, the seven sheikdoms that make up the UAE have grown from a British protectora­te of some 180,000 people to a federation that’s home to more than 9.2 million. Government statistici­ans say 3.5 million people live in Dubai alone, with an additional 1.1 million who temporaril­y live in the city or commute there for work each day.

Oil, much of it from Abu Dhabi’s vast reserves, fueled the UAE’s initial modernizat­ion. After Dubai began allowing foreign ownership of “freehold” properties in 2002, the world’s tallest building, cavernous malls and sprawling subdivisio­ns emerged from what once were uninterrup­ted stretches of windblown sand dunes.

Real estate now rep

resents some 10% of Dubai’s overall gross domestic product. After a slump due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, Dubai saw 86,849 residentia­l sales in 2022, beating a previous record of 80,831 set in 2009.

Buyers and renters have filled exclusive neighborho­ods such as the Palm Jumeirah, a man-made archipelag­o in the shape of a palm tree that juts into the Persian Gulf.

The average asking rent for an apartment there is over $67,600 per year, with a villa renting for $276,000 annually, according to real estate firm CBRE. Analysts attribute growth in the luxury market to the wealthy fleeing pandemic restrictio­ns elsewhere.

That pressure has grown even outside the world of the ultra-wealthy. Rents on average across Dubai are up 26.9% year-on-year, even with anti-price-gouging protection­s. Families living in villas can expect to pay median rents of $76,000 a year.

The sudden increase in rent prompted Gavin Hill, a 34-year-old car salesman from Essex, England, to move with his partner from a villa in the Dubai Hills neighborho­od near downtown to a smaller apartment some 20 kilometers (12 miles) south.

“In terms of looking for a new place, previously it was reasonably easy,” said Hill, who has moved four times in the six years he has lived in Dubai. “This time it’s a minefield”

Russian money has helped fuel this.

Betterhome­s, which has operated here since 1986, saw Russians lead all other nationalit­ies in purchases by non-residents for the first time last year. Other real estate brokers have also acknowledg­ed anecdotall­y the influence Russians have had.

“Since the crisis in Eastern Europe, we have seen a lot of Russians, a lot of Ukrainians as well, looking to both move their family and and money out there,” Waind said.

Dubai has a history of seeking a business advantage in crises like the Arab Spring, COVID-19 and now Russia’s war on Ukraine. During the IranIraq war of the 1980s, its new Jebel Ali port repaired ships damaged by explosions and gunfire in the Persian Gulf. The U.S.-led wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq saw wealthy émigrés arrive in Dubai and the wider UAE.

Those booms included what the West would consider dirty money as well. Some of the nearly $1 billion embezzled in the 2010 Kabul Bank scandal in Afghanista­n went toward luxury homes on Palm Jumeirah. A cousin of Syrian President Bashar Assad tied to Assad’s sanctioned business dealings also owned property there.

 ?? KAMRAN JEBREILI AP PHOTO/ ?? A woman rides a scooter while passing by the advertisin­g billboards of a new residentia­l project in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Jan. 31.
KAMRAN JEBREILI AP PHOTO/ A woman rides a scooter while passing by the advertisin­g billboards of a new residentia­l project in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Jan. 31.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States