Kuwait Times

DAMAC sees property price pause in 2015

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DUBAI: Dubai developer DAMAC expects the emirate’s property sector to steady in 2015 before supply shortages boost prices in 2016-17, its chief executive said yesterday, after the company reported an 11 percent rise in fourth-quarter profit. Dubai house prices fell 49 percent from a peak in the third quarter of 2008 to the market bottom in the second quarter of 2009, according to consultant­s Cluttons, following a supply glut and the emirate’s debt crisis.

Prices subsequent­ly recovered as an influx of cash and people from troubled parts of the Middle East helped spark a rebound, although Cluttons estimates house prices remain about 18 percent below 2008 peaks.

DAMAC made a profit of $249.8 million in the three months to Dec. 31, according to Reuters calculatio­ns based on a company statement. This was up from $225.1 million a year earlier. DAMAC’s 2014 full-year profit was $937 million, up from $641.5 million, the company said in a filing to London’s bourse.

“I see Dubai’s property marketing stabilizin­g in 2015, but 2016-17 there could be some shortage in supply,” DAMAC chief executive Hussain Sajwani told Reuters. “After consolidat­ing, we see the market nosing up.”

The consensus view is for prices to fall slightly in 2015 as increased property sales taxes, stricter mortgage rules and a lack of affordabil­ity reverses market momentum. Sajwani said four developers now controlled 90 percent of Dubai’s property sector-DAMAC, plus government-linked trio Dubai Properties, Emaar Properties and Nakheel.

“These are all long-establishe­d companies with strong cash flows and that is helping the market mature,” said Sajwani. DAMAC’s fourthquar­ter revenue was $440.4 million versus $431.8 million a year earlier, Reuters calculatio­ns showed.

The firm booked sales worth $3.1 billion in 2014, up from $2.5 billion in 2013. It delivered 3,553 units last year. “If you look at our balance sheet, cash flows and growth requiremen­ts, I don’t see a huge need for additional capital,” said Adil Taki, DAMAC chief financial officer.

DAMAC’s value of properties under constructi­on rose by 20 percent to $2.33 billion at 2014end, largely due to increases in its land bank. “I don’t expect we will buy a huge amount of land this year, although there will also always be some depending on location and availabili­ty,” added Sajwani. DAMAC will also de-list its global depository receipts (GDRs) from London by mid-March, having bought out 97.4 percent of holders. Shares in DAMAC, which joined Dubai’s main bourse in January, ended 6.8 percent higher. —Reuters

 ??  ?? HEART: Afghan blacksmith­s work in a shop in Herat yesterday. Afghanista­n’s economy has improved significan­tly since the fall of the Taleban regime in 2001 largely because of the infusion of internatio­nal assistance. —AFP
HEART: Afghan blacksmith­s work in a shop in Herat yesterday. Afghanista­n’s economy has improved significan­tly since the fall of the Taleban regime in 2001 largely because of the infusion of internatio­nal assistance. —AFP

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