Oman Daily Observer

Rents fall due to oversupply and exit of expatriate­s

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According to Saif, there was a time when companies and individual tenants accepted terms without negotiatin­g hard.

They had to stand up to landlords to provide accommodat­ion to their employees.

“Earlier, employers either directly leased buildings to be given to their employees or paid housing allowances separately.

“As the labour force evolved and human resources department­s have started to lump housing benefits into salaries, employees look for flats at lower rates so that they could save some money on that count”, said Saif.

There is a disproport­ion between demand and supply, said Ibrahim al Balushi, a real estate broker.

“Over the last couple of years, there has seen a large supply of new quality apartments amid a fall in demand in areas like Ruwi, Muscat, Darsait, Al Wadi Al Kabeer, Wadi Adai and other adjoining areas where there already exist several hundreds of old buildings”, he said.

Also most buildings are being constructe­d with bank loans that they cannot be kept empty, he said, adding, no landlords want an empty property on their hands at present.

However, the fact is that the current market has seen a power change with tenants dictating more favourable terms, he said.

“The tenants now control the rent as they are the ones helping as pay the bank instalment­s against our loans. If they don’t like the price of rent they will just go and look at another flat and we cannot do anything about that. There have options open before them”, said Raheed al Ruzaiqi, a house owner.

According to Joachim, a Jordanian, high rent is becoming story of the past.

“Rental prices were quite high for a long time in the past. Now they have come down. I believe it will be further down in view of the large number of new housing units available here.

According to Cluttons, average rental rates fell by a further 2.3 per cent during the third quarter of 2016, bringing total decline for the year to 8.1 per cent for Oman’s residentia­l market.

The weakest performing residentia­l sub-market was Shatti al Qurum, where rents fell 21.1 per cent, followed by Sur al Hadid and Qurum witnessing 20.8 and 7.9 pc fall, respective­ly.

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