Business Day

Dubai’s building boom may be about to implode — developers

- Zainab Fattah Dubai

The desert gave Dubai an easy excuse to keep building.

Sprawling for kilometres in every direction from the duelling skyscraper­s on the coast, villa communitie­s have sprung up across the sandy interior, bringing with them schools, hospitals and shopping malls.

Where the dunes once spilled into the Persian Gulf, an eightlane highway now connects the new developmen­ts with the establishe­d neighbourh­oods.

But five years into Dubai’s property funk, the emirate’s leadership is drawing the line.

Work on a mega-airport, designed to be one of the world’s biggest, was put on hold. And in the most dramatic U-turn yet, Dubai’s ruler has created a committee, headed by his son, to balance out supply and demand in the property market and ensure that state-owned developers do not crowd out private builders.

Some developers are already holding off on planned projects. Two of Dubai’s homegrown billionair­es are now calling for a pause to new developmen­t.

Khalaf Al Habtoor, who once added 1,600 hotel rooms to the city through one project, said the market is saturated.

“If this oversupply continues it will be a disaster,” Hussain Sajwani, chair of Damac Properties, said in an interview.

“The banking system will get affected and that’s something we can’t afford.”

Much of the property glut is of the government’s own making, as it controls some of the emirate’s biggest developers.

The state-linked firms, created to speed up constructi­on, used cheap and often free land to compete for buyers.

MUCH OF THE PROPERTY GLUT IS OF THE GOVERNMENT’S OWN MAKING, WITH PROPERTY PRICES DOWN ABOUT 30% IN THE PAST FIVE YEARS

MORE THAN 30,000 HOMES WILL BE COMPLETED IN 2019 ALONE. THIS REPRESENTS ABOUT DOUBLE DUBAI’S ANNUAL DEMAND

Some paid upfront without waiting for homes to be completed by depositing only 5% of the value.

And excessivel­y optimistic projection­s of growth in Dubai’s population, which consists largely of foreigners, only fed the building boom.

“The developers would benefit from cutting back on the supply because that would raise the prices in the long term,” Craig Plumb, head of Middle East research at broker JLL said.

“So far they’ve chosen shortterm interest by maintainin­g the cash flows even at the cost of lower prices.”

Unsettled by chronic oversupply, property prices are down about 30% in the past five years.

In 2018, Dubai’s economy had its weakest expansion in almost a decade.

With banks threatened by falling home prices and nonperform­ing loans, Fitch Ratings estimates a “significan­t portion” of $23bn in loans made to Dubai government-related companies maturing at the end of 2021 may need to be restructur­ed.

In October, the central bank of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) proposed measures to keep lenders from what it called excessive exposure to real estate. On Sunday, its governor told reporters the property supply needs to be controlled.

For now, Dubai is counting on 2020’s World Expo to boost its economy.

But it is less clear how the newly built infrastruc­ture will be used once the six-month showcase is over.

More than 30,000 homes will be completed in 2019 alone, about double the annual demand, according to JLL. Meanwhile, retail and tourism — equally vital to the lifeblood of Dubai’s economy — are going through struggles of their own.

“Real estate projects need to control their pace to bring added value to the national economy, to avoid becoming a burden and a source of imbalance in our economic journey,” Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, said in an open letter in September.

The question is if going in reverse gear is the right remedy.

Land sales remain an important source of state revenue. Besides having to navigate competing interests among the city’s largest developers, authoritie­s also risk wrong-footing firms unaccustom­ed to interferen­ce.

Even as the real-estate planning body recently held its first meeting with property executives and land department officials, doubts are only increasing about its ability to dent the supply.

“A limit can be set through tougher rules on developmen­t as a preconditi­on to issuing permits, but direct interferen­ce sends the wrong message to investors,” said Ali Taqi, the head of equities at Rasmala Investment Bank in Dubai.

The harder truth is that a solution for Dubai may be to look beyond real estate to fix what really ails its economy.

Once a small fishing village that morphed into a global metropolis in the course of just a few generation­s, the emirate may find an identity makeover preferable to years more of malaise.

Policy makers have already implemente­d reforms to residency laws to attract skilled workers and cut some fees to reduce costs for businesses. Lower property prices could also help the competitiv­eness of Dubai, one of the most expensive cities for expatriate­s.

“Even if they slowed the constructi­on, you have an excess of empty apartments and buildings,” said Garbis Iradian, chief economist for the Middle East, North Africa region at the Washington-based Institute of Internatio­nal Finance.

“They should come up with new forces of growth such as innovation, technology, improving the human capital and attracting more qualified expats to come up with light manufactur­ing.”

 ?? /Reuters ?? Slowing down: General view of Dubai's cranes at a constructi­on site. Five years into Dubai’s property funk, the emirate’s leadership is drawing the line, while two of Dubai’s homegrown billionair­es are now calling for a pause to new developmen­t.
/Reuters Slowing down: General view of Dubai's cranes at a constructi­on site. Five years into Dubai’s property funk, the emirate’s leadership is drawing the line, while two of Dubai’s homegrown billionair­es are now calling for a pause to new developmen­t.

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