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DEYAAR TO EMBARK ON Dh800m PROJECT AT ITS DEVELOPMEN­T IN PRODUCTION CITY PROPERTY

▶ Chief executive confident demand remains for quality homes, despite concerns over a slowdown in real estate

- FAREED RAHMAN

Dubai-listed Deyaar Developmen­t plans to start a new Dh800 million scheme at its Midtown master developmen­t at Dubai Production City despite concerns about a slowdown in the property market.

Constructi­on of the project will start next month and is expected to be completed in 30 months, Saeed Mohammed Al Qatami, chief executive of the company, said yesterday.

“It is part of [the] expansion of Midtown, which is a success story,” he said. “We have developed 13 buildings as part of phase one, which have all been sold out. We are planning to start the second phase with 11 buildings next month.”

The overall investment in Midtown through all the constructi­on phases is expected to touch Dh2.6 billion, he added. The company is planning to finance the project through a mix of debt and equity.

The start of the project comes despite concerns about the slowdown of the property market because of weak demand and oversupply. The chairman of one of Dubai’s biggest privately-owned developers, Hussain Sajwani, called for a one-to-two-year pause on new constructi­on projects in an interview with Bloomberg this week as a way of redressing the supply-demand imbalance.

“All we need is just to freeze the supply,” he said. “Reduce it for a year, maybe 18 months, maybe two years.”

Mr Al Qatami said there is still demand in Dubai’s property market and people will buy a good product.

“There is demand today and there is choice for you to stay,” he added. “People who are willing to pay a couple of thousand more than the others, just to have a better life, demand is always there. The demand for me may not be demand for you.”

He also expects the property market to improve because of initiative­s by the government as well as Dubai’s Expo 2020.

The Dubai government has recently set up a new real estate committee to ensure a better supply balance in the emirate through greater collaborat­ion between government-related entities and private sector companies.

The UAE government is also encouragin­g investment through long-term visas for investors and profession­als.

“Things will start improving with more and more government initiative­s,” Mr Al Qatami said. He added that Deyaar has a low level of debt at Dh400 million and is supportive of the

UAE Central Bank’s proposals to create a new regulatory framework limiting banks’ exposure to the real estate sector. Deyaar is 41 per cent owned by Dubai Islamic Bank.

In the hospitalit­y sector, Developmen­t opened three hotels in Dubai with 950 rooms and it expects a recurring revenue of

Dh100m from next year. “There will be more visitors next year due to Expo 2020 and [this] will benefit the hospitalit­y industry,” Mr Al Qatami said.

The developer reported a 54 per cent decline in third-quarter net profit last week as revenue decreased and expenses climbed.

Net profit for the three-month period ending September 30 dropped to Dh16.3m, the company said in a statement to the Dubai Financial Market, where its shares trade. Revenue fell 4.1 per cent year-on-year at the end of the third quarter to Dh145.7m, while expenses increased to Dh43.6m.

Property consultanc­y JLL in its third-quarter report published last week said more than 6,300 new homes were completed in Dubai during the three-month period, bringing the total fulfilment­s so far this year to 23,000. A further 33,000 units are scheduled to be completed by the end of the year.

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 ??  ?? Saeed Al Qatami, Deyaar chief executive, above. Deyaar properties in Business Bay, right Reem Mohammed / The National
Saeed Al Qatami, Deyaar chief executive, above. Deyaar properties in Business Bay, right Reem Mohammed / The National
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