Fearful buyers shelve 2008 property plans
The majority of Gulf residents will ignore increasingly tempting mortgage offers from local banks and continue to rent in 2008 in the belief that house prices have peaked and will begin to fall next year, according to the latest ArabianBusiness.com survey.
Despite rising rental rates and record high inflation across the GCC, 43% of respondents said they would continue to rent their properties rather than risk buying due to analyst concerns that the market may reach its peak this year.
Egyptian investment bank EFG-Hermes said last month that property prices in Dubai look set to rise between 5% and 10% this year, but that in 2009 the market would swing back in the favour of buyers as over 120,000 units come onto the market over the next two years.
EFG-Hermes said would begin declining in next year, with a cumulative decline of 15% to 20% between 2009 and 2011.
However, over a third of respondents (37%) to the poll said they would still look to buy, but instead focus on places where they believe there will be continued demand into 2009 and beyond.
While Gulf Arab states such as the UAE, Qatar and Bahrain have seen property prices go through the roof in recent years due to supply shortages, neighbouring countries Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have yet to see such drastic rises.
The head of Kuwait's Al-Mutakhassis Real Estate said on Saturday that the country would experience a property boom this year due to lower income tax on foreign firms and the creation of the GCC common market.
While analysts predict property prices in Saudi Arabia will rise further over the next few years as demand continues to outstrip supply.
A fifth of respondents (20%) to the survey said they were still undecided on whether to buy or rent, as they were not sure which way the market would swing.
Soaring property prices and the rising cost of imports due to the falling value of the US dollar have pushed up inflation to record levels across the GCC.
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Comments 1-4 of 4
Posted by John, Dubai, Uae on 7 January 2008 at 22:02 UAE time
I would ask EFG to comment at Egypt market and not just for the Dubai market.
As for the property market in Dubai, We have to enough demand until 2012. Just because more units are coming to market does not mean prices will lower. Look at JBR less than 20% are occupied but the prices have not come down.
Posted by Ali Aboucham on 7 January 2008 at 18:53 UAE time
"....rising cost of imports due to the falling value of the US dollar have pushed up inflation to record levels across the GCC" ??
This is quite strange I live in Australia and we are having quite the opposite, our dollar is rising due to the falling US dollar. Can anyone explain?
Editor's reply: The difference is GCC currencies are pegged to the dollar, at a constant ratio that is fixed. Artificially, as the dollar weakens, so do GCC currencies - the government's monetary policy enforces this relationship. If there were a free market, local GCC currencies would rise sharply - the economies of the region are very strong.
At the moment the GCC is in the odd position of having a strong economy and a weak currency, because its monetary policy is a reflection of an environment that is not its own.
The Australian dollar reflects its economy relative to others - your currency is free to move on market speculation. Hence, as your economy is perceived to be stronger than the US economy than it was, because there are no constraints, so your dollar has appreciated to reflect this new relationship.
Posted by shadowpawn, Dubai, UAE on 7 January 2008 at 16:42 UAE time
I do doubt that Rent or anything has the capacity to fall in Dubai.
Posted by Brabus49, Dubai on 7 January 2008 at 13:35 UAE time
What happened to "2008, a year to remember where the Dubai property market will correct". I have been here for 3 yrs now and since my arrival I have heard nothing but cynicism about tomorrow's Dubai property market. The market has done nothing but grow and grow. Seems like our real estate companies/research analysts are always getting it wrong. Now EFG say the market will correct in 2009?? Based what, 120,000 units coming on the mkt???? What about the number of people moving into Dubai every week. Surely we are missing something here. Maybe someone can explain.
Personally I'm optimistic that this market still has some space for further growth.....don't think we have seen anything yet.