Is the Gulf ready for home-grown subprime?

by Sean Cronin

Sixteen months ago at a small and uneventful property conference held in Dubai, a Citigroup banker delivering a speech about real estate investment trusts, finished his presentation with a throwaway remark that went unreported by the media in attendance.

He said that defaulting subprime mortgages in the US that were then starting to emerge, risked spreading throughout the world, making it "harder and more expensive" for people to borrow.
A year after subprime hit, after $12bn of writedowns at Citigroup, and $400bn in credit losses globally, his words seem more prophetic than even he would have imagined. He no longer works at the bank - like about 7000 others whose jobs have been lost or are in the process of being lost there.

A few of them may be looking for new work in the financial hubs of the Gulf, where the local units of many international lenders are helping to compensate for the losses being incurred elsewhere.

Profits are rolling in and recruitment is booming across retail banking, wealth management and brokerage. Most of the income now being generated has been driven by the rampant growth in consumer lending and mortgages.

No danger then, of people finding it "harder and more expensive to borrow" here - or at least not just yet.

That could change quickly. The Dubai real estate market, where residential property prices have advanced almost 80 percent since the start of 2007, is key to the future fortunes of other Gulf property markets. It's where all the ripples emanate from and is a bellwether of the industry's regional health.

Nakheel's move to curb speculation on the Palm's Trump Tower last week by forcing investors to hold property for at least a year before selling it on, might appear draconian and interventionist at first glance.

But desperate times may require desperate measures. The rampant price inflation that the market has witnessed in recent months needs to slow down. Otherwise the consequences for the local and regional economy could be severe.

Morgan Stanley predicts that prices in the emirate could fall by 10 percent by 2010 as an oversupply of units begins to drag yields down.

The prediction follows similar warnings from Standard Chartered Bank that speculators are overheating the market. It recommended the introduction of a capital gains tax to check the increases.

Subprime may not have infected Gulf economies yet in the same way that it has spread through other financial markets, but who's to say that the region won't produce its own home-grown strain of the contagion if real estate and retail bank lending is allowed to continue to escalate unchecked?

Sean Cronin is the editor-in-chief of Arabian Business English.

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