Dubai house prices set for further 20% fall - survey
Dubai house prices will fall another 20 percent this year, as the former boomtown continues to suffer a sharp economic downturn, a Reuters poll showed.
Residential real estate prices in Dubai have a less than 20 percent chance of picking up before 2011, according to the median forecast of 10 analysts at banks, investment firms and research institutions.
Three of 10 forecasters said they expected prices to hit a bottom in the second half of 2009 and three predicted it would happen in the first half of 2010. One forecaster said prices would rise by 10 percent from now in 2010.
Five analysts expected prices to fall a further 20 percent or more this year and prices could fall an additional 15 percent next year before stabilising in 2011, the poll showed.
"We may see a further drop in prices as the magnitude of the problem in the sector is still high and the recovery of the sector may take some more time," said Sajeer Babu, an equity analyst at National Bank of Abu Dhabi, which participated in the June 2 to June 9 poll.
Property prices in the seaside emirate have slumped since late last year, when the global financial crisis and a drop in oil prices ended an economic boom in the Gulf Arab region.
Hundreds of billions of dollars of projects have been cancelled in the UAE, Dubai firms have laid off thousands of employees and UAE banks have been loathe to extend new mortgage loans.
More than half of the construction projects in the UAE worth $582 billion, have been put on hold, Dubai-based market research firm Proleads said in February.
Rents in Dubai are seen declining by 40 percent for the full year 2009 and a further 10 percent in 2010 before recovering in 2011, the poll showed.
While it indicated that house prices for 2009 will fall an average of 50 percent from a peak in the third quarter, it is likely that prices for off plan properties, or properties still under construction, will fall in excess of that.
Liquidity problems, job losses and additional supply to the market are expected to delay the recovery in Dubai's property sector.
"We believe a recovery is likely in late 2010 or early 2011, with this based on a series of factors which include a decline in demand for buying property," said Sana Kapadia, Vice President, equity research at EFG-Hermes in Dubai.
"Our house view is that lower or potentially negative population growth is likely to put a strain on demand," she said, adding more clarity regarding the legal framework for property ownership and greater confidence were also needed.
Dubai's population is set to fall 17 percent this year, the bank said in a report in March.
In a previous Reuters poll in March, Shuaa Capital said it expected 80,000 units of supply for the next two years.
Dubai property prices had soared sharply after the emirate opened its real estate sector to foreign investors in 2002, granting them freehold ownership rights at many developments.
From the beginning of 2007 to mid-2008, property prices jumped almost 80 percent, according to Morgan Stanley estimates.
As buying properties became more expensive, Dubai's mainly expatriate population opted to rent instead, causing prices to spiral upwards.
Three of the analysts said rents in Dubai could fall as much as 50 percent during 2009.
Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi, the UAE capital and home to most of the country's oil, has fared better during the global economic downturm.
House prices there are expected to fall 25 percent on average for the full year, with two out of eight analysts saying prices would slump as much as 45 percent.
Prices would remain flat in 2010 and pick up in 2011, the poll showed. (Reuters)
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Comments 1-10 of 10
Posted by Aloma Dsouza, Dubai, U.A.E. on 18 June 2009 at 11:00 UAE time
I do not really believe that the rents are goin to fall because we just received a 15% increase in our house rents this month.
The new term starts from August. Who do we believe- The Media or The Rent Owners???????
Posted by Luis Sisamon, Dubai, UAE on 17 June 2009 at 09:44 UAE time
Wowo Omar I have been following your posts and I have to say that I find them enlightening.
Thanks to them I have just discovered that I live on parallel (and wrong) universe where JBR occupancy is less than 30%, the number of cars crossing my street (in Marina) has reduced notably, rents have collapsed,...
I need to spread the word to my former colleague trapped with 2 properties, the guy from a construction company who after more than 10 years in dubai yesterday confirmed me the occupancy rates in JBR and a number of people who seem not to be living in JBR.
Please Omar, give us access to your universe, because things seem to be way better than in ours. Also include Knight Frank in your instructions as they seem to (wrongly of course) believe that Dubai property price has dropped 40% and there is another 20% drop to come.
We will not get out of this deep hole by wishful thinking and sweet talking as many governments seem to believe.
Posted by MOHAMMED KALEEMULLAH, DUBAI, U.A.E. on 17 June 2009 at 09:43 UAE time
Thanks for your advise Omar, take it or leave it. I sincerely heed to your advice, however, I will just send back my family home and will stay here and save some money for myself, which I was not doing so far. Now, they increase the rent or decrease the rent, RTA impose new fine or waive it, they bring Train or no Train, it just doesn't matter to me anymore. Reluctantly compelled to continue here since honestly, situation is more worse in my home country. Thanks for snatching away my social life.
Posted by yasin bawaney, dubai, uae on 17 June 2009 at 02:48 UAE time
I agree the real estate sector can not return to its peak level of 2008 as the laws are very investor and resident unfriendly and lot must be done for dubai by the authorities .I belive dubai does not want any investors for its economy and is a not a home friendly country at all.Authorities does not want to aknowledge any facts and issue their statements which are very much unlike the current situaion.Visa laws regarding the property are totally unhelpful and if u buy a property in states one get eligible for permanent residency permit which will later on grant you citizen ship.I see uk as more stable investment property market then dubai where laws do not change periodically.The effects of decrease in population wil be felt after the tourists return back from holidays .
Posted by Omar, Dubai on 16 June 2009 at 14:47 UAE time
Thank you Harry- Thank you very much. It's short and sweet! If you like Dubai, buy a property and if not, no need at all. Leave to a place that you like. No need to feel any pain!
Mr. Tedesco, which your name means German in Italian!, i ALWAYS try to explain what Harry said. Just stay where you like. Does a British have any right in the USA or does a Swiss have any right in Japan or Australian in Germany?? NOOOOOO. This country is for its own people. Whilst Canada is distributing its passports left and right, Japan never ever grants a citizenship to any foreigner even for chidlren born from pure Japanese mothers or even for people with pure Japanese blood living abroad. So UAE has its own rules and culture, if you like it, just stay you are welcome if not, you need to find a place where you will be happy from deep inside!SIMPLE.
MANY people LOVE UAE and that's why there are so many expats here. No one is forcing anyone to buy. I strongly believe that the regulations should be much more appealing and flexible so people buy more and more.
NEW FACTS:
-My friend has just joined Better Homes. That means they have business (NOT CHARITY).
- My wife's cousin just joined another property co in Barsha. they gave him a visa+car+.%. He sold 4 villas in 1 month (not as good as before but 4 villas a month is not bad at all)
- I was called by another British agency asking if i know any sales ladies!
The market is still doing relativel y well. Let me tell you that i warmly welcome a further decline in prices bcz real estate prices are still VERY HIGH by global standards in Dubai. I predicted a sharper decline but the drop was not as steep as expected. The prices in Dubai were absolutely crazy and to date, still very high. The demand is still very high and you can see that from the thick sections of freehold in all newspapers esp. Gulf News although it's very expensive to run such ads!
Posted by Paul King, Dubai, UAE on 16 June 2009 at 14:37 UAE time
Steve,
You need to get yourself inside to some nice cool A/C. Reading your delusional reply, it seems you're spending too much time outside in the 50 degree heat. What has your "cut & paste" claptrap got to do with the price of property in Dubai? Stop watching your Gladiators DVD and read the title of this article. This has nothing whatsoever to do with being optimistic, pessimistic, negative or dreary! It's time to wake up pal and learn to be realistic!
Posted by Mart on 16 June 2009 at 14:01 UAE time
"I for one will wait for this storm in a tea cup to pass. Once the irational stampeding heard has come to a standstill, some will turn around and take advantage of the current low prices; then the stampede will start all over again and that is exactly when I (the rational investor) will sell my property at a massive profit."
Professional stock traders put a stop on their losses by selling if a share falls below a certain price. This is to avoid exactly what Steve does here - rationalising massive losses on the basis that one day by some miracle the global banking system will start producing masses of debt again to fund another binge in Dubai.
Its not going to happen. Dubai's boom wasn't built on the oil price, or some kind of new economic paradigm. It was built on a mountain of credit (that's debt to you and me). The same mountain that saw share prices and US house prices surge, and houses in eastern europe, and Australia and everywhere else.
The debt flowed around the world - we saw house prices, commodities, shares and just about everything else shoot up in price. Then came the inevitable crash, and those who lent the money went bankrupt or were bailed out with amounts of cash that even governments struggle to find.
For Dubai house prices (the same as US house prices, or UK) to boom again all we need is for a banking system that was brought to the brink of collapse by its own idiocy to forget about what happened in the past 2 years and start dishing out money to anyone who will take it once again. Possible, but unlikely. Will the banks really repeat the same mistakes in the forseeable future?
Steve - don't try to rationalise the collapsing price of your property by praying for some economic miracle to come along and flood the world with money again. Sell up if you can, watch the prices collapse, and then if you really want to you buy at the bottom. But there isn't going to be another boom for another 20 years or more - in Dubai, UK, USA, Eastern Europe or anywhere else that shared in the boom and inevitable bust we've witnessed.
Posted by Harry winston on 16 June 2009 at 12:29 UAE time
There are reasons to buy and also many reasons not to buy a property in Dubai or Abudhabi.
The main reason to buy especially in Abudhabi is to avoid paying 250-350k/year to a greedy landlord for a slumdog apartment/villa. If u plan on living 5-10 years in this country i storongly suggest buying a property unless you would like to see a million dirhams gifted to ur landlord.
The sunny weather, expat benefits, tax free status also help.
On the flip side, the quality isnt great for most property ( harsh climate takes its toll), workmanship leaves lot to be desired, property laws are unclear and changing, visa rules keep changing, maintanence fees are ridicliously high.
So me thinks , people should stop whining and complaing. If the life style suits u and ur family go for it. If u prefer the UK, US or Spain go for it. Each to his own .
Overall the UAE has been fruitful to me and m family financially. Therefore i would like it to succeed. The rulers have foresight and vision and will push for a successful resoultion to this crisis after Ramadan.
Posted by Steve, Dubai, UAE on 16 June 2009 at 09:09 UAE time
Bob, Paul,
Judging by your dreary comments and outlook on live you must be British. The more optimistic among you has long since left your shores to start that little place they call The United States of America.
Here is a little live lesson from my neck of the woods
“It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly ... Who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who have never known neither victory nor defeat”
Posted by Carmi, DUBAI, UAE on 16 June 2009 at 08:25 UAE time
The upcoming collapse of the UD Dollar!!!!! Now that's something to watch out for and the far reaching consequences that will have for all.