Is the Dubai property market falling apart or finding a level?

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William11

New Member
Dubai is recovering day by day. There are new buildings coming out.
I think we have not seen the bottom in real estate in Dubai
 
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lookinginvest

Member
The Dubai real estate market is becoming more mature and as such will be more impacted by worldwide economic conditions. Is it really any surprise to see a softening in prices and rental income? Personally I believe those who are writing off the Dubai property market will live to regret this in the longer term.
 
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Longterminvestor

Administrator
The Dubai property market is more stable today than it ever has been. There is nothing wrong in property prices moving with both the local economy and the worldwide economy. The days of defying gravity have long gone for the Dubai property market although hopefully there will be potential for significant long-term capital appreciation and rental income.
 
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Dubai2020

New Member
The prices seem to be dropping according to most research firms and experts, but it is expected to bottom out by the end of 2016 and start increasing in 2017.
 
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PostBrexitInvestor

Member
This has the feel of a slow deflating of what could have turned into a nasty property price bubble. I don’t see any problem with property price corrections as long as there is no build up of momentum on the downside.
 
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Dubai2020

New Member
The rent prices are not matching the sale prices in terms of downward trend, which makes the ROI even more attractive, for some properties it could be > 10%
 
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PostBrexitInvestor

Member
Hi @Dubai2020 are these rents sustainable in your view? If so then it seems to be something of a no-brainer to begin picking up high yielding properties for the longer term?
 
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John Barron

New Member
HI @PostBrexitInvestor,

It appears by all accounts that there will be some fluctuation on the rental returns on property, however not drastic. There have been claims that rental prices will fall, and in some areas they have but only by a little, in the other areas they have just stopped increasing, which for a Dubai resident is nearly as good.

The developers are now starting to put together "more affordable" housing and making promises of guaranteed ROI percentages which to an investor can be quite attractive. The best areas for ROI are Sports City, Jumeirah Village Circle and Al Furjan to name a few (roughly 8-10%).
 
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Longterminvestor

Administrator
Perhaps it is time to start building up real estate exposure in Dubai, especially if rental income is holding up and rental yields continue to rise as prices fall.
 
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Dubai2020

New Member
HI @PostBrexitInvestor,

It appears by all accounts that there will be some fluctuation on the rental returns on property, however not drastic. There have been claims that rental prices will fall, and in some areas they have but only by a little, in the other areas they have just stopped increasing, which for a Dubai resident is nearly as good.

The developers are now starting to put together "more affordable" housing and making promises of guaranteed ROI percentages which to an investor can be quite attractive. The best areas for ROI are Sports City, Jumeirah Village Circle and Al Furjan to name a few (roughly 8-10%).
Hi John,

The ROI is debatable, if the expected rent for example is 50k and the property is sold for 500k they will advertise guaranteed ROI of 10% but you need to factor in the yearly maintenance fees, which could come for example to be 12.5k, so after deducting it from your income rent of 50k, the ROI actually comes down to 7.5%.

It is still a good ROI compared to worldwide rates, but it is inflated by developers.
 
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Dubai2020

New Member
Hi @Dubai2020 are these rents sustainable in your view? If so then it seems to be something of a no-brainer to begin picking up high yielding properties for the longer term?
Hi PostBrecitInvestor, it is a difficult question to answer, but if anything rent rates do not usually fall as hard as property prices. So going with buy-to-let as a long term investment is a sound choice.
 
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nmb

Well-Known Member
Could we see some foreign investors channelling their funds to the UK property market, as opposed to areas such as Dubai, due to the recent collapse in the sterling exchange rate? The UK has a sound and strong property market and after the recent currency collapse surely it must look attractive to overseas investors on a long-term basis?
 
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Dubai2020

New Member
Could we see some foreign investors channelling their funds to the UK property market, as opposed to areas such as Dubai, due to the recent collapse in the sterling exchange rate? The UK has a sound and strong property market and after the recent currency collapse surely it must look attractive to overseas investors on a long-term basis?
I believe the full effect of Brexit will be reflected after 2 years, only then would we see a steady stream of investors since the currency value could drop further within those 2 years.
 
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lookinginvest

Member
It seems inconceivable that the UK will not be involved in the European single market in some shape or form after leaving the EU. Let us not forget that Europe exports far more to the UK than the UK exports to European markets. Surely they will need to find some common ground and a solution which suits everybody?
 
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Rabbab1221

New Member
I think it is a mix of both. Large numbers of speculators and investors started to buy up properties without any intention to live in them and there were huge backlogs in construction. That led to a drop in prices and forced the developers into bankruptcy because they couldn't finish developments that no one was buying.
 
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Goyzer

New Member
Dubai has had a bright light of optimism shining on it for years, welcoming foreign investors with open arms, with great promises of visas, tax free-wealth, a whole ex-pat package, and it has been the most keenly observed city in the world.
 
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