Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Dubai Property Tripped Up By Obama's Peacemaking

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Dubai Property Tripped Up By Obama's Peacemaking

    DUBAI PROPERTY TRIPPED UP BY OBAMA'S PEACEMAKING
    Wayne Arnold, [email protected]

    The National
    August 10. 2009 6:41PM UAE

    Could the slump in Dubai property prices be Barack Obama's fault?

    The US president has never been to Dubai and there is no evidence
    that he has ever owned property there. But since moving into the
    White House in January, Mr Obama may have inadvertently contributed
    to weakening demand for property in the nation's financial capital,
    according to an academic who has studied trends driving the market.

    Dubai's property market has long relied on demand from the Middle
    East, India, Pakistan and Iran, where investors faced with chronic
    political and economic instability look to Dubai as a safe haven.

    By lowering anxieties in the region with his more accommodating
    foreign policy, Mr Obama may have reduced the political impetus for
    buying in Dubai.

    "Dubai has depended on insecurity in the rest of the region," says
    Sayed Bozorgnia, a visiting assistant professor of economics at Abu
    Dhabi University's College of Business Administration.

    Under Mr Obama's predecessor, George Bush, the US was a regional wild
    card. Now, Mr Bozorgnia says, "there's a little more stability".

    He says the Obama factor is only one of several reasons why Dubai
    property prices are likely to keep falling this year.

    He and his students, many of whom he says are property investors, have
    identified a vicious circle of diminished expectations and falling
    prices that raises questions about the wisdom of having relied so
    heavily on property to diversify the country's economy away from oil.

    Along with diminishing fears of wider regional conflict, something
    many thought was a distinct possibility when Mr Bush was in office,
    demand for property in Dubai is falling victim to declining wages
    and rising job losses. Even if property owners are not losing their
    jobs, tenants have been made redundant, affecting demand for rentals
    and pushing rents lower. That reduces the yield on property relative
    to other investments and makes renting more attractive to residents
    than buying.

    "As long as rents are falling, people are not inclined to purchase,"
    says Mr Bozorgnia. "In addition to that, the population has been
    falling. A lot of people have left or are thinking about leaving."

    And as long as potential buyers fear conditions point to a decline
    in prices they tend to delay purchasing, further sapping demand. The
    same kind of psychological effect applies to supply. Developers
    fearing prices will fall further are rushing to sell at discounts,
    Mr Bozorgnia says, placing further downward pressure on prices as
    they hunt for buyers.

    "Since firms think prices are going to be lower, they want to unload
    as much property on to the market as possible," he says. "So your
    supply side has increased; your demand has decreased."

    Demand is unlikely to improve, according to Mr Bozorgnia, until banks
    ease mortgage conditions, a conundrum the UAE Central Bank is still
    struggling to solve.

    Banks' willingness to lend for property purchases, after all, is
    unlikely to improve while the outlook for prices is so dim. Banks
    are already experiencing rising mortgage defaults.

    Persistent weakness in the property market is not good news for the
    nation's economy. Property and construction are the UAE's largest
    employers and, after oil, its largest source of income.

    In the future, Mr Bozorgnia says, the country would do better to
    promote other industries, not by buying up global champions but by
    luring innovators and entrepreneurs.

    "Most good ideas come not from huge organisations but from small
    companies," he says.

    The UAE may not hold much allure for start-ups, however. It ranks
    46th on the World Bank's ease of doing business list, behind Bulgaria,
    Armenia and Tonga. Much of the foreign investment that poured into the
    country over recent years has been to take advantage of the property
    boom. But with the global economy still struggling to emerge from the
    downturn, buying from the country's top sources of capital, India,
    Pakistan and Britain, has been in steady decline.

    So are purchases from Iran, which despite recent election unrest no
    longer faces the prospect of a US invasion. Purchases from Russia,
    relations with which Mr Obama has pledged to reset, have also dwindled.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X