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Behind the Sizzle of Dubai Home Boom, Key Vulnerability Persists

Behind the Sizzle of Dubai Home Boom, Key Vulnerability Persists

It was a year of milestones for Dubai’s property market even before the emirate kicked off its $7 billion Expo this month.

Average home prices are rising at the fastest pace since February 2015, with transaction volumes surging nearly 77% in August from a year earlier -- up over 56% when compared with the same period in 2019, before the pandemic hit, according to real estate adviser CBRE Group Inc.   

But it’s the legacy of chronic oversupply that could determine how long the boom will last. Mohamed Alabbar, chairman of Dubai’s largest developer Emaar Properties PJSC, has warned that the current industry exuberance could come back to haunt Dubai as it now exits a seven-year price downturn made worse by its property glut.

“The real estate market is a very funny market,” Alabbar said in an interview. “There is oversupply. People get excited. Customers start taking the inventory and then everybody starts building again.” 

The issue briefly vaulted near the top of the government’s agenda last year, when a committee was set up to manage supply and demand, while property developers temporarily halted new projects. The sentiment has shifted, however, as Dubai’s economy reaped the benefits of a faster reopening.

Behind the Sizzle of Dubai Home Boom, Key Vulnerability Persists

Even as the market stages a dramatic recovery, pockets of underperformance suggest demand is still insufficient to soak up the excess supply. Average rental rates edged lower in the first eight months, falling 2.7% from the same period last year. 

Apartment rents meanwhile dropped 5.2% at a time when developers are adding to the supply of homes in the city. About 24,595 new homes were completed in Dubai so far this year and the construction of another 24,700 is expected to be finished by the end of 2021.

“Right now, I think the supply situation is good,” Alabbar said, adding that Emaar is on course to achieve record sales this year. “It’s natural businessmen will start again and they will flood the market, but that will take few years.”

Other highlights from CBRE’s latest report:

  • Dubai’s average home prices climbed 4.4% in the year to August
  • Average apartment prices rose 2.5% while single family homes, known locally as villas, soared 17.9%
  • Rental rates for single family homes rose at their fastest pace on record, surging 15.5%; CBRE estimates villas make up around 20% of Dubai’s overall supply
  • “Overall, sales volumes in the first three quarters of 2021 have already surpassed total annual transaction volumes in all but two of the last 10 full years,” said Taimur Khan, head of research at CBRE.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.