Tag Archives: dubai

The Winners And Losers In Overseas Property Game

Exotic, obscure locations were the place to buy in 2006 but the game has changed. By Graham Norwood GRAHAM NORWOOD SATURDAY 18 MAY 2013 Ah, the good times. Back in 2006 the insatiable British appetite for buy-to-let and holiday home investment meant we did not settle for Brighton or the Costa del Sol but sought ever-more exotic locations in which to sink our spare cash. Remember those “emerging markets”? Property supplements and estate agency windows extolled the virtues of buying in places many Britons could not even find on a map. The reasons given for investing in out-of-the-way locations then are almost the complete reverse of criteria investors might adopt now. European cities looked tempting, especially in countries poised to adopt the euro; off-the-beaten-track US locations were no-brainers as America’s economy grew 5.6 per cent in the first quarter of 2006; and you could invest easily by remortgaging your UK home. That was then. In the seven downturn years most emerging property market capital values and rents have crashed and burned. A mortgage famine and poor exchange rates deter new British purchasers from snapping up the homes of those wishing to bail out. For example, a €200,000 apartment in 2006 would have cost you £136,000 whereas today it would be £170,000; a US$250,000 villa in December 2006 would have been £127,250 but today it’s up to £163,000. So what has become of five of the most-hyped emerging markets from 2006? 1. Dubai At first sight, this looks a success story. The respected property consultancy CBRE says house prices are up 16 per cent and rents up 17 per cent in the year to March 2013, while high-end estate agent Knight Frank says Dubai is the world’s second-most booming market (behind Hong Kong) following a 19 per cent rise in 2012. That sounds a steal until you realise prices crashed an average 50 per cent between 2008 and 2011 and the city’s property market required a $10bn bailout from Abu Dhabi, a neighbouring member of the United Arab Emirates. Therefore many values are still 35 per cent below 2006 levels. Building work has resumed and analysts say 15,000 to 18,000 new homes will go on sale both this year and next, so there is a worry about a crash if supply exceeds demand again. As a result, mortgages are difficult to obtain. Even so, excess remains Dubai’s defining characteristic: Chesterton Humberts is selling a four-bedroom flat in Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest residential tower, for £4,993,940. 2. Bulgaria In 2006 this was THE place to buy. UK estate agents like Savills and Knight Frank were selling flats in Bansko ski resort and on the Black Sea coast. Even renowned designer Philippe Starck fashioned the interiors for one scheme. There was a construction surge in 2006 with a pipeline of 22,000 new holiday apartments in the Black Sea region alone according to international estate agency Colliers. But demand for resort properties plummeted from 500 a month in 2006 to 30 in 2008 and prices followed suit. Nothing much has changed since. Some Britons sold their apartments to vulture funds, which were buying properties in 2008, but those who held on have seen only modest rental returns and significant capital depreciation. Rightmove is advertising one-bedroom flats in Bansko for £30,615. Seven years ago similar units were on sale for £50,000. 3. Las Vegas An international buy-to-let market built in a town laden with casinos was always going to be a gamble but perhaps unexpectedly, it may be about to pay off. In 2005 Colliers was selling one, two and three-bedroom apartments to Britons from £140,000 but Las Vegas values collapsed 59 per cent between 2006 and 2012, according to Zillow, a house sales website that analyses price changes. Yet the city’s economy is improving and mortgage foreclosures are down 17 per cent since spring 2012. Average house prices are up 22.3 per cent in the past year. The wider US housing market is showing sustained recovery. Some US mortgage lenders offer overseas investors 15 or 30-year mortgages on Las Vegas homes with up to 70 per cent loan-to-value, although individuals may have to put a hefty sum in a US bank account first. 4. Turkey Buyers here may have been luckier than elsewhere as prices in holiday home hotspots dipped only 10 per cent in the global downturn. The country’s unsophisticated mortgage system did not overstretch its banks to the degree seen elsewhere. Most purchases have been cash because house values are low by UK standards and the few mortgages that exist for foreign buyers typically have rates of seven per cent or more. In 2006 villas were on sale for under £120,000 and flats for £35,000 in Bodrum, Alanya and Antalya, three key tourist spots. They are much the same now. supply exceeds demand in most resorts. However, the market is looking up again. Construction sites mothballed five years ago are resuming work and Turkish house prices rose 10.5 per cent in 2012, says Knight Frank. 5. Montenegro Tourist havens like Kotor, Budva and Sveti Stefan suddenly became must-have places to buy apartments in the booming 12 months after this tiny but strikingly attractive country gained independence from Serbia in 2006. Prices were high: new-build inland villas were £700,000 while coastal apartments hit £1m or more and some agents claimed 100 per cent price rises in 12 months. But prices “dropped about 30 per cent after the crisis and have since come back circa 10 per cent”, according to John Kennedy of developer Boka Group. It has become hugely dependent on just one source – there are 50 flights a day from Russian cities. Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Dubai, Investment, investments, News, Property, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on The Winners And Losers In Overseas Property Game

Is Tokyo the New Miami?

Is Tokyo the New Miami? By Michael Gerrity | May 16, 2013 What does Tokyo have in common with the Miami and Dubai property markets? A tidal wave of foreign property investment is flooding the market due to currency exchange rate fluctuations. Over the last several years Miami’s white-hot property market has been the beneficiary of both a flight of capital from Venezuela, due to the policies of late President Hugo Chavez, and Brazil’s surging real against the U.S. dollar. Similarly, the collapse last year of Iran’s rial, which fell as much as 40 percent in a single week in September 2012, sparked a significant flight of capital by wealthy Iranian families into Dubai condos. Now Japan’s new Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, has moved to spark inflation by devaluing the yen, which has led to a torrent of foreign property investment into Tokyo and other parts of Japan. Investment in Japan property rose to $10.6 billion in the first quarter of 2013, up 32 percent year from a year ago and 38 percent from the previous quarter, Jones Lang LaSalle reports. Japan is the “one [market] to watch,” said Stuart Crow, head of Asia Pacific capital markets at Jones Lang LaSalle. As reported in the New York Times yesterday, Japan’s economy is growing at 3.5 percent annualized rate. This is a real sign that the Japanese Prime Minister’s “Abenomics” policies are gaining real traction in the marketplace. One of the things I’ve learned in my 25-year career in global real estate–“flights of capital,” either due to financial arbitrage opportunities between two currencies, or as safe harbors from unfavorable domestic policies, are a much larger influencer of property markets in many parts of the world than local demand. And that’s what is happening in Japan. The bottom line is efficient use of money drives property markets much more than consumer needs. Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Dubai, Investment, investments, News, Property, Real Estate, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Is Tokyo the New Miami?

Dubai businesses are predicting growth

The majority of businesses in Dubai believe their profits will have increased by the end of the second quarter of 2013.A new study conducted by the Department of Economic Development (DED) showed that confidence is riding high among the city's corporations, with 91 per cent expecting bumper revenues during the three-month period.This is great news for people who are looking to move to Dubai on a permanent basis, as more job opportunities are likely to crop up as companies expand.Indeed, the DED study indicated that 75 per cent of firms are planning to maintain their current headcount, while 23 per cent said they would be hiring new workers in the second quarter.Like many other parts of the world, the UAE was hit hard by the global economic downturn, but His Excellency Sami Al Qamzi – director general of the DED – said the outlook is now far brighter.”Economic activity in Dubai is on a firmer ground, especially with key sectors such as tourism, logistics and aviation flourishing and real estate on a recovery path,” he remarked.”The services and retail sectors are also signalling strong growth, which reaffirms Dubai's reputation as a resilient and vibrant economy.”According to the DED research, confidence levels are particularly high among small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) at the moment.The government is always stressing how important start-up firms are to the nation's economy and Dubai has become a rich breeding ground for SMEs in recent years.A separate study conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) showed that 83 per cent of small businesses based in the Middle East reported an upturn in sales in 2012, which was much higher than the global average of 65 per cent.Leaders at PwC said family enterprises in the Gulf are less fazed by the stuttering global economy and so this has given them more scope to grow.The report also revealed that women are having greater influence on how Middle Eastern companies are run. Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Dubai, Dubai Investment News, Investment, investments, News, Real Estate, Taylor Scott International, TSI | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Dubai businesses are predicting growth