Dubai house prices will spike higher again in the autumn |
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A seasonal pattern exists in the Dubai housing
market, and analysts have noted an annual spike in prices in
September/October over the past few years. This is when the summer
holidays are over and the wealthiest expatriate families return to
town. It is also when new expatriates are most likely to choose to
arrive and business activity picks up.
The summer slowdown in the booming Gulf States is of course nothing
like it used to be in the old days. Then you could pack your bags and
head to Europe in late May and return in mid-September and not have
missed a thing.
Now business activity continues over the summer, with most
expatriates on contracts that only allow for a month of holiday, and a
good deal of planning work gets done over the summer. In the real
estate business too, people do buy and sell property over the hot
months.
But there is a point when rushing around with documents in almost
50C temperatures does become rather wearing for all but the most
dedicated, and the big decision makers tend to be absent. The argument
for waiting until cooler weather returns then looks very attractive.
Sleepy summerThe result is therefore that the real estate
market cools down over the summer months and then tends to burst back
into life in the autumn. More buyers mean that prices tend to go
higher, after a few 'distressed sales' over the summer months, and
sellers who can wait for this moment generally do just that.
In the heat of the summer there are always a few sellers whose
patience or finances run out and for the real bargain spotter this can
be a good time. Indeed, flipping on properties bought in the summer
into the buoyant autumn season is a clever trade.
Why should it be any different in the summer of 2008? There are
some concerns that the Dubai property market is overheating, although
new project launches are sharply down on a year ago and the new escrow
account system is working well.
The cancellation of one project on the Palm Jebel Ali by Damac Properties
has caused some ripples in the local market. But pessimists about Dubai
real estate are always with us, and have been proven wrong so far.
Autumn price spikeSurely this autumn the prospects for renewed
interest in local real estate, and another autumn price spike are
better than ever. Local interest rates are falling, and with high
inflation there are negative real interest rates in Dubai. That means
the local economy is effectively paying real estate investors to buy
property.
Meanwhile, the supply of property 'particularly in the affordable
category' is well below demand from the constant flow of new
expatriates into the booming emirate. And on the basis of international
comparisons Dubai real estate remains cheap, albeit with prices now
rising sharply.
With the local and global stock markets delivering negative returns
for investors this year, and deposit accounts paying miserable interest
rates, Dubai property stands out as one of the few asset classes with
upside potential, and money usually flows to where it will achieve the
best returns.
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