DUBAI: The chairman of Dubai’s biggest real estate developer, Emaar Properties, said he welcomed talk of a slowdown in the emirate’s property market and vowed to keep supplying new homes to help hold prices at “a reasonable level”.
Dubai real estate has gone from boom to bust to boom again in the space of eight years. The market soared late in the last decade, then crashed as a bubble burst, cutting residential prices by more than half and nearly causing Dubai to default on its debt.
Since then, an influx of foreign money, particularly from Arab countries blighted by war and civil unrest, has helped Dubai’s property sector rebound strongly. Prices are now roughly around pre-crisis levels, up by about a third from a year ago.
“We will continue to supply the market — supply in the market is good for our customers because it keeps prices at a reasonable level,” Emaar Chairman Mohamed Alabbar told reporters yesterday.
“In 2013, things went crazy because supply was limited. For me as a long-term developer, this spike scares me, so I’m glad people are saying, ‘Oh, the market is cooling down.’ I think that is healthy.”
Alabbar was speaking at the launch of the first phase of a huge new high-end residential development called Dubai Creek Harbour, a joint project between Emaar and Dubai Holding, the personal investment vehicle of Dubai’s ruler H H Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. The entire project is slated eventually to cover nearly 1,500 acres and include two towers that the developer says will be the tallest twin towers in the world.
Earlier in the day a senior official of the International Monetary Fund said rises in Dubai property prices had moderated, and were now less of a concern to the IMF.
Reuters