Dubai residential prices could fall by up to 10% in 2019: Savills

Dubai residential prices could fall by up to 10% in 2019: Savills
Visitors look at a scale model of one of the planned development projects in Dubai during the emirate’s property show Cityscape on October 2, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 07 January 2019
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Dubai residential prices could fall by up to 10% in 2019: Savills

Dubai residential prices could fall by up to 10% in 2019: Savills
  • Dubai’s over-supplied property market has steadily fallen since a mid-2014 peak
  • The United Arab Emirates, which Dubai is part of, is experiencing its latest real estate slump along with other parts of the Middle East

DUBAI: Residential real estate prices in Dubai could fall by 5 to 10 percent in 2019, weakened by new supply, a strong dollar and lower oil prices, the Middle East chief executive of Savills said on Monday.
Dubai’s oversupplied property market has steadily fallen since a mid-2014 peak, hurting earnings of the emirate’s top developers and forcing construction and engineering firms to cut jobs and halt expansion plans.
While the latest fall in house prices has not come close to the more than 50 percent plunge seen in 2009-2010, which pushed Dubai itself close to a debt default, residential prices fell by 6 to 10 percent in 2018, Savills’ Steve Morgan said.
And this drop could be repeated in 2019, he added.
The United Arab Emirates, which Dubai is part of, is experiencing its latest real estate slump along with other parts of the Middle East, largely due to oversupply, although a strong dollar and lower oil prices are also a factor.
The UAE dirham is pegged to the dollar, making the country more expensive for those holding other currencies, while oil is a major driver of regional wealth.
Morgan said he was “bullish” that Dubai was heading toward the bottom of its property market downturn, although cautioned he had thought the market touched bottom a year earlier.
S&P Global Ratings’ analysts said last year the market could decline by 10 to 15 percent in 2018 and 2019 before stabilizing in 2020 at the earliest.