Category Archives: Overseas Property

Dubai property on rebound

Market will recover by end-2011, says developer of hotel, housing project

Dubai’s property market will recover by the end of 2011 as mortgages become easier to obtain and more people move to the city, according to the developer of a US$4 billion hotel and residential project.

‘Banks can’t stay away for long,’ Santhosh Joseph, 45, chief executive officer of Dubai Pearl, said in an interview. ‘They have to lend and, historically, most of this region’s lending goes into property.’

Dubai, the second-biggest sheikhdom in the United Arab Emirates, experienced the world’s worst property slump during the global recession, with selling prices falling by more than 50 per cent and project cancellations exceeding US$300 billion. To sustain itself, Dubai Pearl is relying on US$1.5 billion paid for apartments in advance and another US$500 million that has been committed by Al Fahim Group, Mr Joseph said.

‘We’re not expecting to sell substantially in 2010 and 2011. We are a zero-debt company but we may look into leveraging at a later date.’

Mr Joseph has a 20 per cent stake in Dubai Pearl while the rest is owned by a group of investors led by Al Fahim Group, one of Abu Dhabi’s wealthiest families.

Dubai Pearl is building four 73-storey towers connected by a single roof less than a mile from the emirate’s palm-tree shaped man-made islands. The project, which has the same name as the company, will have 20 million square foot of hotel and residential space.

MGM Grand, SkyLofts, Bellagio, and Baccarat are among the six hotels that will have 1,400 rooms. The main structure will be surrounded by an artificial beach and low-rise buildings containing malls and theatres. The project is scheduled for completion in 2013.

The property crisis prompted Dubai Pearl to review the project and add entertainment and health components to the design, Mr Joseph said. The company also renegotiated terms with buyers, such as longer payment schedules, to reduce the chance of defaults.

‘In 2010 and until the second half of 2011, I’m not expecting the international markets to be liquid or mortgages to be widely available,’ he said. ‘Real-estate cycles are usually three years peak-to-peak and the best locations tend to bounce quickly.’

Dubai Pearl is at the centre of a newly developed part of the city, surrounded by populated areas such as Palm Jumeirah, Dubai Media City and Dubai Internet City where international media and technology companies are based. The densely populated Dubai Marina is also nearby.

The project has the ‘best location with a captive clientele in a six-mile radius,’ Mr Joseph said. ‘Our area lacks communities where residents can walk from end to end.’

The company is selling residential space at 2,250 dirhams (S$854) a square foot, while furnished and serviced Baccarat-branded apartments are selling starting at US$1,000 a square foot. The prices have been slashed by about 30 per cent, he said.

Source : Business Times – 18 Mar 2010

US housing market ready to rebound

It can withstand removal of govt and Fed stimulus plans: economists

The US housing market is poised to withstand the removal of government and Federal Reserve stimulus programmes and rebound later in the year, contributing to annual economic growth for the first time since 2006, economists say.

Increases in jobs, credit and affordable homes will help offset the end of the Fed’s purchases of mortgage-backed securities this month and the expiration of a federal homebuyer tax credit in April.

Sales will rise about 6 per cent this year, and housing will account for 0.25 percentage point of the 3.6 per cent growth, according to forecasts by Dean Maki, chief US economist for Barclays Capital in New York.

‘I would bet even odds that we’re at a bottom and that we’re going to see improvement in the coming months,’ said Karl Case, co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index and a professor of economics at Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

An improving market would allay concerns at the Fed that sales will relapse after the tax credit expires. It would also give it a freer rein to ultimately raise the interest rate for overnight loans among banks from near zero.

Homebuilders’ shares reflect the optimism. The 12-member Standard & Poor’s Supercomposite Homebuilding Index hit a five-month high on March 9 on speculation that the expanding economy will boost sales.

But recent housing data have been mixed. Sales of existing homes fell 7.2 per cent in January, while housing starts rose 2.8 per cent, according to statistics from the National Association of Realtors in Chicago and the Commerce Department in Washington.

Employment is key to the outlook, according to Patrick Newport, an economist with IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts. ‘When people get jobs, that’s when they move or decide to buy a bigger house,’ he said.

As many as 300,000 new jobs may be added this month, the most in four years, thanks to an improvement in the weather, government hiring of temporary workers for the census and a growing economy, said David Greenlaw, chief fixed-income economist at Morgan Stanley in New York.

Credit conditions may also be improving. A net 13.2 per cent of banks surveyed by the Fed in January reported that they tightened standards on prime mortgage loans in the fourth quarter, the smallest percentage since the central bank began tallying such data three years ago.

‘This is an important step in the right direction,’ Peter Hooper, chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York, and his colleagues wrote in a report to clients last month.

The housing market’s first hurdle comes at the end of this month, when the Fed completes its programme to purchase US$1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities and about US$175 billion of housing-agency debt.

The move probably won’t have much impact, said Mahesh Swaminathan, a mortgage strategist at Credit Suisse Holdings in New York. Private demand will replace the central bank, keeping down the spread at which mortgage-backed securities trade to 10-year Treasury notes, he said.

He sees mortgage rates remaining ‘about where they are now’.

Once the Fed completes its purchases, the next obstacle for the market is the expiration of the tax credit for first-time home buyers.

The original credit helped boost existing-home sales by 4.9 per cent to 5.16 million last year, the first increase since 2005, according to the Realtors’ association. The credit, which was slated to end on Nov 30, was expanded and extended through April.

The final challenge for the housing market this year is the supply of available properties and the prospect that it may rise.

Foreclosures may increase to 2.2 million this year from a record 1.7 million last year, according to a forecast by Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

Source : Business Times – 17 Mar 2010