arniegang wrote:I disagree, Sage and Ian. Dubai cannot sustain the current rate of completions/occupancy.
in the long run, you're probably right, but predicting as to when it will actually peak has proved a challenge and many a subsequent embarrassment for economists, even those in the employ of the government.
If this were untrue, then tell us why Damac is offering a BMW with ever appt and a Bentley for their penthouses. If they are selling like hotcakes as they would have us believe, then why the incentives ??
They have been doing this for quite a few years now. It's hardly an incentive anyway when you do the math, but it used to be Jaguars, and it was something else before that too.
They also gave away the chance to win a jet or one of four hot supercars. It's not new for Damac.
The developers know the market conditions well and they are offloading properties with incentives while there is still a few sparks left in the housing market and using incentives to keep the market artificially moving.
I can assure you without question, the developers know just as much about the economic future of this market as every other person who has an opinion. Within the office of His Highness himself, regularly they joke about the last bold prediction of the Dubai crash as the supposed date whizzes by (or so I am told).
The bottom line is, this thing is going to be produced, built, marketed and hyped to the bitter end, and there is work being done (supposedly) to ensure that bitter end itself is a moving target.
Dubai has really and seriously exceeded my disbelief as to how much a city can just create growth out of nothing. It's Keynesian economic meets marketing hype and it seems to be working.
When developers start running scared so should everyone else. The problem is there is a reluctance to accept this and people are still holding onto the dream to make buckets of cash - it just aint gonna happen now.
If you think Developers are running scared then you will be amazed what some of the projects upcoming will be. Your eyes will literally pop out of your head.
Emaar are now releasing 2million + Dhs 1 bed appartments. Calculate what the purchaser needs to rent that for to return 8% profit after paying agents and maintenance fees. And yet we here agents out there telling us it will grow in value - i think not.
I wonder the same thing... and yet they keep selling.
Most expats cant afford to rent their own appt/villa without sharing the cost at the last 2 years highs, let alone the ridiculous future value predictions of agents.
To be fair, most expats baulk at the idea of spending any more than 20% of their income on rent, which is funny because back in 'Ol Blighty or wherever they came from they were spending more than that.
If you're going to take the high salary, then you have to take the bad with the good. If you don't think the salary is that great, then stay at home. I'm not jumping on the 'if you don't like it leave' bandwagon, moreso I am saying do the math, and if the math don't work, don't come. If you can get a better deal elsewhere, take it.
To be honest, if more people actually followed through on their noise instead of just making it, perhaps you would see the supply and demand curve shift back towards the buyers favour.