Wow
. A lot of useful and thoughtful information there.
Yes, I agree there's a lot of speculation in the market and prices have increased rapidly in the past couple of years.
My question would be what's a fair value for a property and compare prices to that. But determining a fair value is difficult in such a new market and with many factors or uncertainties. So my best guess is to compare Dubai to another established city and look at prices/sq ft. Then try and adjust up or down to compensate for risk factors, changes in population, level of supply etc.
It's a mugs game and I'm bound to get it wrong but at least I'll know by how much I got it wrong
.
And of course it'll depend a lot on what you personally think of Dubai.
A 1 bdrm apartment in Dubai Marina selling for 700-800k dhs sounds like a lot compared to 300k - 400k dhs a couple of years ago (weren't JBR OPs as low as 200K?).
A 1 bdrm apartment in a modern city in a tax-free country with sun and sand for 100,000 pounds getting a 10% return tax-free probably sounds like a good deal to the average Londoner (yes I know, Dubai is not = London).
And yes I do think there's a risk that prices will drop, but I don't think the risk is because properties are inherently overvalued yet. Probably more to do with the speculators cashing in on their gains.
I'd still buy now - but carefully
...
There was quite a good read about
the property law in Time Out a couple of weeks back. You need to login to see it but I'll quote the last part...
So where next for the property market and the development of the laws that govern it? ‘We’re on a gradual slope,’ says Ian Hollingdale. ‘It’s still a place where people want to live. Europeans want to come, Iranian money is a big influence and Indians love it because it is so close to home.’ And what about the proposed laws? ‘They need ratifying – that would make everyone’s life easier. Especially for the institutions lending money to buyers.’ DAMAC’s Peter Riddoch goes a step further in his prediction for the future. ‘I believe that Dubai is such an enlightened country that the day will come when expatriates will be able to buy property anywhere.’
This of course is speculation, but let’s look at the bigger picture for a moment. Oil prices are sky high and will remain so for the foreseeable future, meaning the Gulf is awash with cash, while the nearby economies of India, China and Russia are also booming: where does all this excess revenue go? The government of Dubai has an answer: build the world’s premier tourist attractions, double the population and offer every incentive possible to people to come here to live, work and spend money. Fast forward to 2015 when the new airport is bringing in millions of tourists a year, Dubailand is open, the Marina is finished and the Palm Islands are operational. What will a sea-view apartment be worth then?
Dubai’s rulers are investing incomprehensible amounts of money in this vision and they are asking you to trust them to get it right, and indeed to buy into it yourself. But the plan also seems to involve establishing the minutiae of Dubai’s property law along the way. While sceptics play a waiting game, many others have faith in Dubai’s ability to deliver. For all the expert analysis, the decision remains yours to make.