Dubai Palm Islands  
<
up
>
 Table of Contents 
 About us  
 Owners Forum  
 About Dubai  
 About the Palm Islands  
 Appartments for Rent  
 Furnish Your Home  
 Homes for Sale  
 How to Buy  
 How to Sell  
 Mailing List  
 News Updates  
  ;  08   09 Freehold Property in Dubai  
  ;  05   01 Buy London or Dubai  
  ;  05   27 Property History 1  
  ;  05   27 Property History 2  
  ;  05   27 Property History 3  
  ;  05   31 Dubai Prices Should Double  
  ;  07   11 House Price Inflation  
  ;  08   01 Autumn Property Boom  
  ;  08   24 Why Invest in Dubai  
  ;  08   31 Dubai Famous Abroad  
  ;  09   15 Dubai Vs UK Prices  
  ;  12   04 How Long Can the Boom Last  
  ;02 05 the Dubai Economic Miracle  
  ;02 26 Same Day Property Finance  
  ;03 10 Uae Realty to Get 63bn Investment  
  ;  03   24 Property Prices a Global Angle  
  ;  04   02 Oil Boom Back to the 1970s  
  ;  04   06 Real Estate Market Propels Dubai  
  ;  05   02 Tourist Overwhelms Dubai Hotels  
  ;  05   02 World Hotel Investment Capital  
  ;  05   25 Donald Trump Endorses Dubai  
  ;  07   08 No Uk Crash Heralds Dubai Boom  
  ;  07   16 Property Law Grants Freehold Rights to Foreigners  
  ;  09   31 Dubais Market Poised to Double in 2005  
  ;  01   01 Dubais Growth Double Chinas  
  ;  01   02 Real Estate Boom Not a Bubble  
  ;  01   28 Middle East Business Right to Be Optimistic  
  ;  02 13 Boom Town Dubai  
  ;  02   02 New Property Law this Month  
  ;  02   03 is Dubai Like Singapore or KL  
  ;  03   15 New Property Law Issued  
  ;  03   16 Freehold Property Buyers Do Not Get the Right to Work  
  ;  03   16 Property a Better Buy Then Stocks  
  ;  03   22 Speculation About a Crash in Property Prices  
  ;  04   03 Dubai Property Law Re Ignites Real Estate Boom  
  ;  05   01 Dubai Property Boom Survives the Stock Market Crash  
  ;  05   07 Dubai Demographics Strong But Supply Growing  
  ;  05   15 How Would a Global Property Downturn Impact on Dubai  
  ;  05   20 Summer Lull Begins for Dubai Real Estate Autumn is a Test  
  ;  05   28 Will August Be a Boom Month for Property Sales Again  
  ;  06   05 Negative Real Interest Rates Sustain Dubai Property Boom  
  ;  06   21 Arab Liquidity Underpins Dubai Real Estate  
  ;  07   01 US Dollar Devaluation Inflation and Dubai Property  
  ;  07   06 Can Freehold Property Registration Revive a Slowing Market  
  ;  07   07 Registration of Freehold Property Gets Under Way  
  ;  07   22 Freehold Clarification Eases Real Estate Tension  
  ;  07   26 Will Dubai Property Prices Reach European Levels  
  ;  09   23 Would Falling House Prices Ever Outpace Rental Increases  
  ;  10   09 Construction of Atlantis Resort Set to Peak  
  ;  10   10 Compare Dubai and Western House Prices  
  ;  11   25 Lower Cost Mortgages Essential to Sustain Boom  
  ;  03   25 Could Dubai Prices Reach Hong Kong Levels  
  ;  04   12 Dubai a Safe Haven from Crime and Regional Instability  
  ;  06   05 Dubai Property Boom Will Continue Until 2010  
  ;  06   10 Dubai If You Are Not Loaded and Decadent You Cant Come in  
  ;  02   01 Dubai Will Rise Again  
 Offices to Rent  
 Offshore Companies  
 Contact us   Print 

United Arab Emirates: 01/01/2006 Gulf News Newspaper

Real estate boom not a bubble

Dubai: The boom in the Gulf's construction sector is well cushioned from international oil price fluctuations predicted for the short to medium term. In fact, high oil prices will continue to fuel the sector's growth, say experts.

Incidentally, the value of the real estate projects in the GCC, Iran and Iraq has already crossed Dh2.75 trillion ($750 billion), with about a third concentrated in the UAE. This is higher than the region's combined gross domestic product (GDP), which is currently below $700 billion.

Experts say the trend will continue for some time despite a projected decline in oil prices in the short to medium term.

"Oil demand is projected to reach more than 92 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2009 from the current level of 84 million, which will continue to drive the oil price high despite sizeable investment by governments in lifting capacity," Edmund O'Sullivan, editorial director of Middle East Economic Digest (Meed), told delegates at a conference recently.

"Average crude price is forecast to decline from $50 per barrel to about $45 per barrel by 2008. However, increased supply, will offset any decline in revenues.

"As a result, investment in projects will continue in the short-to-medium term. The region is just half-way through its 10-year growth cycle, so the growth mode will continue for at least another half a decade," O'Sullivan said.

The UAE's growth curve has defied analysts' prediction, developers say. "For the last five years, almost every expert told us there would be a bubble in the property sector. However, the reality proved to be the opposite," said Robert Lee, development director of Nakheel, the Dubai-based real estate giant.

With 34 million people, including about 500,000 high-income professionals and $525 billion GDP, the GCC is the world's 17th largest economy. With exports at about $250 billion and imports crossing $200 billion annually, it produces 16 million bpd of oil and exports 13 million bpd.

O'Sullivan said the region's half- trillion dollar economy generates more than $500 billion in investible revenue, which will continue to boost the construction and real estate sector.

"The UAE's GDP, growing at 25 per cent annually, is expected to reach anywhere between Dh550 billion to Dh900 billion by 2010, the way boom is continuing," he said.

"The UAE has recently succeeded Egypt as the second largest Arab economy after Saudi Arabia, which reflects the explosive growth witnessed by the country."

Total value of projects in the UAE is Dh825.75 billion ($225 billion), of which Dubai accounts for Dh456.36 billion ($124.35 billion), according to the latest tabulation.

"Dubai's current population of 1.1 million will surge to four million by 2017 and five million by 2020," said Hussain Nasser Lootah, Assistant Director General of of building and planning for Dubai Municipality, adding "projects in Dubai are so fast-moving that the infrastructure, including the roads, public transport, and utilities cannot keep up."

The Dubai Government has spent $2.5 billion on the city's network of roads up to the end of 2004, covering 9,600 kilometres.