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CONSTRUCTION NEWS

Lacklustre rental market dims UAE investors' yield

Jul 26, 2017 9:34 AM

Yields for UAE buy-to-let investors are in retreat as declines in rental values outpace a slump in sales prices according to a report by Propertyfinder Group a leading real estate portal in the region....

Yields for UAE buy-to-let investors are in retreat as declines in rental values outpace a slump in sales prices, according to a report by Propertyfinder Group, a leading real estate portal in the region.

Nevertheless, yields remain generous compared with global norms and with zero capital gains tax the country’s property sector remains an excellent option for international investors looking for both investment income and long-term asset appreciation, stated the 'UAE Real Estate Trends 2017' report.
 
Rental yields fell in 15 of Dubai’s 23 apartment neighbourhoods and in 11 of the city’s 16 villa districts in the six months from last September to March 2017.

These declines left apartment yields varying from 5.2 per cent on Palm Jumeirah to 9.5 per cent in Discovery Gardens. For villas, yields range from 3.1 per cent in Emirates Hills to 6.5 per cent in Jumeirah Village Circle, it stated.
 
Unsurprisingly, Dubai’s peripheral areas – deemed a higher risk by many investors and therefore priced accordingly – offer some of the best yields. Of the 10 districts with per square foot selling prices below Dh1,000, Motor city provides the lowest yield at 7.9 per cent, said the report which analysed apartment and villa sales and rental prices in Dubai, Abu Dhabi and the Northern Emirates.
 
Dubai continues to be a multi-tiered market where the most desirable locations offer the worst rental yields, while the best yields are found in emerging communities surrounded by desert and mass construction, it added.
 
Propertyfinder pointed out that in the emirate, market forces present a neat risk versus reward synopsis.

"Blue Chip communities for investors are deemed to be safer and, despite their popularity, have a relatively smaller pool of well-heeled tenants who can afford over Dh120 per square foot per annum in rent," it said in the report.
 
Rental values fell by a greater margin than sales prices, largely following the same trend in each neighbourhood. This suggests landlords have proved more willing to cut their asking prices than those wishing to sell and perhaps points to ebbing demand and over-supply in the rental sector, it added.
 
The UAE portal said emerging communities catered to the large and growing middle income segment seeking affordable rents but for buyers there are many, many projects and apartments complete, under construction and off plan to choose from so these communities tend to be less liquid.
 
“If the villa community is relatively affordable, the rental yield is healthy but they steadily decline as you move up the food chain. Emirates Hills and Palm Jumeirah both offer villa yields of around 3.1 per cent which in virtually any other market in the world is acceptable, but in Dubai appear distinctly lacklustre,” it stated.
 
Abu Dhabi, the world’s fifth largest oil producer, has suffered markedly more from the sustained slump in crude prices than Dubai, where oil makes little direct contribution to the economy.
 
As such, it’s no surprise that Abu Dhabi’s property sector is showing prolonged weakness. Sale prices fell in four of six apartment districts and in six of eight villa neighbourhoods, while rental value declines were mostly of a bigger magnitude, said the report.
 
According to Propertyfinder, the yields remain excellent, despite the drop in rental values – apartment yields are 7 per cent or higher in all districts, with Al Reef the largest at 8.6 per cent.

Villa yields also outperform Dubai, ranging from 5 per cent on Saadiyat Island to 7.8 per cent in Hydra Village. Overall, yields fell in eight of 12 neighbourhoods for villas and apartments, it said.
 
Northern emirates steady

In the northern emirates of Sharjah, Ajman and Ras Al Khaimah, the yields were steady as prices and rentals showed relatively little movement. Apartment yields slipped to 6.5 per cent from 6.7 per cent and villa yields rose to 6.0 per cent from 5.7 per cent.
 
For investors, the rental yield in Sharjah and Ajman in particular look particularly enticing, stated the report.

"We’ve seen some launches of freezone, off-plan projects recently in Sharjah which is now competing with Dubai and RAK for non-GCC buyers," it added.-TradeArabia News Service

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