Dubai warehouses and luxury homes are in a bear market

Prices for Palm Jumeirah apartments, Emirates Hills and Hattan on the Lakes villas have all fallen by 20-25 per cent in the past two years. - File photo

By Matein Khalid

Published: Mon 10 Apr 2017, 10:26 PM

Last updated: Tue 11 Apr 2017, 10:53 PM

I find it laughable when investment bankers come to my office and try to assure me that warehouse and logistics space in Dubai is a "defensive" investment. Mathematical reality does not support this argument. Rents in Jebel Ali Free Zone (JAFZ), the most prime industrial enclave in the Arabian Gulf, have fallen from Dh44 a square foot in 2014, when crude oil prices peaked at $115 a barrel, to Dh35 now. In the financial markets, a peak to trough fall of 20 per cent constitutes a bear market and the JAFZ rent declines now demonstrate that prime industrial, logistics and warehouse space is not immune to the slump in the business cycle and is hugely correlated to the economic/credit cycle in Dubai. The glut of planned real estate investment trusts in the UAE will only increase the supply of industrial property and further reduce rents and capital values in this sector.
The protracted banking credit crunch, thousands of job losses in sectors as diverse as oil and gas, aviation, finance, construction and hotels will lead to a sharp shrinkage in retail volumes and thus demand for warehouse space in 2017. This is reflected in the 20 per cent fall in warehouse rentals and capital values. Bankers and developers dazzled by the sharp 30 per cent rise in the values of JAFZ warehouses in 2013-2014 did not anticipate that the oil price crash, fiscal austerity, contractor debt/banking credit crunch in the UAE would also gut demand for industrial assets at the precise moment when supply of warehouse space was set to soar. The result? A painful bear market that will not bottom out in 2017. Warehouses, like luxury homes, are a kiss of death when demand slumps as their market is so illiquid. As J.P. Morgan rightly observed "Liquidity is like a cab on a rainy night. It disappears when you need it the most".
The real pain in industrial property sector is felt by many local traders who had acquired warehouses and logistics on credit in 2014, near the peak of the market cycle. As the business cycle deteriorated since international and local banks slashed credit facilities to these accounts. When import/export volumes and retail sales plummeted in 2015, these traders were forced to sell their properties in a falling market. Increases in tenant fees/levies, insurance/storage security cost and the cost of upgrading decades old warehouses for the needs of high tech corporate supply chains have only exacerbated the pain, as has new supply from Dubai Investment Park and Dubai South. As usual, older, Class B warehouses in Al Quoz saw the steepest rental falls, down 25 per cent.
I was shocked to read that the prices of Burj Khalifa apartments had fallen by 25 per cent in the past year. Usually, prime property in global cities is viewed as a store of value, exhibits less price volatility as it has a relatively price inelastic demand curve. This is clearly not the case in the Dubai luxury home market. Prices for Palm Jumeirah apartments, Emirates Hills and Hattan on the Lakes villas have all fallen by 20-25 per cent in the past two years. International property broker CBRE believes the steep price falls are due to the fact that major property developers ramped up construction of thousands of new villas and townhouses before Expo 2020. CBRE expects the number of new homes scheduled for delivery in 2017 and 2018 to "be well above" the last five-year annual average of 15,000. The tsunami of offplan product launches does not bode well for secondary market capital values. There is a major glut of luxury villas in Dubai at the same time as high priced expat executives in the Dh80,000-150,000 a month salary range are culled en masse in banking, oil and gas, aviation, construction etc. Expect the bear market in luxury homes to accelerate in 2017 and 2018 as the metrics for a market bottom are simply not evident.
The listing of the Al Jazira and Riyad REIT's in Saudi Arabia on the Tadawul is an exciting milestone in the kingdom's capital markets. With a local population of 24 million Saudi citizens, the kingdom is the most attractive market for new REIT listings. The Saudi secondary Nomu market is also an attractive exit option for investors in high yield property segments, such as holy city of Makkah's hotels where cash on cash dividends can range between 14-16 per cent per annum. However, as listed REIT's on Nasdaq Dubai demonstrate, secondary market liquidity is simply impossible to attract when a leveraged distribution yield is below 5 per cent or less than the cash yield on a studio in International City! My call? Caveat emptor! Buyer beware as it is no fun to be a victim of the greater fool theory in an illiquid market.

Researched and compiled by Matein Khalid. Mr Khalid is a global equities strategist and fund manager. He can be contacted at: mateinKhalid09@gmail.com
 
 

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Matein Khalid

Published: Mon 10 Apr 2017, 10:26 PM

Last updated: Tue 11 Apr 2017, 10:53 PM

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