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Dubai’s largest developer puts temporary halt on new project launches

Emaar chairman Mohamed Alabbar says Covid has ‘put the brakes on’ building new developments

Dubai's largest developer puts temporary halt on new project launches

Dubai’s largest developer is temporarily halting new project launches amid a property glut that, combined with the coronavirus pandemic, has shaved nearly a third off house prices in the past six years.

“We don’t build anymore,” Emaar Properties chairman Mohamed Alabbar said at a conference in Dubai on Monday. “The government entities decided to stop new developments almost a year back, but Covid definitely put the brakes on.”

Home prices in Dubai, the Middle East’s main business and financial hub, have slumped by more than 30 percent since 2014, forcing the government to set up a committee to manage supply and demand.

Alabbar was criticised by Damac Properties chairman Hussain Sajwani last year as the main culprit in perpetuating the city’s oversupply. Sajwani said Emaar offered payment plans that encouraged speculation and wouldn’t slow building even when the majority of other big developers, including Meraas Holding and Nakheel, did.

Emaar, which built the world’s tallest tower, Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, declined to comment at the time.

Emaar Properties chairman Mohamed Alabbar

With the onset of the pandemic, property companies worried about their cash flow and stopped projects as demand from foreign and local investors evaporated.

Alabbar said demand is now picking up amid discounts offered by developers and that current Emaar projects – 90 in total – were going ahead as planned. Demand from buyers in India, Russia and Saudi Arabia is strong, he said.

Alabbar’s in no rush to sell shares in Noon.com, an online retailer he founded, he said.

“We are four years old and growing fast, we don’t think we should put it under quarterly results pressure,” he said. “We want to make the right decision, we need to plan ahead and I think we are on the right track.”

At the same conference, the chairman of DP World, one of the world’s largest port operators, said trade between the United Arab Emirates and Israel could amount to $5 billion annually after the two nations normalised ties earlier this year.

Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, who’s also the Dubai-based company’s CEO, added he was ready to invest more in the UK, whether or not the country struck a Brexit deal with the European Union.

“We can deal with” either situation, he said. But they need to “make up their mind,” he said.

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