Singapore Real Estate and Property

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Dubai urged to improve property dispute resolution

July 29, 2008
Dubai urged to improve property dispute resolution
Emirate needs to do this to improve its ranking, says JLL

(DUBAI) Dubai needs to improve the way it handles dispute resolution
in the real-estate industry if it is to improve its ranking in terms
of transparency, said Jones Lang LaSalle Inc (JLL), the property and
investment management company.

Internationally-recognised benchmarks that allow investors to compare
performance across markets, and more financial instruments for real-
estate investors will also help Dubai reach tier two in JLL's
transparency rankings, Blair Hagkull, managing director for the
Middle East and North Africa, told reporters in Dubai yesterday.

Dubai rose up JLL's bi-annual real-estate transparency ranking faster
than any other market in 2008, to reach tier three, or semi-
transparent, from tier four, or low- transparent, in 2006.

Dubai, the second-largest sheikhdom in the United Arab Emirates
(UAE), became the first place in the Arab Gulf to allow foreigners to
own property in 2002, sparking a US$2 trillion Gulf real-estate boom.

'Dispute resolution is a key aspect of what Dubai needs to do to
reach tier two,' Mr Hagkull said. 'There also needs to be performance
benchmarks and other ways to invest in real estate beyond buying
actual properties.'

Dubai is the most transparent property market in the Middle East and
North Africa, followed by Bahrain and Abu Dhabi, which are also tier
three markets, and Saudi Arabia, which is tier four, according to JLL.

Dubai rental yields fell for a fifth straight month in July as the
increase in property prices in the emirate outpaced gains in rents, a
UAE-based investment bank reported.

Dubai's residential property prices rose 41 per cent from a year
earlier, accelerating from an annual 40 per cent in May, Al Mal
Capital PSC said on July 17.

No comments: