Real estate bubble risk lowest in Dubai: UBS
Despite a buoyant year, the Dubai housing market, now only back to its 2019 price level, and still 25 per cent below its 2014 peak, is in fair-valued territory, according to the UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index,
Dubai’s real estate bubble risk is the second-lowest after Warsaw among the world’s 25 major cities as the nominal house price growth across the world accelerated to 10 per cent on average from mid-2021 to mid-2022 amid signs that the global housing boom is coming to an end, a study by a leading Swiss bank says.
Despite a buoyant year, the Dubai housing market, now only back to its 2019 price level, and still 25 per cent below its 2014 peak, is in fair-valued territory, according to the UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index, which says that Toronto and Frankfurt exhibit the most elevated risk levels on housing markets.
Dubai’s house price growth is likely to remain high in the coming quarters, but growth rates will gradually recede amid higher financing costs.
“In the long term, with existing oversupply and new construction continuing to outstrip population growth, Dubai’s real estate ride will most likely remain bumpy,” says Matthias Holzhey, lead author of the study at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Risks are also elevated in Zurich, Munich, Hong Kong, Vancouver, and Amsterdam. Notably, Tel Aviv and Tokyo join the group of cities in the bubble risk zone for the first time since UBS began to publish this report in 2015 as imbalances in global metropolitan housing markets continue to be highly elevated and prices are out of sync with rising interest rates.
Milan and Sao Paulo are two other cities with the lowest property bubble risks.
“Dubai’s two-decade property roller coaster continues to chug along. After seven years of falling housing prices, Dubai’s housing market rebounded to a nominal price growth of 10 per cent between mid-2021 and mid-2022. Growth was even stronger in the prime market. However, the market is now only back to its 2019 price level, and still 25 per cent below its 2014 peak,” says Holzhey in the report.
The post-pandemic reopening of Dubai’s economy and surging oil prices have propelled the recovery. Disposable income growth has now turned positive for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, the UBS report says.