Friday 15 November 2024
 
»
 
»
ADDITIONAL PRESSURE FROM COVID

Emaar halts new building work in Dubai amid oversupply woes

DUBAI, December 8, 2020

Leading Dubai developer Emaar Properties has halted new construction work after a construction boom in recent years led to oversupply in the Gulf city, reported Reuters, citing its chairman.
 
"We as a group have stopped supply," stated Mohamed Alabbar, while speaking at a UAE-Israel conference in Dubai, adding that demand was improving but the market remained oversupplied.
 
It was not immediately clear when Emaar, which counts Dubai’s state fund as a major shareholder, had ceased new building work, although sources had told Reuters in April that Emaar had suspended work on major new projects at Dubai Creek Harbour, a new development touted as offering homes to 200,000 people.
 
That included suspending work on the Dubai Creek Harbour Tower, billed as being higher than Dubai's Burj Khalifa, which is now the world's tallest building.
 
Alabbar did not say when the firm would resume construction projects.
 
In August, TradeArabia had reported that Emaar's net profit for the first six months plunged 35 per cent to AED2.007 billion ($546 million) from AED3.1 billion ($843 million) last year.
 
Its revenue too fell 22 per cent for the six-month period from AED11.6 billion to AED9.032 billion. 
 
Added to that, S&P Global Ratings had recently downgraded the ratings of Emaar and its retail subsidiary Emaar Malls along with another major Dubai-based real estate development company DIFC Investments on increased economic pressures stemming from the spread of Covid-19 pandemic.
 
Dubai faces a deeper economic contraction in 2020 than the about three per cent decline it experienced due to the 2009 financial crisis, the global ratings agency had stated in its review. 
 
S&P Global Ratings pointed out that Dubai's economy would recover to 2019 levels of nominal GDP only in 2022. 
 
"Following a rebound of about 5% next year, we expect Dubai's real GDP growth will slow to two per cent through 2023, below the historical average of four per cent for the last 10 years," it had said in its review.



Tags:

More Construction & Real Estate Stories

calendarCalendar of Events

Ads