View Full Version : With love from South Africa


SYDNEY
July 12th, 2004, 08:36 PM
Howdy neighbours ;) I thought that you might find this interesting, it is an article regarding Dubai that was published here in South Africa - enjoy:

"Phenomenal property boom in this once-dusty sheikhdom looks set to spill over into Africa"

By Ian Fife, Dubai

IFA, the listed Kuwaiti developer that bought half of Moreland's Zimbali golf estate in Ballito, KwaZulu Natal (South Africa), has been hugely successful withits first big development in Dubai.

The 780-unit Golden Mile on Palm Jumeirah was sold out less than 48hours after its launch on May 4. Sales totalled US$450m (R3,1bn) - a possible world record.

The success of Golden Mile demonstrates that Dubai is a world leisure destination, driven by two little-noticed forces: demand and supply. This once dusty sheikhdom of pearl divers and traders is experiencing growth on a scale all of its own.

There are now two manmade, palm-shaped archipelagos stretching 5 km or more into the Arabian Gulf. Then there is The World - islands clustered to form the world's continents - where you can buy a home or resort in"Cuba", "Madagascar" or the "Western Cape".

And Burj Dubai has the highest office building and the biggest shopping centre in the world - at 870 000 mē, the size of 30 soccer fields,eight times the size of Sandton City .

Dubailand will be twice the size of Disney World. Scores of 40-storey hotels, apartment buildings and office blocks, interspersed by tax-free"cities", are rising from an urban landscape that looks the way the Karoo (a desert area in South Africa) would after a 20-year drought.

Perhaps only Shanghai is growing faster.

Development started in earnest less than a decade ago, when the sheikhdom launched "can do", business-friendly programmes offering the best of everything,from roads and IT to tax breaks.

Dubai has reduced oil from 18%-10% of GDP in eight years. Manufacturing is now the biggest economic sector, at over 10%, and direct foreign investment accounts for 3% of GDP.

IFA says its buyers come from around the world, but mainly from Britain,Europe and the Middle East. Some are speculators. Others are attracted by a less-than-rigorous control of currency controls, such as, perhaps,the Russian who bought 50 units at Golden Mile.

But dig deeper and you discover that this demand signifies a geopolitical shift in capital allocation. Most of the European buyers are Westernised,wealthy individuals originating from the Muslim Middle East or Indian continent.

They are reacting to growing prejudice against them, following the September 11 2001 attacks in the US and the subsequent war on terrorism. Says IFAchairman Jassim al Bahaar: "Many people who have lived for years in Western countries find themselves increasingly being treated with suspicion and downright discrimination."

They are selling their beach villas in Palm Springs, Florida, as well as other investments, and buying in places where they feel more welcome."There is no lack of capital available for Gulf projects," says IFA presidentJames Wilson, who is developing strategic alliances with other organisations.

For instance, Golden Mile is a joint venture between Dubai development agency Nakheel and IFA. There are alliances with Kingdom Hotel Investments,a Saudi company which controls the Movenpick, Four Seasons and Fairmonthotel groups.

And that's the supply driver. Middle Eastern businesses are not hampered by corporate structures. Owners, closely aligned to the state's absolute rulers, have no stakeholders to worry about and can make more daring decisions backed by professional management.

Wilson adds: "When we negotiated our Zimbali purchase with Moreland,they had five people working on the deal. I was on my own. I could make instant decisions with my chairman."

Says al Bahaar: "We open markets, we don't follow them." And now that Dubai is in hand, IFA is moving into Africa.

Kingdom Hotel Investments has a new development in Chad, where, saysCEO Salayem Zok, it is " getting premium risk-adjusted returns and far higher margins than in Europe and America".

IFA will soon be announcing a new project in Zanzibar. "But South Africa remains our most important market," says al Bahaar.

Dubai-Lover
July 12th, 2004, 09:43 PM
it's nice to hear that dubai's boom is reaching the whole world. thank you for this post! :)

SYDNEY
July 12th, 2004, 09:46 PM
it's nice to hear that dubai's boom is reaching the whole world. thank you for this post! :)

A big pleasure :nocrook:

SA BOY
July 13th, 2004, 06:36 AM
howzitt gandalf good to have you over here as well, check out some of our projects
ciao
SAB