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Real estateSpecial Report

Kuwait’s City of Silk

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

The Gulf is once again pushing the boundaries of architectural innovation by building what will be one of the world’s largest urban developments and the tallest skyscraper. But unlike the past few years where the biggest, largest, tallest and most expensive were monikers applied to projects in Dubai and Qatar, Kuwait is now in on the act with the City of Silk.

The $132 billion project will transform Kuwait as the mega-development rises from the desert over the next 20 years to cover 250 square kilometers. And unlike other projects underway in the Gulf, the City of Silk (Madinat Al Hareer) is to become a central part of Kuwait’s economic future as it moves to diversify away from hydrocarbon revenues, slated to contribute $15 billion to the country’s annual GDP by 2030.

The project also aims at turning Kuwait into a more knowledge-based economy through investment in the media and entertainment sectors at the City of Leisure, a hub for universities and education, and for environmental research at a wildlife reserve at the City of Ecology. Due to the strategic location of the project in northern Kuwait, improved economic ties with neighboring Iraq and Iran are also an aspect of the development’s aims.

“City of Silk is a diplomatic and economic initiative that far outstrips the introverted property developments throughout the Middle East,” said Eric Kuhne of London-based architects Eric R Kuhne and Associates, the firm designing the project.

“It is a port city that will open the closest saltwater port to Central Asia and it is a gateway city that will become a catalyst for the Iraqi and Iranian economies. It will create a new economic development zone for trade in the Gulf,” he added.

To be managed by Tamdeen, funding for the City of Silk is through the private sector and from the state. Currently being discussed in parliament as a new Economic Development Zone, the government is expected to fund primary infrastructure. Part of this is Kuwait City’s need for a new financial district, so the plan is to build a City of Trade and Commerce on Kuwait Bay. A port and airport are also to be incorporated into the project, which ballooned the projects costs from an estimated $86 billion earlier this year to the current $132 billion.

Massive infrastructure projects

“The cost shift is because the new airport to the west and the new port to the east have been folded into the budget,” said Kuhne. “These huge infrastructure projects, which are employment centers unto themselves, are what have contributed to the apparent ‘doubling’ of the budget. All of this is exceptionally good news, as City of Silk is about building primary infrastructure for the region as much as creating a 21st century model of Arabian Urbanism.”

Indeed, with the GCC awash in oil money, Gulf states have invested heavily in mega-projects to build cities and economic zones from scratch. Following somewhat later than the UAE, Qatar and Saudi Arabia in such mega-projects, the Kuwait project will outsize any other such development in the GCC.

With 750,000 people to be housed at the City of Silk and jobs for 430,000, in terms of size the project is behind only China’s re-housing project for one million people at the Three Gorges Dam.

By Arabian Urbanism, Kuhne is referring to the structure of the project, made up of 30 communities averaging 25,000 people, within which are five to seven villages of 5,000 to 7,000 inhabitants. “The molecule of Arabian life is the family and this is a profound difference with planning from North America and Europe that is organized more around the individual. City of Silk replaces antiquated planning philosophy and strategies with one that is inspired by the cultural and behavioral patterns of the Middle East,” he said.

But in keeping with other architectural projects and trends in the Gulf, the City is also at the cutting edge of design, with plans to build one of the highest towers in the world at 1,001 meters. And in such an arid area, cutting edge science is being used for water supplies, such as the Seawater Foundation developed saltwater irrigation system, and from sweet water wells, grey-black water recycling, and desalinization plants.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Real estateSpecial Report

Rare the Saudi mortgage

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

The demand for residential real estate in Saudi Arabia is fueled by a growing and predominantly young population. According to the Oxford Business Group, 70% of the Saudi Arabia’s population is under 30 years old and 45% is under 15, and this young population will boost the demand for houses and apartments in the upcoming years. Samba Financial Group economists estimated that 2.62 million homes will have to be built by 2020 to keep up with the growing demand.

These facts indicate that a large percent of the population should be actively buying houses since most people would prefer to own a house rather than pay rent. Surprisingly, only one in five Saudis owns their home due to the absence of a clear mortgage law because, according to the Saudi government, mortgages do not comply with sharia. On the other hand, some economic experts say that mortgages without interest payments do not oppose Islamic values. Nevertheless, the government banned banks from giving mortgage loans. Without a clear mortgage law, bank borrowing remained very low and mortgage housing finance in the country represented only 2% of the 2007 GDP. 

In July 2008, the Shura Council finally drafted a mortgage law, which was passed to the Council of Ministers for final approval. It is expected that the law will be issued by year’s end. It is comprised of four components: a system to monitor financing companies, a real estate financing system, a lease financing system and a real estate mortgage system.

The law was highly criticized. Abdul Rahman Al-Azmil, a Shura member and industrialist, was quoted saying that the law would not benefit 85% of Saudis whose monthly income is below SR5,000 ($1,333). He added that the law would mostly benefit “large real estate firms, large real estate investors, large financial institutions and the middle class.” Additionally, the mortgage law does not solve some cultural issues like the actions that should be taken in case someone defaults, since throwing people out of their houses is against sharia, and financing off-plan sales is also not addressed in the law.

Though the mortgage law is not yet approved and the market rules are still unclear, banks and mortgage finance companies, as well as real estate finance companies, have been active in providing sharia-compliant financing, be it through murabaha, whereby the bank purchases the house and resells it to the customer at a higher price in monthly installments, or ijara, a kind of leasing, where the bank buys and resells the house to the customer at the same price on installments plus an extra monthly amount as rent. Al Rajhi Bank launched its program for private and commercial properties in May 2007, and Dar Al-Arkan Real Estate Development Company, one of the largest real estate developers, initiated a mortgage finance joint venture with Kingdom Installment Co. (KIC), Arab National Bank and the International Finance Corporation (IFC). 

Even though one of the mortgage law’s purposes is to increase the demand for houses, this huge increase in the demand for funds might overwhelm the real estate sector in the coming years. More analysis and forecasting is needed and banks will have to find new sources of financing for mortgages in order to meet demand and avoid pushing up inflation or prompting a real estate crisis.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Real estateSpecial Report

Gulf market maturing

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

Real estate prices in the Gulf countries have been rising across the board. High liquidity during the last few years and promises of big returns have seen investors from Jeddah to Abu Dhabi and beyond throw money at the sector with remarkable results. Yet the buying frenzy, coupled with double-digit inflation and a global financial crisis, has begun to make investors across the region think twice before dumping even more cash into the sector. Questions about the true value of property and the possibility of a regional credit crunch have begun to crop up almost as fast as the towers punctuating Dubai’s skyline.

The Price of Land

“Waterfront property in Dubai costs between 600 and 800 Dirhams [$160-$220] per square foot gross floor area,” said Abid Junaid, executive director of ETA Star Properties. He added that land in the Business Bay area is selling for a similar amount due to its prime location and that plots around the Burj Dubai demand another 20% on the price tag. These prices represent some of the highest yet seen in Dubai, as residential real estate values in the emirate have risen by over 25% per year over the last few years. And it is not only the exclusive neighborhoods that cost more. “Affordable housing areas range anywhere from 250 to 400 Dirhams [$70-$110] per square foot,” Junaid suggested. While these numbers may fail to impress the Emirati real estate neophyte, it is important to note that plots of land in Dubai are priced according to the projected size of the structure to be built. Thus, if a developer wants to build a 30-floor building on 1,000 square feet of land, priced at 700 Dirhams ($190) per foot, he must multiply the 30 by 1,000 by 700 to discover that the plot of land will cost him 21 million Dirham ($5.7 million). This means the selling price of the land will then amount to 21,000 Dirhams ($5,700) per square foot.

These high numbers have become prohibitive for many of Dubai’s residents, who have begun to seek refuge in the neighboring emirates along the Gulf coast. “Sharjah has always been a bedroom community for Dubai. There is a huge demand for residential apartments in Sharjah because they are on average 30-40% cheaper than those in Dubai,” said Jean Pierre Nammour, managing director of Al Nahda Real Estate and Trading. But the increasingly popular emirate just northeast of Dubai has seen its own share of price hikes in recent years. “The last plot of land we purchased was in 1996 at 65 Dirhams [$17] per square foot. Six months ago, we bought a plot across the street from us at 1,300 Dirhams [$350] per square foot,” Nammour explained. Mercifully, however, in Sharjah the size of the structure to be built does not impact the cost of land, so the price quoted is the final selling price.

Ajman

A little farther up the white sand beaches of the Gulf is the emirate of Ajman. This sleepy little town is slowly being transformed into the new Sharjah as it is an even more affordable home base for those who do not mind the slightly longer commute. “Prices for residential property in Ajman have hit 900 to 1,000 Dirhams [$245-$270] per square foot,” noted Rami Dabbas, CEO of Aqaar Properties. In Ajman the purchaser will again have to deal with the complex mathematics of calculating the land price based on structure size. Four Dirhams ($1) per square foot per floor are added to the final selling price. While this means that prices are still cheaper then Dubai and Sharjah, even this emirate is not immune to rising values. As Dabbas pointed out, “In the past year and a half prices in Ajman have gone up by 30-50% in some cases.”

Other Gulf countries are also feeling the pinch. In Bahrain, just as in other countries in the region, land is no longer cheap. “Even by conservative measures, land prices in Bahrain have seen a consistent increase in comparison to previous years. Some of Bahrain’s prime areas have seen a tripling in prices,” asserted Mahmood al Koofi, CEO of Reef Real Estate Finance Co. Growing interest from foreign and regional investors and petrodollars have been the primary drivers in the market of late. “More developed residential areas garner prices in the range of 45 to 55 Bahraini Dinar [$115-$120] per square meter. Commercial plots today go for as much as 70 to 90 Bahraini Dinar [$185-$240] per square meter and investment lands have reached up to 300 Bahraini Dinar [$800] per square meter,” Koofi said.

Saudi Arabia has seen rising real estate prices as well. Again, oil wealth plays a role, as do the plethora of announced architectural mega-projects scheduled to starting going up in many cities in the country, including the famed coastal town of Jeddah. Rakan Tarabzoni, managing director of Blue Print Communications, a firm specializing in real estate advertising, pointed out that, “Jeddah has a very dynamic real estate market, especially with the announced revamping of the landscape. Depending on the location of the land, prices may vary from 1,000 Saudi Riyals [$265] in distant suburbs to 25,000 Saudi Riyals [$6,600] for mainly high profile locations like the Corniche.”

A Healthy Market?

There is no doubt that average real estate prices throughout the Gulf have been steadily climbing for years and have reached spectacular levels. But many people wonder if this trend will continue into the future. Perhaps one of the most important indicators of what may happen in the regional real estate market is Dubai. With its liberal tax regime, openness to foreigners and a ‘can do’ attitude, this emirate of 2.2 million inhabitants is a local trendsetter.

Most of the current indicators in Dubai suggest that the real estate sector could not be better. Occupancy rates are near 100% and every year over 350,000 new visas are issued to people coming to work in the emirate. Relatively cheap credit for developers and the incredible demand for accommodation lead to a 30% surge in the number of projects planned since the beginning of the year resulting in a total pipeline of $952 billion.

“There are many projects in the pipeline and most of them are expected to be completed in 2009 or 2010. There will be excess supply in the market [should all those projects be completed],” said Turker Hamzaoglu, an economist at Merrill Lynch. Perhaps sensing the impending shift in market dynamics, the Dubai government has taken steps to cool the overheated economy and tame the runaway real estate sector with new regulations. Stiffer mortgage laws and the tacit acceptance of higher finance rates are just a few of the actions the government has taken.

Disappearing credit

While these new regulations are significant, the single most important element in the equation is the evaporation of credit due to higher costs. With funding more scarce and a global financial crisis rising, many developers will have to cut their projects. According to a recent report by Merrill Lynch, “approximately $320 billion worth of planned construction projects (a third of all project investment) are likely to be shaved.” This dynamic may be positive in that it keeps supply in check, but it will likely result in the squeezing out of many middle and lower level developers.

Hamzaoglu, however, believes that these bumps “will be a catalyst for normalization of the real estate market.” Noting that Dubai’s economy has been overheating and the monetary policy has been over expansionary, he suggested that these developments may not be such a bad thing. “If this weren’t happening right now, the correction in the future would be much more painful,” he said.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Real estateSpecial Report

Solidere’s castle

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

Real estate in the Middle East currently looks like a Greek drama unfolding in twists and stages. Most recently, market assessments for the Gulf region have shifted from a ridiculously positive analyst project to an Emo-fashion sized wave of doom-saying. As observers are viewing the second act, it is not possible to ascertain whether the whole thing will end as tragedy or find happier resolution in a comedy of errors.

The stage for the drama’s current act, that has been unfolding before amazed eyes since July and erupted into a crescendo of action in September, is the region’s stock exchanges. For Lebanese watchers, the actor to keep in focus of attention was the country’s lonesome real estate stock, Solidere, which — by standing in sixth place by market cap among real estate stocks between Cairo and Kuwait City — also is the country’s sole large-cap corporation in regional comparison.

Tightly tied to the surge in security and national stability, Solidere’s share price had defied the tempest of Beirut’s downtown political quarrels in 2007 and the first quarter of 2008. Liberated from the corset of demonstrations after a last test by violence, the stock ascended on the wings of the Doha Accord to unprecedented share price levels in June.

Its price level of well above $30 per share and by local standards good volumes of trade led some pundits to say that this stock has still room to rise further and with the start of the second half of 2008, the stock scraped the $40 per share — but did not go higher.

Instead, the scrip lost almost 30% between the end of the first July trading week and the end of the first week in September. After dipping to a low on September 4, the stock regained its footing but the momentum in the two weeks that followed was not strong enough to return the company on consistent basis to share prices above $30.

Slipping stock

A loss of 30% in eight weeks’ time is more than enough to raise questions on any stock but a closer look suggests that the situation is not a simple response to threats from the usual culprits, namely national politics or security worries. Some of the pressures on Solidere are normal market mechanics. Additionally, as the company has morphed into a regional economic animal with both regional investors and regional projects, it has to be seen in context of regional market trends.

Firstly, the Solidere share peaked just ahead of its dividend date and, quite in line with investor behavior anywhere, the stock would be oversold ex-dividend. This goes towards explaining the rise from $35-36 per share to $38 in the first week of July and the reverse motion in the second week, following the July 8 dividend date.

Later on, local analysts surmised that another setback in the merger discussions between Lebanon’s Bank Audi and Egypt’s EFG Hermes Group exerted downward pressure on Solidere when Lebanese stock market investors shuffled positions.

Other likely factors in the sell-off relate to the region and to global market drivers. Investors who see their portfolios come under stress often consider it their best choice to draw profits from liquidating investment positions in which they can book a gain and use this money to fill holes in their holdings.

Cautious and downcast sentiments can also influence decisions; when investors see that their real estate stocks take a beating in a large market, they may prefer to reduce their exposure to real estate stock, irrespective of the questions if the malady of one stock or one market is going to afflict the other.

Solidere fits the ticket both ways. Investors who bought the stock at any point between November 1998 and May 2008 could realize a lovely return when selling in July and August 2008, using the profit to go fishing, shore up their positions, or relieve the pain of losses elsewhere, for example in US banking or insurance stocks. Smart-money investors equally might have decided that the rally of Middle Eastern real estate stocks just might have been close enough to its crest to liquidate positions.

While Solidere had its steepest loss in many years in July and August, comparison with other large cap real estate stocks in the Middle East shows that seven of its peers also lost 20-30% each. To capture the weakness or strength of Lebanon’s real estate leader more accurately in regional context, it is helpful to compare the performance of Solidere shares in the months of July and August with happenings in the first two weeks of September. 

Compared in context

The average (mean) drop of large cap real estate stocks between Cairo and Kuwait City in the two trading weeks between September 4 and September 18 was 15.6% across 18 companies, with 16 losers juxtaposed by only two gainers — one of them, and the stronger gainer, was Solidere. In one word, it did better than anyone could predict. It advanced 5%, demonstrating no correlation with regional real estate stocks or with global equity trends.  

This does not imply any secret immunity of the Lebanese company to future market downturns. Solidere, by way of its Solidere International affiliate and the participation in the Al Zorah mega-project in Ajman, UAE, has become subject to real estate developments in the GCC. Plus, the company has subjected itself to exposure to Egyptian market sentiments through its collaboration with Sodic in the suburbia projects surrounding Cairo.

The move abroad appeared compelling when it was engineered in 2006/2007. War on Lebanon and political occupation of downtown Beirut, whatever euphemisms company executives could find to sweet-talk the situation in regards to investor interest, were not good for business in the city.

Given that the logic of the original Solidere charter mandates a diminishing role in the Beirut city center in the best-case scenario, reaching beyond the downtown horizon was clearly enticing as it offered double escape from Lebanon’s unstable situation and Solidere’s inherent limitations into the exciting realm of the MENA real estate boom.

But what if the boom goes plop? GCC stock exchanges have been betting on foreign investors to shore up their market caps, on foreign corporations as employers who can’t deny the fact that the GCC is a growth market with growing role to play in international business and finance, and — at least in part — on foreign labor to supply the demand for apartments and homes that is the prerequisite for the GCC real estate boom.

All of this is based on assumptions, and some of them have just been tested with negative results.

According to a research note by investment bank EFG Hermes, foreign capital has exited GCC markets en masse. Whereas non-Arab investors held 13-18% of market capitalization in the UAE bourses in June 2008, their net sales of stock through the first half of September cut the Dubai and Abu Dhabi shareholding by foreign investors to significantly less than 10% in the two national bourses. With 7% in Dubai and 4% in Abu Dhabi, the presence of international money in the exchanges was the lowest since 2006, EFG Hermes observed.   

The reasons for the withdrawal can be manifold and specifically do not need to be local issues in the GCC. Shifting of portfolios by international investors can be related to performance problems in developed markets where positions need to be balanced. Some exit of foreign cash can also be related to the currency market and a reversion of speculation that GCC central banks would de-peg from the greenback. But in a wider sense, the way the global economy is going makes the Middle East real estate outlook unpredictable and suggests that the shares of regional developers are not as safe as many thought earlier in the course of this year.

On the sidelines of current markets volatility — or, if you wish, quite at the center but ignoredly so — is the minor matter of integrity. Transparency is another word for it, governance another just as appropriate, but one has to keep switching words as weapons in the war against wasta. This is true for Gulf stock markets (quod erat demonstran- dum) and also the Beirut Stock Exchange. To begin with, the BSE is yet to emerge as a paragon of timely disclosures and one can argue, neither has Solidere on the corporate level. 

What about new life?

There are opportunities out there, optimists declare. True. But the structural issues of regional economic culture have to be solved. This is not about sharia-compliance or prohibitions against gambling. The challenge is about earning trust and developing a homegrown platform of institutional expertise. 

Attempts at predicting share prices have been proven futile many times under many different situations. With share prices now in the trough, regional smart money can be expected to seek out opportunities that follow upon a panicky market. However, there are real estate stocks out there that look cheaper than Solidere at the current level of valuations.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Real estateSpecial Report

Building Beirut rain or shine

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

Real estate in Lebanon is a strange thing. It seems to defy all logic. In good times things are good, but in bad times things are better. For example, take the three years since the slaying of Lebanon’s former prime minister and billionaire construction magnate Rafiq Hariri in 2005. In years prior, the country was riding a wave of post-war reconstruction and was quickly reestablishing itself as a regional banking and tourism hotspot. After Hariri’s assassination the country witnessed a quick succession of terrible and violent events including many gangland-style political assassinations, sectarian infighting, an armed Islamist insurgency and a full-scale war with Israel. One would expect the real estate market in Lebanon to suffer from this instability, just as the remainder of the economy did.

Yet, as Raja Makarem, managing partner at RAMCO, pointed out, “real estate [in Lebanon] has been doing between 25 and 30% growth in the last three years on average, which is an amazing record,” adding that, “30% [growth] a year is already a lot and this is without the Gulf element. If the Gulf element is added to this, then we will be expecting much higher prices.”

Exorbitant rental prices in the Beirut Central District suggest that Gulf investors are already part of the market. “Office space in the Beirut Central District [rents for] around $200 per square meter per year,” asserted Elie Harb, president and owner of Coldwell Banker Lebanon. He added, however, that much of the office space in the area often referred to as Solidere sits empty. Several factors contribute to the high vacancy rate, according to Harb. Although political instability and a yearlong sit-in during 2007 did much to deter renters, prohibitively small floor plans and lack of parking are some of the more fundamental issues with the properties. Strangely, the loss in opportunity cost has not yet brought down prices as it would in more predictable markets. Harb suggested that the people who own the office spaces for let in Solidere do not use the rental of that property as their bread and butter. “If the property doesn’t rent because it is too expensive, they don’t take action to recuperate that opportunity loss and they will likely leave the price as it is,” he said. This unflinching attitude to renting suggests investors backed by Gulf-flavored petrodollars command much of the quaint but quiet BCD.

Glittering gold

Other areas of Beirut are less calm. Occupancy frenzy seems to have taken hold of some of the more exclusive neighborhoods in the capital. Known as the Golden Triangle, the area between the Sodeco, Sassine and Sofil intersections has seen sky-scraping residential towers and sky-high prices in recent years. “Finished property in the Golden Triangle sells for $3,500-4,000 per square meter. This is almost double the price compared to last year due to higher prices for commodities and the huge rise in land prices,” said Chafic Saab, of Jamil Saab & Co. And anecdotal evidence suggests that much of this property is occupied. Professional real estate agents, local simsars and even the neighborhood hang-abouts on the trendy streets of Abdul Wahab al-Inglizi, Monot and Furn al-Hayek say the same thing: “Sure we have apartments in this neighborhood. But they are all occupied.”

Another glimmering area with high prices and perhaps more availability is the drag of flashy shops and apartment buildings on the sea running east from the marina. This Golden Strip, as it is called, is replete with high-end clothing shops and sports car dealerships, so it is logical that the luxury flats in the area will carry big price tags. Buyers who are looking for apartments above the 15th floor will be seeing prices of up to $10,000 to $12,000 per square meter for finished property.

On the other side of town in West Beirut, prices have been climbing to new heights as well. A square meter of land right at the water’s edge is going for the same prices as on the Golden Strip, asserted Karim Ibrahim, marketing and sales manager for Jamil Ibrahim Establishments. The main attraction for this part of town is the cliff-top Corniche overlooking the famed Pigeon Rocks, which undoubtedly helps drive up the price. Just inland, the Verdun district sports much lower prices of between $5,000 and $6,000 per square meter.

Alternatively, buyers seeking more approachable prices will look at the capital’s suburbs where prices are substantially lower, or even outside Beirut. Some chic countryside developments have been hit by price hikes as well, however. Chahe Yeravanian, chairman and general manager of Sayfco Holding, has discovered this with one of his developments in Faqra Club. “When we bought the land for the Clouds project in 2005 and 2006, it was running at $250 to $300 per square meter.  Today, the market is at $1,200 per square meter,” he said.

Challenges

In the view of Pierre Abou Jaber, general manager for Veninvest, “The number one problem [for real estate] is political instability.” He added that, “we need to overhaul the legal structure and corruption must be solved.” Many of the major players indicated that political stability was of the upmost importance as it helps to reassure investors and to facilitate construction, in addition to the passage and enforcement of new legislation pertaining to real estate. Echoing those concerns Karim Bassil, chairman of BREI, said, “There are two main problems facing developers in Lebanon today: political instability and growing construction costs.”

Recent spikes of up to 50% in the price of commodities like steel and concrete have made life difficult for real estate developers and contributed to the growing cost of finished property. Yet some developers view the startlingly high price of land as an even bigger concern, claiming land prices outweigh the cost of commodities. According to Sherif Aoun, of Mouin Aoun Contracting, “Commodity prices are a problem, but they are nothing compared to the high price of land. The major challenge now is to find land to develop.” Karim Ibrahim, of Jamil Ibrahim Est., echoed that thought: “Commodity prices in Lebanon haven’t been that big of a challenge. In other developing countries, the price of the land constitutes 5-10% of the apartment. In Beirut it is 60-70%, so the higher commodity prices are diluted [by the land prices.]”

Real estate developers are also concerned about the lack of regulation in the country. Karim pointed to the ever-popular balcony as an example. In Lebanon developers are required to make 20% of their building into balconies. “Yet people are allowed to glass in their balconies as they chose,” he said. “Why do they oblige people to have balconies and then let them be closed in? They should really let the architects and designers handle this. Because honestly, you finish a building and it looks great, and then half the people close their balconies, the other half don’t close their balconies and it ends up looking like the ugliest building in the world.”

Beyond developers, real estate brokers have their own set of problems. As one observer put it, anybody can sell real estate in Lebanon. Christian Baz of Baz Real Estate said that property is something of a national pastime in a country where everyone has something for rent or sale. “There are no rules, there is no certificate, there is nothing [to qualify a real estate agent],” he said and added that improved transparency and regulation would have a positive impact on the industry by making life easier for the customer and broker alike.

Trending towards the future

Lebanon is a land of heritage and its architecture is no exception. While many of the villas and their gardens that once defined Beirut have been torn down, others have been saved by strict zoning laws or developers intent on preservation. “The building is not classified, so it could have been destroyed,” said Karim Saade, general manager of Greenstone Real Estate Development, about his new L’Armonial Project. Instead, the company decided to incorporate the 1930s era building into their newest residential project on the historic Abdel Wahab al-Inglizi Street to help safeguard the street’s historic atmosphere. Other developers have also stayed true to a neighborhood’s feel by maintaining the heritage of the area. For example, BREI is trying to help the famed Gemmayze street maintain its traditional character by refraining from building towers and focusing on projects inspired by the existing architecture, such as its Convivium series. Often these same architects also speak of the need to master plan areas because ‘architecture without an urban plan is nothing.’

Elie Harb of Coldwell Banker was quick to point out, however, that pitfalls can beset master planned areas such as the Beirut Central District as well. “The concept of the Solidere area, that whole design is a mistake. Shops and offices work well together to an extent, but they should have left some room for apartment buildings,” Harb contended. Furthermore, he said, “the footprint of the buildings that were in the area before the Civil War was an average of 200 square meters, some as small as 100 square meters. They are not equipped to handle medium-sized or international companies. You can’t fit forty to fifty employees in such a small footprint.” He added that the areas currently being built up with residential towers near the marina could have been emphasized as commercial districts and the Solidere area could have looked as it once did: shops on the bottom and residential on top.

One trend mentioned by many industry players is the move towards smaller apartments. “We only work with small apartments between 140 and 170 square meters. This is a very important new trend. They are proving popular with newlyweds, Gulf residents looking for vacation homes and Lebanese expatriates who would like to own a piece of land in their own country,” Aoun explained. Smaller apartments also make owning land in the city more affordable.

When a pied-a-terre in the heart of the city does not satisfy, then potential homeowners often look to the outskirts of Beirut. Baz pointed out that “the new Hazmieh highway is fantastic, and that has really boosted the real estate in that area.” He also said previously overlooked areas like Sioufi were seeing renewed interest as well.

Whether it is in the suburbs or the heart of the city, the future of Lebanese real estate appears to be secure. A limited supply of land and a quickly evolving industry, coupled with a massive and successful diaspora, means that it is highly unlikely the sector will take a massive tumble in a copy of the American real estate market. While some stabilizing of prices is expected over the next few months, most of the country’s real estate brokers and developers feel they have a very safe bet.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Real estateSpecial Report

The currency of property

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

The Middle East has learned that petrodollars mean nothing until they are spent, and what better way to spend then on property and its development. The proliferation of countless master planned communities, shopping malls, residential towers, sprawling ports, and even artificial islands bears witness to this new currency. Yet the phenomenon has come in fits and starts. Some countries appear to have mastered the trend, while others struggle. In Saudi Arabia, for example, only one in five people own their house due to the absence of a clear mortgage law. Realizing that the young and rapidly growing population is in need of home finance, earlier this year the Shura Council finally drafted a mortgage law. It should be issued by year-end, opening the door to more ownership and development of property for the country’s young and rapidly growing population.

Just across the border, Kuwait is going a step or two farther by redefining development and planning philosophies with its $132 billion City of Silk project. The 250 square kilometer megaproject will take 20 years to build and be home to 750,000 people. The developers claim to depart from the North American or European model of focusing on the individual by making the family unit the essential ingredient. Other countries in the region have their own megaprojects going as well. This year the United Arab Emirates’ project pipeline was scheduled to be $952 billion worth of developments. Unfortunately, however, the cheap credit and market confidence that were the driving force behind this incredible investment have begun to dry up and will likely result in a $320 billion reduction in that figure. While a slight correction in the country’s real estate market may be in the offing, most likely for Dubai, it will be welcomed by analysts who seem to have taken a ‘better now than later’ attitude.

The cooling off appears to be contagious as well, with Lebanese real estate prices expected to stabilize over the coming months. Twenty percent growth in prices over the last three years has culminated in a 50% spike for some areas of Beirut in the six months since the peace-making Doha Accord was signed. Real estate developers in the country seem to welcome a temporary mellowing of prices, as one of the biggest challenges currently is simply affording new land to build on. The high prices, however, have benefited other Lebanese players, specifically ones holding large swathes of real estate in the capital city. Antithetically, one Lebanese stock that is tied to real estate has not kept pace with the price of land: Solidere. Over the last couple of months the stock has been down by as much as 30%. While analysts are at pains to explain this development, it has been suggested that the primary drivers here are “normal market mechanics.” The stock is said to be slightly undervalued currently, so it is possible that we will see the price of land in Beirut hold steady or drop slightly, while the price of a real estate pegged stock climbs.

These are the realities of Middle Eastern real estate. From North Africa, where Morocco and Tunisia are echoing the booming developments of the Gulf with petrodollar fueled megaprojects sponsored by the same wealthy benefactors as the quickly maturing market of the Emirates, to the tried and true Levant. This sector maybe struggling, vibrant, complicated or confusing, but it is most certainly never boring.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Levant

Cool connect

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

“You can’t be in two places at once,” Talal Choucair said, explaining the need for the ‘remote access virtual private network (VPN)’ he and his partner, Guillaume Baron, created when they saw the market opportunity for this kind of technology. “The tools we were using were either too complex or they didn’t fulfill our requirements, so we designed a prototype based on what we wanted to use ourselves.” After two years of aggressive development, Choucair and Baron devised a product that not only satisfies a personal, professional, and market need, but also indeed allows the user to virtually be in two places at once.

March 2008 saw the commercial launch of WallCooler (“it literally cools firewalls,” Choucair pointed out), and, over the past six months, the unique remote access-VPN solution has attracted tens of thousands of users and has a major presence in over 110 countries. “Our revenue is doubling every month,” Choucair revealed, speaking to WallCooler’s immediate success. “In terms of customers, the [MENA] region is one of our biggest growing regions … And we just recently discovered that someone has written an article about us on Wikipedia,” he continued, surprised that his product is now documented in the largest and most popular general reference work on the Internet.

Seeing opportunity

Traditional VPN technology involves a very expensive server and equally expensive software and, after a complicated installation process requiring an IT professional, it allows the customer to access the files on one computer from a separate computer at a different location. “All of this together makes it a little out of reach for a lot of businesses,” Choucair explained. “The idea was that remote access shouldn’t only be the playground of big companies with lots of money and IT resources,” so he and Baron took the idea, developed their own unique version of the technology, simplified it for users (WallCooler’s target demographic is individuals and small businesses), maximized its features and capabilities, and significantly reduced the cost. “We took a very complex remote access system only available to big companies for a lot of money and IT resources, and we brought it to small businesses at a very cost-effective price, with no hardware. It’s a simple software — like Skype or MSN — that, once installed, can be up and running in minutes,” he summarized.

“With WallCooler you have access to your computer, direct access to all the files that are available on your computer, and you also have access to your entire office network. You can be sitting at your home computer or on your laptop at Starbucks, and connect to the office databases, print on your office printer, or send a fax if you have a network fax at the office,” Choucair detailed. He went on to outline the market for remote access-VPN technology, which has grown from $80 million in 2005 to $8 billion in 2008, as “the mentality of society is changing in terms of work culture; we want more flexibility and less constraints, and increasingly we are realizing the need for these solutions.”

Choucair cited his favorite example: “Two full-time working parents have a child that is ill and needs to stay home from school. Now the parents argue about who needs to be at work for their 10 a.m. meeting, or go to the office to finish their presentation… In this case, a remote access solution is crucial for employee and employer. With WallCooler, the employee can access everything he or she needs right from the home computer. He or she can fulfill social requirements or constraints without sacrificing work.”

WallCooler comes in three easy-to-install, ready-to-use versions: Wallcooler Standard, the free remote access service; WallCooler Pro, the full-featured remote access and VPN solution that allows multiple locations, but is limited to just one login; and WallCooler Enterprise, which is essentially the same service offered with WallCooler Pro, but ideal for small businesses because it allows up to fifty users. It is available for download on the company’s website, where fully animated diagrams and instructions walk the customer through the installation step-by-step. Creating a username and password is the only part of the process that really requires any active thought.

“We are about 80-85% cheaper than other existing VPN solutions,” Choucair claimed, hastening to add, “but that’s not the main point. What is important to us is what users want, which is quality and simplicity.”

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Levant

An unscrupulous cleaning

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

Mary came to work in Lebanon in July. She had held a decent job in her hometown of Manila, Philippines, making $86 a month as a quality controller at a clothing factory. Earlier this year, she met an Egyptian businessman who told her she could earn $400 a month working as a maid in Lebanon. She thought it was a good opportunity to give her five children a better life.

Mary left the children with her mother. Upon landing at Rafiq Hariri International Airport, she says she was issued a tourist visa, and was met by her new employer, her ‘Madam’. The Madam told Mary her salary would be far less than expected: $200 per month. From thereon, Mary’s situation only deteriorated.

“My mother had a heart attack on July 23, and died. Now there is no one to take care of my babies,” Mary said. She tried to do the housework, but could not stop crying. She wanted to go home. Her employer was unsympathetic.

“My Madam said that if I don’t stop crying, she will throw me out the window, and burn my things,” Mary said. “Madam said she wanted me to die, and my children to die and go to hell.”

Mary said her employer beat her and used a fork to scratch deep grooves into her underarms, leaving scabs visible two weeks later. Mary was terrified and heartbroken, so she ran away. In August she found refuge at a shelter for run-away migrant domestic workers north of Beirut. Mary was waiting to speak with a lawyer to get her passport back from her employer and figure out how she was going to get home.

Although a victim of human trafficking, Mary was lucky to be in the shelter. Many of her fellow run-away maids end up in the General Security’s jails, waiting for their cases to be heard.

To be fair, this is not how most Lebanese treat their migrant domestic workers. But with few regulations, and a country already swamped with problems, incidents like Mary’s are not uncommon. Advocates for workers say the problem is that the 200,000 migrant domestic workers from Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Ethiopia and other countries have little legal recourse against abusive employers.

Invisible under the law

“The labor law does not apply to domestic workers,” said Martin McDermott, a priest who has worked with Lebanon’s migrant domestic worker population for 15 years.

The problem has come to the attention of Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, who in September issued a fatwa criticizing the treatment of maids in Lebanon, and calling for better protection of the workers and legal reform.

According to McDermott, the International Labor Organization and NGOs like Caritas Migrant Center and Human Rights Watch, the worst situations migrant domestic workers find themselves in are physically or sexually abusive. Other bad cases include employers who do not give their maids food, lock them in the house or force them to sleep outside.

These kinds of abuses can lead to suicide or death in an attempt to escape, according to Nadim Houry, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch. He said that in less than two years, 40 maids committed suicide and 24 more died in falls from balconies.

“Many domestic workers are literally being driven to jump from balconies to escape their forced confinement,” Houry said. “All those involved […] need to ask themselves what is driving these women to kill themselves or risk their lives trying to escape from high buildings.”

According to Houry, much of the abuse suffered by maids in Lebanon is not that dramatic. Most practices are normalized and accepted in Lebanon, even though they are prohibited by either human rights conventions that Lebanon is a party to, or by Lebanese law.

In a 2005 study of 500 migrant domestic workers in Lebanon by Dr. Ray Jureidini at the American University of Cairo, 56% of maids reported working more than 12 hours per day, 34% said they did not have a day off and 31% said they were not allowed to leave their houses. Anecdotal evidence suggests  employers often withhold payment in order to insure maids will not run away.

This spring, Human Rights Watch started “Put Yourself in Her Shoes,” an advertising campaign pointing out the day-to-day abuses that maids endure, hoping to change Lebanese employers’ treatment of their maids.

Employers and employment agencies also confiscate maids’ passports to prevent them from fleeing: only 1% of live-in maids in Jureidini’s study reported possessing their own passports. Rania Hokayem, project manager at the Caritas Migrant Center, said that Lebanese confiscate their maids’ passports to protect themselves, because the law does not.

“For them, it’s a guarantee,” she said. “The employers consider that they invested a lot of money to bring a person to Lebanon to work for them, and in case she runs away from the house, this would be a loss. So they consider that keeping the passport in their hands will not give the chance for the worker to think about running away.”

Hokayem said the Lebanese labor code does not cover domestic help, leaving the employer largely responsible for the $2,000 it costs to bring a maid to Lebanon and making the maids vulnerable to abuse by the employer and the employment agency. Moreover, the laws on the books to protect workers are rarely enforced. The maids’ legal status in the country is defined by the contract they sign with the employer, which is based on the kafalah (sponsorship) system.

Kafalah ties a maid’s legal residency in Lebanon to her employer, who then controls her freedom of movement, work hours, days off and pay. The system is also inflexible: if employers do not like a maid, they are basically stuck with her, possibly leading to situations of conflict and abuse. McDermott said that many employment agencies also ‘bait and switch’, forcing maids to sign a different contract than what they agreed to in their home country.

“The employment agency will supply their own contract, often it’s in Arabic, she doesn’t know what she’s signing anyway and she doesn’t get a copy,” he said. “These girls are simple, they’re not used to dealing with sharks and legal ways. So they can be taken advantage of.”

The contracts do not specify work hours or conditions. The common wage is $125 to $200 per month. In interviews, workers routinely say they were promised more by their employment agency before they arrive in the country.

In 2005, Lebanon’s then-minister of labor, Trad Hamade formed a committee to look at ways to bring migrant domestic workers under the labor code, with the committee’s first objective to create a unified, standardized and legally binding contract for maids and employers.

The contract would have set out rules for on-time payment of wages, working conditions and work hours. The draft was finished and awaited approval from the minister. But before the Hamadeh could approve the contract, he resigned along with the rest of the Amal and Hizbullah ministers in November 2006. During Lebanon’s 18 months of political deadlock, other officials in the ministry asked the committee to submit a new draft. Hokayem said it was a big setback for the contract.

“When we finally reached the end, we had to go back to beginning, and discuss all the issues we had already discussed during the previous year,” Hokayem said.

The new minister of labor, Mohammad Fneish, declined to comment for this article. Hokayem is optimistic that he’ll take up the issue. But others are less hopeful. They point out that those who employ maids are often wealthy and politically connected: and they would stand to lose if the maids gain.

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Levant

The baby borrow

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

In malls around town, couples pushing baby strollers are a common sight. However, for many plagued by infertility, children are a luxury they can’t afford.

According to Dr Joseph Aboud, an oncological and gynecological surgeon, Lebanon’s infertility rate stands at 15%. “This percentage can be further broken down, whereby 85% of cases can be solved with medical treatment while the remaining couples will often require IVF surgeries,” he added. The specialist recommends, however, that the right approach to solving infertility problems should be carefully balanced and progressive in terms of treatment procedure.

In vitro fertilization (IVF) procedures have been done in Lebanon since 1989. IVF involves the female eggs being fertilized by sperm outside the woman’s womb and is used as treatment for infertility when all other methods of assisted reproductive technology fail. The process is based on hormonally controlling the ovulation process and removing the ova (egg) from the woman’s ovaries before allowing sperm to fertilize. The fertilized egg is then transferred to the patient’s uterus.

Currently there are about 14 IVF centers in Lebanon, where each assisted reproduction procedure costs about $2,500, according to Dr Aboud. who underlined that in the United States such a procedure can cost up to $25,000. The specialist estimates that about 25% of patients undergoing IVF will be able to conceive after the first trial, while others will frequently require one to five additional procedures.

One bank has identified the need for reproductive assistance and the inherent costs that are linked to it as an opportunity. First National Bank (FNB) started marketing fertility loans of late in all its branches. Maher Mezher, head of FNB’s marketing department, explained that he became familiar with infertility problems during the course of a study he led at Université Saint Joseph (USJ), where he teaches. “While conducting the study, we discovered that about 18% of newly married people were unable or faced difficulty conceiving. The Fertility Association of Lebanon estimates this rate to about 15%. If applied to the general Lebanese population, this figure would translate into 10,000 couples suffering from infertility,” he pointed out. The study also attributed infertility to couples getting married later, change in lifestyles as well as acute stress, causing loss of sperm motility and other infertility problems.

What’s covered

The FNB fertility loan is divided into four main lines. The first line includes fertility treatments such as diets, injections, vitamins, medication and surgeries. The second type of procedure financed by FNB is stem cell collection and conservation. In a developing embryo, stem cells can differentiate into all of the specialized embryonic tissues. In adult organisms, stem cells act as a repair system for the body thanks to their ability to replenish specialized cells, as well as maintain the normal turnover of regenerative organs, such as blood, skin or intestinal tissues. Medical researchers believe that stem cell therapy has the potential to dramatically change the treatment of human disease as stem cells can now be grown and transformed into specialized cells with consistent characteristics. A number of adult stem cell therapies already exist on the market, the more popular ones being associated with bone marrow transplants and to treat certain types of cancers such as leukemia. “These cells are collected from the child’s umbilical cord during delivery and refrigerated at a temperature of -169 degrees, then sent to stem cell banks located in England, Germany, or the United States. These stems, when available in sufficient number, can be used to treat heart disease, Alzheimer, paralysis or any injuries that are caused during an accident,” Mezher explained.

The importance of stem cell treatment has promoted FNB’s decision to finance such vital procedures and make it available to the public. “Besides fertility treatments and stem cell conservation, FNB also finances delivery expenses,” Mezher said. The manager explained that although much of the population may enjoy social security or medical coverage, such insurances may not fully cover procedures in relation to delivery, allowing the bank to step in and fill the gap.

The fertility loan is also granted to couples who can have a child without medical assistance but are in need of financing their baby’s accessories — strollers, furniture for the baby room, car seat, clothes or any other item required by a newborn.

Anyone with a salary of $600 dollars or more can apply for the loan while self employed individuals such as doctors and merchants should boast a salary exceeding $1,500. The loan will also finance the $2,800 or so needed for stem cell preservation. “Nonetheless, loan amounts should not exceed one third of the client’s salary and ought to be reimbursed over a maximum period of three years,” Mezher said.

Top tier loans

FNB applies an interest of 5% on the fertility loan which, according to Mezher, is quite affordable when compared to other loans that are otherwise backed by tangible assets. The amount limit of the loan is $7,000, however, clients with a salary of over $2,000 can obtain a loan of $10,000. On average, each IVF procedure costs about $2,500 and historical data has shown that more than one procedure is required. “We only cover IVF treatments done in Lebanon as we settle doctors’ fees directly,” Mezher added, noting that the loan is not available to non-residents.

The manager underlined the confidentiality involved in the process of obtaining a fertility loan. “Loan applications are distributed to doctors who help their patients fill them out. They are then processed by one department only at the bank and overseen by two FNB employees. I was, however, really surprised by the number of forms which were filled out directly by clients at the various branches and especially in rural southern and northern areas,” said the manager. Lebanese seem to have overcome the cultural taboo traditionally linked with infertility problems. Dr Aboud reckoned that he has seen some patients resort to selling their property, whether apartments or land, to finance assisted reproductive treatments.

An indicator of couples’ desire for children is the FNB’s call center, which went from receiving 26 calls to up to 256 calls per day after the launch of the fertility loan. “We expect to grant as many as 500 to 1,000 loans within a year and a half,” Mezher said.

FNB has relied on a powerful marketing campaign to promote its new loan product. About 1,300 billboards displaying the fertility loan ad were put up around Lebanon while a press conference was organized at the Phoenicia hotel for the public launch of the loan. An ad campaign including TV, newspapers and magazines was also organized. Finally an SMS campaign was initiated a few weeks earlier, with some 100,000 messages sent to mobile phones around the country.

According to Mezher, “The bank is actually creating awareness. We have abandoned classical marketing campaigns that tout the merits of our institution and replaced them with an effective approach underlined by new products from which our clients ultimately benefit”

As profitable a product as the new fertility loans may be, their impact certainly has an important social dimension. In Mezher’s words, “We are positioning ourselves as a daring bank with a keen interest in humanitarian issues.”

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Levant

Market flux

by Executive Staff October 3, 2008
written by Executive Staff

The days that one would see groups of Syrian workers sitting on every street corner, drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes while waiting for a job, are long gone by. Since the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafic Hariri in 2005, Syrians have generally proven more reluctant to try their luck across the border, as many Lebanese blame Syria for the string of political killings that shook the country in recent years. It is estimated that following the murder of “Mr. Lebanon,” some 30 Syrians were killed in random attacks.

Meanwhile, Lebanon’s construction and real estate market is booming across the board. Nearly everywhere in Beirut, buildings are bought up, emptied and demolished to make way for yet another new apartment block. With less Syrian workers around while demand is soaring, labor cost has witnessed a significant increase in recent years.

According to a Lebanese contractor from eastern Beirut, who preferred not to be named, the salary of a Syrian laborer has risen by an average of some 33%. “Three years ago an unqualified worker was about LP15,000 ($10) a day,” he said. “Today he charges about LP20,000 ($13). A qualified worker, such as a carpenter, electrician or painter, costs some LP45,000 ($30) a day, up from $20 to $25 a day.”

According to him, there are several reasons for the price hike. “It’s more expensive for Syrians to take the bus to Lebanon and food has become more expensive, so it is only normal that they demand a wage increase,” he said, adding that, ”since March 14 there are simply less Syrians around. A few years ago, you could pick up a worker from the street even for $8, as many were desperate just to eat. Now, you are lucky to find anyone at all.” 

Construction inflation

Personally, the contractor is not too affected by the lack in supply, as he has been working with more or less the same group from Aleppo for more than a decade. He warned that the cost of labor is neither the sole nor the main cause for the increase in construction costs. “Fuel, steel, lead, cables, everything has become more expensive,” he said.

Still, that has not stopped the Lebanese from building. According to figures released by the Order of Engineers of Beirut and Tripoli, the Lebanese authorities issued construction permits for a total of nearly 6.1 million square meters during the first seven months of 2008, an increase of 26.5% compared to the same period last year.

Even the clashes in May 2008 did not stop the builders from building, although the increase in construction activity that month was relatively smaller than in other months. Most permits issued (49.8%) concerned the Mount Lebanon region, followed by north Lebanon (16.5%), South Lebanon (15.9%), Beirut (12.1%) and the Bekaa (5.6%).

The increase in construction activities is to a large extent caused by a soaring demand for real estate. According to the Investment Development Authority of Lebanon (IDAL) over $4.3 billion worth of properties were sold in Lebanon in 2007 alone. Most buyers are Lebanese expatriates working in the Gulf, Europe and the US. According to most real estate brokers, the price of properties in Beirut and Mount Lebanon saw an average increase by some 40% over the past year.

Soaring real estate

“The price of medium and high end property in Beirut has increased by some 35% to 40% over the last four months alone,” estimated Raja Makarem of Ramco Real Estate Advisers. According to him, however, the price increase hike is not so much the result of a rise in construction cost, but by a surge in demand, some 90% of which stems from Lebanese expatriates.

Still, he expected a (minor) market correction to take place during the coming months, mainly due to the current instability in the world’s financial markets. “Over the last three years, the market grew by some 25% to 30% a year, while this year by up to 40%,” he said. “I think the market will go back to normal growth figures in the coming months.”

While the Lebanese banking and real estate sectors have so far not been tarred by the American subprime and financial market crises, Lebanese expatriates may adopt a wait-and-see attitude before investing. In addition, some may have been personally affected by the crash in international stock markets, while others may have lost their jobs due to the collapse of banking giants such as Lehman Bros.

“Although there is no crisis whatsoever, the recent craze for Lebanese real estate may be over, at least temporarily,” Makarem concluded. 

October 3, 2008 0 comments
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Since its first edition emerged on the newsstands in 1999, Executive Magazine has been dedicated to providing its readers with the most up-to-date local and regional business news. Executive is a monthly business magazine that offers readers in-depth analyses on the Lebanese world of commerce, covering all the major sectors – from banking, finance, and insurance to technology, tourism, hospitality, media, and retail.

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