After years of international isolation and embargo, Libya has begun a slow process of opening its economy to the outside world. Foreign players are acquiring stakes in Libyan banks, household-name hotel brands are muscling in on the market and the world’s largest energy firms are queuing up to get their hands on Libya’s immense oil and gas reserves.
On the back of this — particularly the record oil prices which have propelled impressive growth in the Libyan economy since 2003 — the real estate market is beginning to draw the attention of keen investor interests from Europe, the Middle East and further afield.
The fundamentals look good, but with an unwieldy bureaucracy, an untried market and an uncertain political future, many developers are still hesitant to enter into one of the few remaining virgin markets around the Mediterranean.
Potential awaits
With a population of just over six million and some of the world’s largest oil and gas reserves, Libya in some ways resembles the situation of several of the Gulf markets a decade ago. It is also relatively stable, has massive tourism potential and, even better, lies right on the doorstep of Europe.
Unsurprisingly, this has spurred greater interest in Libya’s real estate sector, which shows some indications of being on the verge of a boom. A burgeoning business sector is driving demand for new office and residential space, while investing in property is starting to gain popularity amongst local groups and wealthy Libyans. Construction costs are low, there is a ready supply of labor and a number of players have already dipped their toes in the water.
Yet until recently real estate in Libya was off-limits, and it was only in the late 1990s that the authorities eased legislation on private property ownership, which previously had been considered contrary to the socialist leanings of Colonel Gaddafi’s blueprint for the country.
Following the resolution of the long-running Lockerbie bombing trial in 2003 and the lifting of EU and US sanctions, Gaddafi has appeared to take a new track by gradually allowing foreign investment into various fields and seeking joint development ventures for large pieces of land on the coastline to support the country’s ambitious tourism program.
Even so, the real estate sector remains restrictive. Individual foreigners cannot buy property in Libya, with the apparent exception of Maltese citizens who enjoy a privileged status thanks to a longstanding reciprocal investment agreement between the two countries. Larger investors can lease land from the government for up to 99 years, as long as it falls within certain areas which have been designated for development, but so far there is no freehold.
Drivers of demand
Keen to invest enormous windfalls from oil revenues, the government is emerging as one of the key drivers of the real estate market. A number of rather opaque entities, usually controlled by the sons of Colonel Gaddafi, are teaming up with seasoned foreign firms to build a series of large-scale joint ventures which have only been signed within the past one or two years and have yet to break ground.
Other factors also give the market some rosy prospects. The first is the rising numbers of foreign visitors. Libya’s hotel market is seriously undersupplied, and even if tourist levels stay at their relatively modest current levels of around a million
arrivals per year, demand from business visitors is set to soar thanks to the burgeoning private economy and the growing numbers of energy companies operating in the country.
For now, the only five-star hotel in Tripoli is the Corinthia Bab Africa, which reportedly enjoys an occupancy rate of between 95-100% despite commanding a rack rate of more than $450 for a single room. It will be joined by a series of other high-end hotels in 2009 and 2010, with the Sheraton and Intercontinental both set to manage properties in the capital and the other mega-projects including hotels in their master plans.
Another advantage is the thriving business environment, even if this still depends largely on energy-related companies. Tripoli suffers from a lack of quality office space, with many companies forced to convert residential villas or erect their own buildings. There are only three quality office towers in the capital, for instance, all of which have zero vacancy rates.
Libyans themselves also constitute an important market for new villas and apartments. Demographic growth is rapid, at around 2% a year, and there is a sizable Libyan diaspora that may look to move back home or acquire a second residence as the local economy becomes a more attractive place to work and live. The government is also building low-cost apartments to bridge the shortfall in housing, which is thought to be in the hundreds of thousands of units.
Scouting investments
The experience of a handful of foreign developers who already have projects running in Libya may be instructive for more risk-averse investors.
One of these is the Malta-based Corinthia Group, which already owns the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli and enjoys a long-standing relationship with Libya, and now is building a beachside residential complex called Palm City. All the villas and apartments are for rent only, and the first phase is scheduled to be ready by the end of 2008.
The Pakistani Hashoo Group is another early mover, building a 92,000 square meter tower called the Burj al-Bahr on the eastern suburbs of Tripoli. The project has already been beset by delays and construction problems, but the developers say that the returns will still be more than worthwhile.
European investors are showing interest too, with the UK-based Magna Group building a mixed-use development and the Swiss company, Berocko, putting up two beachside hotels just outside Tripoli. Korean firm Daewoo is also building a hotel in the city center which will reportedly be managed by Marriott.
Emaar, the Dubai-based developer which has myriad projects around the region, has also been studying the potential for a completely new city on the shores of the Mediterranean which would have its own legislative system and free-zone status. If and when it goes ahead, the project will be by far the largest in the country.
Two of the other major Gulf groups believed to enter the market in the coming years are the Kuwait-based Kharafi Group and the government-owned Qatari Diar holding company, both of which are reportedly looking to develop seafront plots in Tripoli in partnership with the government. Lastly, in late 2007 the Bahrain-based Gulf Finance House announced plans to build an Energy City worth an estimated $3.8 billion.
And while so far most of the investment has been in Tripoli, Libyan developers claim that even higher returns can be found in Benghazi, the second-largest city which lies further along the eastern coastline.
“You can buy something at 100 in Tripoli and sell it at 150 a year later,” says one Libyan property investor. “But in Benghazi, because the market is even more immature, you can buy at 100 and sell at 200. The margins are even higher.”
Tricky business
As one might expect though, things tend to move a little slower in Libya. Signing a multi-million dollar development deal is one thing and actually beginning work is another, as the long delays in these first projects have shown.
Investing here remains a cumbersome and bureaucratic affair, despite government promises to make things easier for foreign companies to establish a legal presence on Libyan soil, and there are also sizable risks. Rules and regulations can change suddenly, unaccountably and at the whim of an unpredictable leader, while no-one really knows for sure who will take over — and how — after Gaddafi’s reign comes to an end.
The laws on foreign investment mean that investors need to team up with Libyan partners in order to buy — as oppose to lease — property in Libya, and more importantly, it is too early to find many tried and tested examples of previous success stories.
Other challenges include obtaining government permission to develop larger plots of land, which often requires the foreign investor to contribute to building local infrastructure, the idea being that investors should play a role in upgrading roads, electricity and water supplies and other amenities in undeveloped areas. And with unemployment unofficially running at more than 30%, large-scale tourism and hotel projects are also rated on how many jobs they will create for Libyans.
Yet despite the fact that regulations are unlikely to be liberalized further in the near future, opportunities to invest in such virgin markets as Libya are becoming increasingly scarce in the Middle East — and especially on the shores of the Mediterranean. With the market likely to be transformed by 2012, some might argue that now is the time to take the plunge.








