Tag: DFM real estate stocks

  • Dubai Property Market Rebounds as DFM Real Estate Stocks Extend Losses

    Dubai Property Market Rebounds as DFM Real Estate Stocks Extend Losses

    Two weeks after the onset of regional conflict on February 28, a significant divergence has emerged between Dubai’s physical real estate market and its listed equities, as property transactions rebound while financial markets continue to reprice risk.

    Transaction Liquidity Rebounds After Initial Shock

    Following an initial risk-off pause, the physical property market demonstrated a notable bounce-back in the second week of March. According to Dubai Land Department records analyzed by The Real Estate Reports, total transaction value on a headline basis, including land transactions, surged to Dhs15.66 billion in the week of March 9–15, representing a 51% increase in value and a 58% jump in transaction counts over the previous week.

    However, a closer examination reveals the recovery was primarily volume-driven. When excluding land plots to remove the volatility of high-value land deals, built value grew 13% to Dhs8.26 billion while transaction volume rose 56% to 4,327 deals. The discrepancy between modest value growth and surging volume indicates the market remains operational under more cautious, broader-based participation, with average ticket sizes softening.

    Off-Plan Sales Maintain Market Dominance

    The structural integrity of the market appears to have held. Off-plan sales continued to command the lion’s share of activity, accounting for 63% of built property value in the second week of March, compared to 66% in the week immediately following the conflict’s start.

    The most visible shift within this segment was a rotation toward villas. Off-plan villa sales rose to approximately 23% of the segment’s value, up from 16%, while the ready market similarly saw increased interest in landed homes over commercial assets. This suggests selective risk-taking by buyers who are prioritizing tangible residential assets over more sensitive commercial segments.

    Mortgage registrations nearly doubled to 1,053 in the second week of March, demonstrating that the fundamental infrastructure of the property market remains intact. Earlier this week, property services handled over 563,920 customers throughout 2025, reflecting the sector’s operational capacity.

    DFM Real Estate Index Plunges 13.8%

    The resilience in physical transactions stands in stark contrast to the Dubai Financial Market. Since trading resumed on March 4, aided by a temporary 5% limit-down threshold to prevent panic, equities have undergone a sustained de-risking phase.

    The DFM General Index (DFMGI) fell 5.7% in the second week of March on a turnover of 1.52 billion shares, nearly double the volume of the prior week. The pain was most acute in the Real Estate Index (DFMREI), which slumped 13.8% last week as investors demanded a higher risk premium for regional exposure.

    “While the physical market shows signs of a recovery in activity, the heavy-volume sell-off on the DFM suggests that financial markets may be pricing in a more prolonged period of uncertainty.”

    Growing Gap Between Sentiment and Real Economy

    The data highlights a widening gap between sentiment-driven equities and real economy property transactions. In the stock market, liquid shares are being sold as investors demand higher risk premiums for regional exposure. In the physical market, the normalization of mortgage registrations and sustained transaction volumes suggest the operational framework of the industry remains intact.

    Ali Shahin, founder of The Real Estate Reports, noted the contrast between the two markets, stating that while Dubai real estate is proving it can operate under pressure, listed counterparts are absorbing the brunt of the geopolitical shock.

    The divergence comes as global capital continues flowing into Dubai property, with industry leaders citing structural advantages and a diversified buyer base. Despite regional tensions causing an initial pause, off-plan demand has held firm, with luxury sales continuing across premium locations.

    For now, Dubai real estate is proving it can operate under pressure, even as its listed counterparts absorb the brunt of the geopolitical shock. The question remains whether financial markets are pricing in risks that the physical market has yet to fully experience, or whether the resilience on display will ultimately validate current transaction levels.

  • Dubai Property Market Rebounds as DFM Real Estate Stocks Extend Losses

    Dubai Property Market Rebounds as DFM Real Estate Stocks Extend Losses

    Two weeks after regional conflict began on February 28, Dubai’s real estate sector is demonstrating a striking divergence between physical market performance and listed equity valuations.

    According to Dubai Land Department (DLD) data analyzed by The Real Estate Reports, total transaction value surged to Dh15.66 billion in the week of March 9–15, representing a 51% increase in value and a 58% jump in transaction counts compared to the previous week.

    However, when excluding land plots to remove volatility from high-value land deals, built property value grew a more modest 13% to Dh8.26 billion, while transaction volume rose 56% to 4,327 deals. The gap between volume growth and value growth suggests buyers are proceeding with caution, resulting in a lower average ticket size per transaction.

    Off-Plan Sales Drive Market Activity

    Off-plan properties continued to dominate, accounting for 63% of built property value in the second week of March, only slightly below the 66% recorded immediately after conflict began. Within this segment, villa sales increased their share to approximately 23% of off-plan value, up from 16% the previous week, indicating buyer preference for tangible residential assets over commercial properties.

    The recovery in mortgage registrations provided further evidence of market functionality, with 1,053 mortgages registered during the week, nearly double the prior period, suggesting that the financing infrastructure supporting Dubai’s property sector remains intact despite regional tensions.

    “While the physical market shows signs of a recovery in activity, the heavy-volume sell-off on the DFM suggests that financial markets may be pricing in a more prolonged period of uncertainty.”

    Equity Markets Tell Different Story

    In stark contrast to the physical market’s resilience, the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) continued its downward trajectory. The DFM General Index (DFMGI) fell 5.7% in the second week of March on turnover of 1.52 billion shares—nearly double the volume of the previous week.

    Real estate stocks bore the brunt of the sell-off, with the DFM Real Estate Index (DFMREI) plunging 13.8% last week as investors demanded higher risk premiums for regional exposure. Trading resumed on March 4 with a temporary 5% limit-down threshold implemented to prevent panic selling.

    The divergence highlights how sentiment-driven equity markets are repricing regional risk while the underlying property economy continues to function. For investors, the data suggests that while short-term caution prevails in financial markets, Dubai’s real estate infrastructure and transactional mechanisms remain operational.

    Ali Shahin, founder of The Real Estate Reports, noted that Dubai real estate is proving it can operate under pressure even as listed property companies absorb the immediate shock of geopolitical uncertainty.

    The physical market’s resilience comes despite an initial 50% drop in weekly transactions immediately following the start of regional conflict, with industry leaders citing structural advantages and a diversified buyer base as key factors supporting continued capital inflows.

    For now, Dubai’s property sector appears capable of maintaining operational momentum despite elevated geopolitical risk, though the heavy selling in listed real estate stocks suggests investors remain cautious about medium-term prospects in the region.