Stake co-founders say recent reforms will present opportunities for property investors next year after 2020 slowdown
Dubai’s residential real estate market will present opportunities next
year despite a slowdown in 2020, according to the founders of a new investment
platform.
Stake co-founders Rami Tabbara and Manar Mahmassani have leveraged their
15 years of experience in Dubai’s real estate and financial markets to launch
the digital real estate investment platform.
Residential real estate prices in 2020 had dropped down to almost below
replacement point, meaning that investors can buy property at less than the
building cost, but with the introduction of vaccines and the economy picking
up, prices are expected to pick up in 2021, said Tabbara, who was a former
senior vice president of sales at Damac.
“We also feel that more people
will start coming to Dubai with the introductions of the retirement visas and
the five-year visas,” said Tabbara.
“All this will create a fantastic opportunity for people to come into
the real estate market here. If we've learned anything in 2008 and 2009 it is
that Dubai is very resilient. If you come in at the lows, then you'll make
money at the highs,” he continued.
Stake, which launched on Monday in DIFC’s FinTech Hive, provides
potential real estate investors with a digitised platform where they can browse
pre-vetted property listings, said Mahmassani, previously managing director at
Falcon Group.
Listings include a due diligence report, a market report, financial
projections and a property valuation report for each project, he added.
Regulated by the DFSA, Stake deals with only residential properties and
lists secondary real estate projects which the co-founders believe gives a
better return on investments.
“Optically, off-plan projects appear to be a good deal as investors only
have to pay a little upfront. From a risk standpoint, however, they are
concentrating capital, taking construction risk and taking vacancy risk on the
asset when it gets delivered in three or four years. When you're buying
something that is ready today, and that is already leased, you remove all those
risks,” said Mahmassani. Properties on Stake should be already leased for a
minimum of a year, he added.
“Instead of getting one investor to put all his money into one unit, we
tell them to divide that equity across five or six different units and start
making returns. If one isn't rented out, another one is making you money so it
kind of diversifies. It takes the issue of affordability out of the equation,
as long as you can afford one unit, and it also provides you with
diversification,” said Tabbara.
The minimum investment is AED2,000, he added.
“You basically invest by funding your digital wallet with us through
several payment methods. From there on, you allocate how much you want to
invest in each property by creating a diversified portfolio of multiple
properties where you own a stake in each one proportional to the amount that
you've invested. We've fractionalised the asset for you to own a partial stake
in it,” said Mahmassani.
Stake encourages a five-year investment into the platform, for which
shares are distributed every quarter, said Mahmassani.
“From there on, you can choose to reinvest those proceeds or take them
out into your bank account. We give you full transparency reporting on how your
property has performed over six months,” he added.
Aside from affordability, the co-founders claimed Stake also answers the
market need for transparency in real estate investment in the region.
“There are a lot of shortcomings in the real estate investment space
where investors tend to be misled by developers and brokers to buy high priced
properties with little return,” said Tabbara.
“In other places in the world as well, there are people who get burnt by
over-promises and investing in real estate but in our part of the world it is
more relevant because there's a lot of foreign investors that come in and there
isn't that wide access to information that's given to them,” he continued.
Mahmassani said Stake generates its profits by taking a small percentage
upfront and on a running basis but the main source of revenue is at the exit
after the investor has made money.
As a bootstrapped start-up, Stake has raised $2 million from the
co-founders themselves, their friends and family, angel investors, a London
based VC and Madison Marquette, a leading commercial real estate investment
manager in the US.
Stake’s investors were not only a source of financial backing, they also
opened up expansion opportunities for the young start-up.
“The beauty of Dubai is that caters to many international investors so
part of our roadmap is to obviously target investors outside of Dubai to invest
in Dubai. But, one of our lead investors is a developer in the US so we will
then start listing US real estate onto our platform,” said Tabbara.
“Another investor in our platform is a London based real estate
developer so we'll start targeting investments in the UK as well. That's part
of our roadmap, potentially, in year two and three,” he added.
The duo, who met in high school in Lebanon, offered this advice for
aspiring entrepreneurs: “The thing that most keeps people away from actually
starting their own businesses is the fear of what happens if it doesn't work
out. But if it's something that's actually keeping them up at night, and
they're losing sleep over it, then it's definitely worth it. They should go for
it, stay the course and not look back.”
Shaikhani
Group said, this coming year would be the simplest year for the Dubai. it'll be
a boom for each industry. Moreover, they're trying their best to extend the
productivity of theirs projects so it'll fork over by the top of this year….
Shaikhani
Group explained, Dubai is understood by doing things on right time,they come up
with those ideas where people think‟s it's impossible , while ago Dubai was a
desert, now nobody can say this was a desert. People like to visit Dubai for
holidays, because all facilities are there including security which may be a
basic necessity of life.
Dubai is one
As the pandemic situation
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