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To: jeevacationftmail.comueevacationagmail.comi: Jeffrey Epsteinbeevacation©gmail corn]
From: Sultan Bin Sulayem
Sent Thur 4/3/2014 1:24:01 PM
Subject Re: Wall Street journal
The only missing thing in Dubai Jeffery not visiting us
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On Apr 3, 2014, at 9:21 PM, Jeffrey Epstein leevacation@umail coal> wrote:
great great great
On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 9:20 AM, Sultan Bin Sulayem < wrote:
http://m.europe.wsj.com/home-page
Chinese Investors Change Face of Dubai
Investment by Individual Chinese Investors Nearly Tripled Last
Year
Shoppers visit a store in the Dragon Mart shopping mall, part of an emerging
Chinese retail center in Dubai. Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS
By
RORY JONES
About 15 miles from the Burj Khalifs on the edge of the Arabian desert is a
growing housing and retail community that would look more at home in Beijing
than Dubai: Stores and restaurants have Chinese signs and a huge dragon
sculpture adorns the Dragon Mart shopping mall.
After pouring billions of dollars into cities including London, New York and
Sydney, individual investors and developers in China are expanding into Dubai.
About a thousand individual Chinese investors spent 1.3 billion U.A.E dirhams
($353 million) on land, residential units and office real estate in Dubai last year,
according to data from the Dubai Land Department. That is a nearly threefold
increase from the 486 million dirhams spent by 288 Chinese investors in the
previous year.
Overall, property transactions by individuals in the emirate climbed 53% last year
to 236 billion dirhams, with foreign investors buying 114 billion dirhams of land
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and property.
"Dubai is becoming more and more known by the Chinese people," says Wang
Liao, the 30-year-old owner of Dubai-based Atomic Properties, a real-estate
broker that predominantly caters to Chinese buyers and is located a short walk
from Dragon Man.
Chinese investors and developers weren't very active before 2009, when Dubai
was hit by a real-estate crisis. But they now play an increasingly important role in
the market, according to brokers, developers and analysts.
Demand from individual buyers is helping launch new developments and fueling
Dubai's residential recovery, while Chinese contractors and banks are revitalizing
high-profile projects that stalled in the previous boom.
The market looked a lot different in 2009, when Dubai World, one of the
emirate's major government-owned holding companies, said it would stop making
debt repayments, shocking global financial markets and sparking a drop in
residential house prices of more than 50%. The Burj Khalifs, the world's tallest
tower, opened weeks later.
While residential prices rose by about 35% last year, they still are 20% off their
previous peak. In prime commercial property, the market aimed at medium-to-
large corporations, prices are projected to rise by about 10% in 2014, after a 5%-
to-7% increase last year, according to Knight Frank, a London-based property
consultancy.
Indians, Britons, Pakistanis and Saudis were the biggest foreign purchasers in the
previous boom, and again make up the largest portion of buyers. But Chinese
investors are now one of the fastest-growing buyers in the market, according to
the Land Department.
Built in 2004 on the outskirts of the city, Dragon Mart was developed by
Nakheel, one ofDubai's biggest government-owned developers. It has become
such a popular mall that Nakheel is now adding 177,000 square meters (1.9
million square feet) of retail space and a hotel.
Around this retail Mecca, a Chinese community has sprung up in a residential
estate called International City, which also was built by Nakheel. The developer
estimates that half the population ofabout 100,000 in International City is from
China.
What's more, about half a new development of about a thousand town houses has
been sold to Chinese investors, according to Ali Rashid Lootah, the chairman of
Nakbeel. "They have bought in other areas, but not as much as International
City," Mr. Lootah adds.
Many wealthy Chinese seek to invest abroad to diversify. They find Dubai
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attractive partly because they believe they can achieve returns of as much as 30%
annually—better than Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing, where real-estate
markets are cooling, according to brokers, analysts and investors.
"The prices in Dubai are much lower than in China," said Joan Chang, 32, a
resident of the United Arab Emirates who is originally from Shanghai. She
manages her and her husband's portfolio of five one- and two-bedroom
apartments throughout the emirate and is looking to purchase a villa.
In 2020, Dubai will host World Expo, a six-month trade fair that analysts forecast
will boost the emirate's economy and increase real-estate prices. "This is the main
advantage Dubai has in the future," Mrs. Chang adds.
Underpinning Chinese residential investment are greater commercial trade ties
between the U.A.E. and China, noticeably in commercial real estate. Chinese
developers, both private and state-owned, are expanding throughout the world as
they seek stable returns outside their slowing home market.
Last year in Dubai, state-owned China State Construction Engineering Corp.
bought an undisclosed stake in the $1 billion Viceroy Hotel on the Palm Jumeirah.
It created a joint-venture development company with Dubai-based developer
SKAI Holdings to build and manage the project, and helped the venture win $201
million in financing from Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, according to
executives at China State Construction and SKAI.
China State Construction is known for building some of the highest-profile works
in China, including the national swimming center in Beijing known as the Water
Cube and Hong Kong International airport.
But now it is expanding overseas and moving into development, rather than solely
construction. In December, it bought New York-based Plaza Construction for an
undisclosed sum and it is building a $3.4 billion casino and resort in the Bahamas.
It also has a number of significant contracts in Abu Dhabi, 100 miles down the
road from Dubai in the U.A.E.
—Jason Chow contributed to this article.
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