Spring/Summer 2018
The Middle East’s ultra-wealthy individuals own an average of four homes, just ahead of Russia and significantly ahead of other regions, says a survey
The Middle East ranks first in the number of first and second homes owned by ultra-high-net-worth-individuals (UHNWIs), just ahead of Russia, according to a survey by global property consultancy Knight Frank.
The region also tops the rankings in terms of the proportion of UHNWIs planning to buy a new home in 2018 with the UK property market seen as their preferred choice, said the survey.
The Knight Frank Wealth Report 2018 revealed that the region’s ultra-wealthy individuals own an average of four homes, just ahead of Russia (3.5) and significantly ahead of other regions (Europe 2.7, North America 2.7, and Asia 2.9), it stated.
The report includes price performance data for 100 global luxury property markets, wealth distribution data, Knight Frank’s Global Cities Index as well as the results of the Wealth Report annual attitude survey.
The attitude survey looks at the most important investment trends for the UHNWIs, canvassing the responses of 500 of the world’s leading private bankers and wealth advisors, who between them represent over 50,000 clients with a combined wealth of more than $3 trillion.
Another eye-catching result from the attitude survey was that the Middle East ranks highly in terms of the proportion of UHNWIs planning to buy a new home in 2018.
The results showed that 33 per cent of the survey respondents from the Middle East said that their clients were planning to buy a new home in their home country in 2018, placing the Middle East on top of the ranking.
This figure increases to 39 per cent when it comes to intentions to acquire a new home overseas in 2018, ranking the Middle East in second position just behind Russia, the Knight Frank survey revealed.
The Attitude Survey shows that UHNWIs from the Middle East favour the UK, the UAE, the US, France and Turkey (ranked by order) as a preferred destination for property investments, it added.
Knight Frank is currently tracking £3.9 billion ($5.46 billion) of private wealth in the GCC looking to invest in overseas real estate including the UK, Europe and the US with a focus on various asset classes ranging from offices and retail to hospitality and logistics.
A substantial share of this private wealth is looking into investments in the UK’s commercial market due to its solid fundamentals (liquidity, transparency, and high quality stock) and attractive pricing.
-
Omniyat expands ultra-luxury portfolio
Thu, Jan 25, 2024 -
Largest penthouse in Dubai goes on sale for $163m
Wed, Jan 3, 2024 -
NEOM announces Norlana community
Sun, Dec 31, 2023 -
Bahrain Marina Residences first phase sold out
Tue, Dec 26, 2023 -
Ultra-luxury mansions launched in Dubai
Wed, Nov 22, 2023 -
Missoni-branded residences in RAK
Wed, Nov 22, 2023 -
Forbes Towers to have experiential sensory design façade
Wed, Nov 8, 2023 -
Reality of Luxury Realty
Autumn 2023 -
Ultra-luxury penthouse sold for $50m in Dubai
Wed, Oct 25, 2023 -
Dubai busiest market for $10m+ homes
Wed, Oct 4, 2023 -
New Damac Casa offers ‘vertical island living’
Tue, Oct 3, 2023 -
$8bn 'Venice' to come up in Dubai South
Thu, Sep 28, 2023 -
Nakheel's Palm Jebel Ali enters market with first villas
Mon, Sep 18, 2023 -
Dubai leads in super-prime property sales
Mon, Sep 18, 2023 -
Damac unveils luxurious seaside waterfront haven in Dubai
Wed, Aug 16, 2023