(MENAFN - Arab News) Apartment and villa rental rates broadly unchanged the northern Emirates in the fourth quarter of 2011 with limited transaction activity set to continue, says Asteco Q4, 2011 report.
Apartment and villa rental rates in the northern Emirates were mostly unchanged in the fourth quarter of last year as ongoing problems with connections to electricity, water and sewage continued to slow the pace of supply, according to the latest report from leading property consultancy Asteco.
Prices are expected to remain stagnant in early 2012 but are likely to fall in the latter half of the year as more supply enters the market.
In order to spur demand over the past three months, landlords in Sharjah and Ajman offered rent-free periods of one to two months with no commission for new projects there.
"The demand trend for apartments in the northern Emirates has primarily been for families looking for larger two and three-bedroom units," said Elaine Jones, CEO, Asteco.
"Families tended to relocate within the same emirate due to children's schooling and value-for-money units," added Jones.
Apartment rents in Sharjah were the highest in the northern Emirates, while rents in Umm Al-Quwain were the cheapest.
The average yearly rental rate for a three-bedroom apartment in Sharjah ranged from AED35,000 to AED63,000 in the fourth quarter, compared to between AED35,000 and AED40,000 in Umm Al-Quwain.
Rental rates for three-bedroom villas in Sharjah went for an average of AED70,000 in both Al-Khan and Shargan, and AED77,500 in Al-Quz.
Sales activity for both residential properties and offices in the northern Emirates was limited throughout the year and some completed buildings in Sharjah, Fujairah, Ajman and Ras Al-Khaimah remained empty due to a lack of utility connections and inadequate sewage.
Several buildings in Fujairah and Ras Al-Khaimah are expected to get electricity connection this year resulting in an increase in the number of available units and therefore a drop in rental rates.
However, connectivity problems throughout the northern Emirates as a whole will continue and are expected to be resolved at a slower pace due to the high number of buildings marked for completion and handover.
Bureaucracy continued to prompt more existing businesses in Sharjah to move to neighboring Dubai and Ajman Free Zone in the fourth quarter with other emirates expected to compete heavily for Sharjah business early this year.