Tag: investors

09 Nov 2020

UAE investors rush to snap up real estate in ‘safe haven’ London

British capital is attracting Dubai buyers who are looking for a second home to diversify their investments

UAE buyers are flocking to the London property market as the UK records its highest ever sales.

The British capital is attracting Dubai buyers who are looking for a second home to diversify their investments, according to experts.

UK property site Rightmove recorded more than £37 billion ($49 billion) of property sales between July 12 and August 8 – the highest ever agreed in a month since it began tracking the housing market more than a decade ago.

 

“The London market has seen increased interest from UAE buyers,” Mayson, head of international residential sales at property firm Prinn Middle East told Arabian Business.

“Given the huge effect of coronavirus on the UAE’s tourism industry and the weak oil price, locals are diversifying their investments into safe places around the world – and London is top of that list,” he said.

 

Prinn said London is the beneficiary of “years” of pent-up demand being released into the market following the political uncertainty of Brexit and the country’s three-month coronavirus lockdown.

“Initially during lockdown we saw the brakes put on UAE sales but since Ramadan, we have seen record interest – mainly from owner-occupiers.”

Ashu Director at Brisk Avenue said ” He predicts a slew of deals once flights between the UK and the UAE are fully opened up and quarantine rules are relaxed.”

“Owner occupiers want to physically see and touch the properties but unfortunately they haven’t been able to do that right now,” he said. “I expect there will be a lot of transactions once flights have opened up.”

In an additional boon for global buyers, the UK government has lifted the threshold at which people start paying stamp duty for residential property from £125,000 to £500,000.

 

The change, effective immediately, is a temporary measure designed to boost the housing market and the measure will remain in place until March 31 2021 next year.

Properties over £500,000 will pay stamp duty, however the rising of the nil rate band means they will pay £15,000 less than before.

“The removal of stamp duty has given a shot-in-the-arm to the market,” said Ashu,“It has galvanised UK buyers and there is a follow-on international galvanising effect. London is still a very safe market.”

According to data, UAE nationals are drawn to higher end properties valued at £1.5 to £2 million plus. However, non-native UAE expats are purchasing less costly stock from £700,000 upwards as buy-to-let investments.

Prinn said UAE buyers are showing interest in the Kings Road and Battersea areas, as well as White City – which is home to one of London’s biggest shopping malls.

“UAE buyers tend to look for larger properties for their families,” he said. “They are also seeking luxury touches, such as concierges, swimming pools and underground parking.”

Ashu said he has noted increased UAE, Saudi Arabian and Kuwaiti buyer interest in the firm’s St John’s Wood and Kensington developments.

“There is a lot of interest from owner occupiers,” he said. “Registrations and transactions are up on this time last year. It’s been a welcome surprise.”

According to Brisk, the COVID-19 pandemic has caused buyers to think about their lives in a “more long-term” manner. This trend is driving owner occupation interest, whether it’s full-time homes or pied-a-terres, he said.

Andrew Hawkins, director at Rocket Properties – the developer behind The Atlas Building in London’s Shoreditch – said the area is attracting significant Arab interest.

“Dubai dwellers are used to high-rise developments like ours,” he said. “ Culturally they are comfortable with high-rise living.”

Hawkins added that Shoreditch – close to the City of London and Old Street – has particular appeal for UAE buyers looking at lower price points with the opportunity for higher yields and capital appreciation.

Prinn said he remains bullish on the London property market going into 2021.

“London is the number one choice for Middle East investors because it outperforms every other market,” he said. “I predict that Gulf interest will remain high, particularly if sterling remains good value for international buyers.”

09 Jun 2020

70% of Indian startups will run out of money in less than 3 months

70% of Indian new businesses will run out of cash in under 3 months An overabundance to tie down extra capital in the coming a long time to guide through the Covid pandemic, as per an industry report. 70% of new businesses in India, home to one of the world’s biggest startup biological systems, have under a quarter of a year of money runway in the bank, and another 22% have enough to scarcely make it to the furthest limit of the year, as indicated by a review directed by industry body Nasscom. Just 8% of new businesses that took an interest in Nasscom’s review said they had enough cash to make due for over nine months. 90% of new companies said they were confronting a decrease in incomes, while 30 to 40% said they were incidentally stopping their tasks or were currently shutting down. As new businesses stand up to exceptional occasions, many are considering finding a way to remain above water. About 54% of somewhere in the range of 250 respondents said they were hoping to rotate to new business openings, and 40% said they needed to broaden into development verticals, for example, medical care. The money crunch comes as financial specialists on the planet’s second biggest web market become mindful about composing new checks to youthful firms. In an open letter a month ago, a few unmistakable VC reserves cautioned new businesses that they may discover it particularly testing to bring new capital up in the following not many months. For certain new businesses, there are different variables at play, as well. Over 69% of business-to-business new companies, particularly those working in retail and fintech classes, state in the report that they are confronting delays in installments from their customers. This has left the greater part of such new businesses to implement pay cuts, decrease their advertising spends, and a fourth of them to change to a cheaper seller to set aside cash. New companies working in vehicle and travel areas are additionally seriously affected, with 78% of respondents saying they were reevaluating their plans of action and tweaking their items as per the current situation. In a call with correspondents on Tuesday, heads at Oyo disclosed new advances the spending dwelling startup had taken at its inns to guarantee security for administrators and clients. They additionally said they were trusting that New Delhi and state governments would permit more individuals to travel and remain at lodgings once more. More than 66% of new companies additionally said they were searching for arrangements that facilitated guidelines and spike government buys. Numerous likewise mentioned help in assessments for a couple of years. More than 66% of Indian new companies accept the effect of Covid will wait for as long as a year. (Nasscom) Recently, India declared a $266 billion improvement bundle to help resuscitate the slowed down economy. On Saturday, Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said that new businesses excessively will have the option to get to a portion of this help — however subtleties stay meager on how they should go about it. Since 2017, India’s startup environment has developed reliably. A year ago, new companies in the nation raised a record $14.5 billion. “Out of nowhere, this prospering development adventure has abruptly been hit by a barricade… the COVID detour. There is no nation, business or living being that has not been influenced by the COVID pandemic. While governments have been working industriously to secure and spare living souls, organizations have been hit and independent ventures and new companies have been the most influenced,” said Debjani Ghosh, President of Nasscom, in the report.

18 Sep 2019

India start-up scenario.

Why there is no better time than now to invest in startups

Investments in the Indian start-up ecosystem surged 322 per cent in July year-on-year. They rose to $5.61 billion last month, against $1.33 billion in July 2019, according to data from Tracxn, a firm that tracks investments and financials of private companies and start-ups. The funding that went into Jio Platforms’ alone accounted for nearly 87 per cent of the total amount

The number of companies that garnered the investment, though, fell to 82 last month, against 120 in the same period in 2019.

Top-funded sectors

The top-funded sectors include telecom ($4,854 million), enterprise infrastructure ($236.2 million), ed-tech ($164.95 million), real estate- and construction-tech ($78.1 million), retail ($57.42 million) and media and entertainment ($53.90 million). The consumer sector, which encompasses online and technology-enabled consumer-facing companies in the business-to-consumer (B2C) space, raised $183.47 million.

While Jio Platforms, Nxtra Data, Vedantu, Zolo and Toppr were the top five funded companies in July 2020, the most active investors – based on the number of deals in July – included Mumbai Angels, Matrix Partners India, Accel, LetsVenture and Unicorn India Ventures.