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Kuwait Real Estate Transactions Continue To Decline

BY Realty Plus

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Prices of real estate transactions have been on a steady downward slope since the first half of 2022, this decline is accompanied by a price rate hike especially within Asima and Hawally governorates, as per Ministry of Justice data.

The first half of this current year marked a sharp 41 percent plunge in the number of transactions within the residential sector with 1,526 deals struck (total value of KD 736 million) compared to 2,592 in the same period last year (total value of KD 1.75 billion).

Despite this obvious decline in the number of deals, the average value of a single deal increased to KD 483,000 per deal from KD 414,000 in 2022, a 16.6 increase, this speaks to private residence price increases namely within Asima and Hawally while prices in other governorates remain intact. The investments sector was also subject to decrease as 589 deals were registered in first half of 2023 compared to 687 deals in the first half of the previous year, marking a 14.2 percent decrease.

However, unlike the residential sector, average value of single transaction within investments sector declined by 9.8 percent from KD 854,000 per deal last year to KD 770,000 this year.

Data shows that the commercial sector plummeted by 74 percent from 111 deals in first half of 2022 to only 39 deals first half of this current year, whereas average value of single deal shot up from KD 3.513 million to more than KD 5 million.

As for forecast for upcoming six months, most investors and observes are awaiting whether The American Federal Reserve continues to increase interest rate. The Kuwaiti market could rejuvenate if American interest rate seizes to increase in second quarter of 2024 prompting decrease in local interest rate, thus causing bank trusts to loner appeal to investors and driving them back to the more robust markets of real estate or the stock exchange.

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Tags : price real estate transactions hike Asima Hawally governorates Ministry of Justice data commercial sector