After three years of renting a villa in Dubai, French engineer Philippe Bakhos has decided to buy. The 38-year-old is taking advantage of some of the lowest interest rates ever offered in the United Arab Emirates to purchase a three-bedroom villa for 2.5 million dirhams ($680,661) in “The Springs,” a development about 20km from the center of the city. Bakhos went to Barclays and HSBC Holdings before securing an AED2m mortgage from Mashreqbank, a local lender.“With property prices and interest rates so low, it makes sense to buy,” the father-of-two said in an interview. “With the money I’m spending in rent each month, I can make repayments on a mortgage.”International and local lenders are cutting mortgage rates to attract expatriates such as Bakhos amid signs house prices in the emirate may be bottoming out after dropping 64 percent from their peak in the middle of 2008. Property agent Better Homes says home sales rose to a 12-month high of 116 in July, typically the slowest time of the year, from 38 in January Mashreq, controlled by the Al Ghurair family, is offering Bakhos a 5.49 percent interest rate and an 80 percent loan-to-value ratio with no early payment penalty. The same villa cost AED4.4m at the height of Dubai’s property boom, according to Dubai-based broker Better Homes. Standard Chartered Plc is offering the lowest interest rates in the UAE at 4.99 percent. HSBC Bank Middle East Ltd., the Dubai-based unit of HSBC, Europe’s biggest bank, has cut mortgage rates to as low as 5.49 percent from a high of 9.5 percent in 2009. Rates at Barclays range from 5.35 percent to 7.75 percent depending on the loan-to-value ratio.“Banks weren’t booking significant volumes at the higher levels so slashing their rates means they’ll start to compete,” said Raj Madha, a Dubai-based analyst at Rasmala Investment Bank. “With the labour market stabilizing and property prices beginning to find a floor, banks are realizing that mortgages are a comparatively safe place to lend.”The three-month Emirates interbank offered rate, the level at which banks in the UAE lend to each other, has dropped 31 percent, or 66 basis points, since the beginning of April, to 1.47 percent on August 8, the lowest since Bloomberg began collecting data in September 2006. The rate reached 4.79 percent in October 2008 after the collapse of Lehman Brother Holdings triggered the worst economic slump since the 1930s Great Depression. “It’s not surprising that rates are coming down because EIBOR rates have eased this year,” said Shabbir Malik, UAE banking analyst at investment bank EFG Hermes. “The UAE’s banking system as a whole has become more liquid.”International lenders are looking to capture market share from local mortgage providers such as Tamweel and Amlak, which provided almost 90 percent of all mortgages in the UAE by mid-2008. Both companies halted lending in October 2008 after the property market collapsed. Tamweel resumed operations in January and now offers a 25- year, 80 percent Islamic mortgage at 5.25 percent profit rate to buyers in selected areas.Overseas banks may be able to take business from domestic firms because their cost of funding is lower, allowing them to offer cheaper mortgage rates, Malik said. “Rates offered are a function of the cost of borrowing for the bank,” said Thimal Parera, Barclays’ product director of consumer banking in Dubai. “Current rates in the market reflect the lower cost of borrowing prevailing in the market.”International banks may also be boosting mortgage lending after regulators limited personal loans, according to Varun Sood, acting chief executive officer of Tamweel. In February, the UAE’s central bank capped personal loans at 20 times a borrower’s monthly salary to control lending and curb charges.Property prices in Dubai, the second largest of the UAE’s seven sheikhdoms, have still dropped 64 percent from their peak in mid-2008, while rents have fallen 55 percent, Deutsche Bank said. Mortgage demand has plummeted since the days of Dubai’s property boom, when speculators bought yet-to-be-built homes and sold them at a profit before a single brick was laid. The number of mortgage transactions was at 396 worth AED1.5 bn last month compared with 698 transactions worth AED6bn in July last year, according to Reidin.com, a research firm that tracks the UAE real-estate market.Dubai’s home prices are expected to decline further as 54,000 homes, or about 15 percent to 20 percent of the existing supply, comes onto the market from 2011 to 2015, Jones Lang LaSalle estimates. The impact of lower interest rates and new visa laws isn’t expected to kick in until later in the year, analysts said.Non-performing loans at banks in the UAE are expected to peak at about 12 percent this year from a range of 8 percent to 10 percent in 2010, Moody’s Investors Service said March 7. “Any risk of fierce rates competition between banks is compensated by the renewed interest this competition is creating in the real-estate market,” said EFG’s Malik. “This should stabilize the real-estate market and as a result reduce the risk of non-performing loans for all banks.” Most of the mortgage transactions last year were to refinance existing loans, while the majority of loans this year are for new purchases, analysts said.“The majority of buyers we’re seeing now are well-paid expatriates having lived here a fair amount of time,” said Independent Finance’s Wani.“Over the years, they have spent huge amounts of money on rent and would now want to use this money to build property equity while they are here.” From / Arabian Business News