Category: Overseas Property

Dubai: Empty Eastern Promises

I’ve been doing a lot of legal PR in the past year both in support of the Dublin solicitors Anthony Joyce & Co and also representing two separate groups of investors have legal actions to recover funds that they paid for overseas property.

The most high profile of these relates to the Dubai Acton Group who bought property through Irish company Larionovo and their parent Profile Group. The estimate that they have €20m tied up in the projects in Dubai, including the Sports City development and also the Island of Ireland in The World project.

The Group are just ordinary people who got duped into buy investments in a sector that was left unregulated by the Irish government, so these people were lied to and taken advantage of. As they are not experienced with the media and understandable quite daunted by the high profile they have been recieving, I have been acting as spokesperson for them in the newspapers and on the radio. I have also had them one RTE’s evening news programmes.

Below is story that appeared the UK paper The Independent, in which I feature today. Here is the link and the full article has also been pasted in below. Thanks must go to freelance journalist Laura Latham for her help in putting this extensive article together. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/house-and-home/property/dubai-empty-eastern-promises-1841754.html

The Independent (UK)

DUBAI: EMPTY EASTERN PROMISES

It was meant to be the hottest investment on the planet, but the Dubai downturn has left buyers believing the boom was merely a mirage, as off-plan properties stand unfinished and investors count the cost. Laura Latham reports

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

There is a definite hint of schadenfreude about Dubai’s financial turmoil. All those investors buying into a glittering desert city, that crumbled to dust – more fool them many will think. Where else in the world would you see plans for an air-conditioned beach or a glut of six and seven star hotels? However, the situation is no joke for investors who aimed to make a small fortune selling off-plan properties or those who simply wanted to live or retire in the sun. Property prices have fallen 50 per cent from their peak, leaving the developments they bought into left unfinished, and the companies they trusted their life savings with nowhere to be seen.

Last month’s announcement by Dubai’s main property and investment company, Dubai World, that it couldn’t make payments on $25bn (£15bn ) of debt sent financial markets reeling across the globe. And while this week’s bail out by Abu Dhabi’s government to the tune of $10bn was welcomed, the situation is still uncertain. The downturn was a culmination of a problem that has been brewing for some time. Over the past year, the Dubai property bubble has burst, plunging thousands of investors into financial ruin.

“I did my homework and made a rational decision to invest in Dubai for the long term. I wasn’t a speculator,” says Rob Thomas from London. “The government regulatory system looked watertight, but now that everything has gone wrong no one’s interested.”

In 2007, Thomas paid a £30,000 deposit on a apartment in Bermuda Views, a luxury development in Dubai Sports City. The project was due for completion by early 2009 but, two years on, work has barely begun. “I discovered that the project had been stopped and the sales office closed,” says Thomas. “I have a contract stating I’m owed a refund if the builders default but, despite chasing it through Dubai’s real-estate regulator, I’ve got nowhere.”

Like many investors, Thomas trusted claims that development was regulated by the Dubai government. He believes this gave credibility to the boom and made buyers feel secure enough to invest. “I can’t bear the thought of losing my money. All I can do is chase repayment, or hope the developer finds a way of completing the project.”

Thomas wants to join one of several action groups that have been formed by investors to fight their cases in court. They hope that pressure of numbers may force Dubai’s government to admit who is to blame for the mass abandonment of building projects and where the money has gone.

In addition, there’s the issue of escrow accounts, which were supposed to have protected buyers’ funds until properties were completed. In many cases, the money seems to have vanished along with the developers, and buyers are being stonewalled when applying to the authorities for details.

“Developers are refusing to return the money,” says Jeff Kershaw, a retired lawyer who has taken up the case for investors who bought into properties being built by one Dubai property company. “One could say some developers are guilty of fraud. People have lost on average £60,000, and, in some cases the development hasn’t been started, despite being scheduled for completion this year.”

The lack of transparency has been used by some companies to their benefit, according to Simon Palmer, spokesperson for the Dublin-based Dubai Action Group, set up by Irish investors. The group is looking to recover funds paid to sales agents, which also bought into the The World, who they claim mis-sold properties before going into liquidation.

“Several developments have not been completed, and some investors have lost as much as €600,000 [£543,000]” says Palmer. “The agents say we need to take the case up with the developers, but we believe the agents are also responsible, and some agents were shareholders in development companies. The problem is that construction was sub-contracted to different firms, so it’s difficult to get answers.”

Palmer points out that investors were often advised to put money into Dubai by financial advisers and banks, and that these companies are now also suffering huge losses. “If even the banks got sucked in, what chance did ordinary investors have?”

The strength of the group’s claim means that the Irish government is backing it and is hoping to secure a change in the law that prevents a class action being brought in the Dubai courts. However, Palmer is one of a number of people and investors who claim that Dubai’s government the Dubai government’s backing of development means there could be a conflict of interest.

“I think the Dubai government got in over its head,” says Tony Hines, Dublin a businessman who lost over £175,000 on un-built apartments he was planning to use as a home and business premises. “They made up the rules as they went along and it got out of control. This is a disaster.”

His sentiments are echoed by Alan O’Neill and his wife Karen, who used their savings to invest in four properties. They lost over £350,000, with three properties unfinished and one delivered two years ago but without title deeds, which means the couple can’t legally take possession. O’Neill says he has lost everything; the worry keeps him awake at night.

“I thought it was a fantastic opportunity and told it was all backed by the government, that the escrow system meant my money was safe,” he says. “Now no one can say where my money has gone. I’m pinning my hopes on joint legal action, the Dubai government needs to stand up and be accountable.”

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Sell-off lifeline offered to Irish owners of Bulgaria properties

Irish company Appreciating Assets specialises in alternative or niche investments. They are currently focusing on the Bulgarian market where they are assisting Irish property owners sell their investments to Russian buyers. They have sold over 200 properties this year – not bad in a recession.

The Christmas and New Year period is a particularly busy one in Bulgaria as it is the peak of the winter season, so it is important for Irish property owners to market their properties whilst visitors are plentiful.

Below is an article today’s Irish Independent featuring Appreciating Assets. Link and full article below

http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/selloff-lifeline-offered-to-irish-owners-of-bulgaria-properties-1975189.html

IRISH INDEPENDENT

Sell-off lifeline offered to Irish owners of Bulgaria properties

By Charlie Weston, Personal Finance Editor

15th December, 2009.

AN Irish company is offering to buy out financially distressed owners of properties in Bulgaria.

Thousands of Irish buyers are being forced to walk away from Bulgarian properties they bought during the boom because they cannot meet loan repayments.

Now Dublin-based Appreciating Assets is providing them with a lifeline by offering to match up sellers with Russian buyers from across the Bulgarian border.

This newspaper reported last month that stretched owners of Bulgarian properties are walking away from their investments because they cannot afford to meet repayments.

Many of these people re-mortgaged their homes in Ireland to put down deposits on properties abroad.

Now that the apartments are nearing completion and they are being asked to pay the full amount, they are unable to raise the funds.

Foreign property lawyer Tom McGrath said his firm was now inundated with queries from people in financial trouble.

Yesterday, Dylan Cullen of Appreciated Assets said Russian buyers were plentiful in the Bulgarian market and many of them were likely to visit the country over the Christmas period.

Mr Cullen said: “Russia has a very robust economy that has not slipped into recession, so Russians are still holidaying abroad and still very active in the Bulgarian property market.”

He said his company needs Irish property owners to send it details of their properties now so it can target Russian buyers while they are in Bulgaria over the holiday period.

It is estimated that between 50,000 and 100,000 Irish people bought properties in Bulgaria between 2000 and 2008. Property experts said many of these people had typically paid €120,000 for apartments that were worth €40,000.

With offices in Dublin and SofiaIrish-owned Appreciating Assets Ltd has sold 200 properties in Bulgaria since the beginning of the year.

A spokesman for the company said sale prices were down between 40pc and 50pc from the property price peak.

- Charlie Weston Personal Finance Editor

Irish Independent

Dubai Action Group appoints Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co

Dubai Action Group has appointed Dublin legal firm, Anthony Joyce & Co, to undertake litigation on behalf of the purchasers who are chasing funds used to buy property through Irish agent’s Larionovo and parent company Profile Developments.

The Group is currently recruiting new members before instigating legal action. Developments in which investors bought property include: Eagle Heights, Bermuda Views, Stadium Point and Profile Residences, all developments with landmark project Sports City. Other developments include: International City, Snowdome Residences, 050 Waterfront and the Island of Ireland in the famous World development.

Anthony Joyce  has experience in recovering funds for overseas property owners; he is currently involved in a high profile legal action against Irish overseas property agent’s Kuvera and a development in India. In July, after only eight weeks since injunctions were issued by Anthony in the Commercial Court on behalf of the Kuvera Action Group.  He successfully secured propety assets, company shares and cash for the Group. A legal action is currently on-going against the indemnity insurance that covered Kuvera’s legal adviser, Seymour Major’s. Action in India is also progressing.

Any other people who purchased property through Larionovo are asked to contact Dubai Action Group as soon as possible, either by calling Anthony Joyce on 01 454 000 or registering via the following website www.tinyurl.ie/dubai.

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Larionovo (Profile) Sports City Investors Meeting 3rd November, 2009.

The next meeting of Larionovo’s and Profile’s Dubai investors in Sports City will take place tomorrow at 7.30pm at the City West Hotel in Saggart, Dublin. As many of the investors as possible are asked to attend.

This meeting will clarify the Group’s actions and will be attend by prominent Irish solicitor Anthony Joyce from Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co. He will present to the Group and outline potential legal options.

Anthony has a great deal of experience in litigation and recently undertook another high profile case involving another overseas property company, called Kuvera; only eight weeks after instigating legal action he had secured money and compensation from the Irish agents for the investors. This case is continuing with legal action being taken against Kuvera’s legal adviser, Seymour Major, and also on the ground in India.

Please let me know if you cannot attend and I will ensure you will receive an update.

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