Due to ongoing conflicts and clashes sweeping
through Middle Eastern and North African countries, Arab investors are
flocking to the Turkish real estate market to invest in luxurious
residences and waterfront villas by Istanbul’s Bosporus Strait,
according to the top executive of Sotheby’s local branch.
“In recent years, Arab investors started monitoring the Turkish
market, but now this has accelerated,” Arman Özver, general manager of
Sotheby’s Turkey, told the Hürriyet Daily News during a recent
interview. Extremely rich Arabs generally pay from $2 million to $30
million for houses on the shore of the Bosphorus Strait, which divides
the Asian and European parts of Istanbul, Özver said, adding that the
remaining Arab investors look for luxury residence projects in central
Istanbul for around $250,000.
Mansion to become hotel
Zeki Paşa Mansion is one of the flamboyant survivors and last of the
great waterfront mansions on the Bosporus. It is listed in the company’s
portfolio for 187.2 million Turkish Liras.
“We are continuing talks with two international hotel chains and they
both want to turn the historic building into a boutique hotel,” Özver
said. The luxurious house was built for Zeki Pasha, an Ottoman official
working in the service of the Sultan Abdülhamid II, emperor of the
Ottomans in the second half of the 19th century. With 3,000 square
meters of enclosed space and 4,000-square-meter garden by the water, the
residence also attracts interest from Central Asian investors, he said.
Cultural similarities shared by Turkey and Arab countries as well as
the religious commonalities play a significant role in Arab investors
choosing to live in Turkey, according to Özver. “Turkish soap operas
widely watched and followed in Middle Eastern countries also attract
many wealthy Arab investors looking for luxury here. The country’s
economic and political stability also encourage investors to consider
Turkey for new investments.”
Arab investments in Turkey totaled $10.6 billion last year, according
to İbrahim S. Dabdoub, chief executive of the National Bank of Kuwait,
who recently spoke to the Daily News on the sidelines of the sixth
Turkish-Arab Economic Forum in Istanbul.
Building its real estate portfolio up to a total of $500 million in
the last six months, Özver said the local branch of Sotheby’s is in
talks with 15 individual and corporate customers mainly from Middle
Eastern and Gulf countries. “Nearly 70-80 percent of the sales take
place in Istanbul and the rest in western and southern provinces,” he
said.
Talking about the future plans of the international real estate
company in the Turkish market, Özver said Sotheby’s plans to open 12
more offices in Istanbul, Ankara, the northwestern province of Bursa,
the western province of Izmir and the southern province of Antalya. “We
aim to reach total revenue of $1 billion in three years’ time,” Özver
said.
/Hurriyet Daily News/