Uncertainty doesn’t eliminate opportunity. For the right investor, it creates it.
April 07, 2026 | Jatin Deepchandani | UAE | Developers
There’s a particular kind of clarity that comes when everyone around you goes quiet.
Markets are noisy when things are going well. Everyone has an opinion, everyone has a tip, everyone is moving fast. But when sentiment cools, when the news gets complicated and the instinct is to pause, something interesting happens. The crowd thins. And in that space, the investors who think differently from the crowd tend to find the moments that define their portfolios for years.
We are in one of those moments right now.
I want to be honest about what I mean by that. I’m not saying the timing is perfect for everyone. If the capital isn’t there, it isn’t there, and no market insight changes that. Stretching beyond your means in uncertain times is never the answer. But if you have dry powder, if you’ve been watching this market and waiting for a signal, the signal worth paying attention to right now isn’t the headlines. It’s the behaviour of people who know this market deeply.
When I spoke to Ashirwad Somani, CEO of Candour Real Estate, on The DeepTalks Podcast, he shared something that stayed with me. During the height of the recent regional uncertainty, he had 20 investor conversations. Nineteen of them were about buying. Not one person called him looking to exit. That’s not bravado, that’s a particular kind of investor reading the same uncertain environment as everyone else and arriving at a completely different conclusion.
These are not reckless people. They are experienced investors who have learned, often the hard way, that the moments when sentiment is weakest are precisely the moments when the fundamentals speak loudest. When the crowd is hesitating, the underlying value of a well-located, well-governed, structurally sound market doesn’t disappear. It just becomes temporarily less visible — and therefore, temporarily more accessible.
What makes this moment particularly interesting is not just market sentiment, it’s what the UAE has been doing in the background while the noise has been loudest.
In the middle of this unsettled period, new laws on building safety and shared housing were issued. Abu Dhabi rolled out four significant investor protection reforms, covering escrow controls, ownership frameworks, and compensation mechanisms. The Dubai Land Department moved into Phase II of its real estate tokenisation project. These are not reactive measures. These are deliberate, long-term moves by a government that is not distracted by short-term turbulence.
That, to me, is the real signal. When a government continues to raise its own bar, tightening governance, strengthening investor protections, advancing its digital infrastructure, during a period of external uncertainty, it tells you something important about where that government’s confidence lies. It is building for what comes after. And what comes after unsettled periods, in a market with these foundations, tends to be significant.
I’m not here to tell anyone what to do with their money. That’s not my role and it wouldn’t be responsible. What I can offer is a perspective shaped by years of sitting inside this market, through the conversations at World Realty Congress, through The DeepTalks Podcast, through the daily work of covering an industry that I genuinely believe in.
And the perspective is this: the most interesting opportunities in any market rarely announce themselves. They don’t come with a green light and a clear sky. They come disguised as uncertainty. They come when the crowd is standing still and a smaller group of people, the ones doing the work, asking the harder questions, looking past the noise, are quietly moving.
Whether this moment is right for you depends entirely on your position, your timeline, and your own assessment of the fundamentals. But those fundamentals, the governance, the infrastructure pipeline, the equity depth of this market, the quality of the regulatory environment the UAE has spent years constructing, have not changed. The headlines have changed. The fundamentals haven’t.
That gap between what the headlines suggest and what the foundations support is, historically, where the interesting decisions get made.
I believe the UAE’s real estate market will not just recover from this period. I believe it will reach new ground.
When the uncertainty clears — and it will — the market that emerges will reflect everything that was built and governed well during the quiet period. The people positioned ahead of that moment will look back at this window differently from those who waited for the all-clear.
The all-clear, in my experience of markets, usually arrives just after the best entry points have closed.
Jatin Deepchandani is the Founder & CEO of Real Estate Market Times, Business Frontier, and Global Leaders Today. He also founded the World Realty Congress, an annual real estate event held in the UAE, and hosts two podcasts: DeepTalks and The Property Pulse.