Dubai still leads

Nigel Investment Adivice Arabian Post DeVere

Nigel Investment Adivice Arabian Post DeVere

Dubai still delivers, even in the shadow of war.

I’ve just arrived back in the city where we have our headquarters and several core offices, and what strikes me immediately is not disruption, but continuity.

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The US-Iran conflict has injected real tension into the region, with the Strait of Hormuz under pressure and the wider Middle East adjusting to a far more uncertain backdrop.

Yet here in Dubai, daily life, business activity, and long-term ambition continue with a level of stability that few global cities could replicate under similar conditions.

This matters, because Dubai has never positioned itself as a place that only works when the world is calm. Its real strength shows when conditions are more complex.

Spending time here again reinforces why it remains one of the most compelling destinations globally for work, finance, and lifestyle.

The fundamentals that drew talent and capital in the first place are still firmly in place. The city offers a combination that is difficult to match: tax efficiency, global connectivity, safety, and a business environment built to enable rather than obstruct.

The career proposition remains particularly strong. Dubai continues to attract professionals across finance, AI and tech, and entrepreneurship, with a jobs market that is still expanding and evolving despite the geopolitical backdrop.

The depth of opportunity is visible in the number of firms setting up, expanding, and hiring. Financial services. in particular, continue to scale rapidly, with new entrants and established players growing their footprint.

Being back in our offices this week, the energy is clear. People are not stepping back, they’re leaning in. Conversations are focused on growth, hiring, expansion, and positioning for what comes next. The mindset is not universal globally right now, and it underlines a key point: Dubai attracts individuals who are here to build.

Lifestyle remains a central part of the equation. Dubai continues to offer one of the safest environments globally, supported by infrastructure that allows both professional and personal life to operate smoothly.

The ease of living here removes friction. Systems work efficiently, processes are streamlined, and people can focus on their careers, businesses, and families without unnecessary obstacles.

The regional context cannot be ignored. The conflict has tested perceptions of safety and stability, and there has been scrutiny around how Dubai holds up under pressure. Questions have been raised about whether its position as a global hub can endure in this environment.

What I see on the ground points to resilience.

Dubai is not pausing. Infrastructure investment continues, long-term economic planning remains intact, and development across financial districts, transport, and housing is moving forward.

This reflects a city that understands its position and continues to build on it, even as the region faces heightened tension.

A deeper structural shift also supports its outlook. Global talent and capital are more mobile than ever, and both are seeking environments that offer clarity, efficiency, and opportunity. Dubai continues to meet those requirements.

Many professionals are choosing to remain, expand, and deepen their presence here rather than step away, which reinforces the city’s stability.

This resilience has been built deliberately over time. Dubai has diversified its economy, strengthened its financial ecosystem, and positioned itself as a hub that connects global markets. It doesn’t rely on a single narrative or sector to sustain its growth.

Returning now, the sense is not that Dubai is insulated from what is happening around it. It is that it is prepared for it.

Confidence in Dubai as a destination for work, finance, and lifestyle remains well placed. The city continues to attract ambitious professionals, global businesses, and international capital because it offers a rare combination of opportunity, stability, and quality of life.

For me, being back here reinforces a clear conclusion. Dubai doesn’t lose its appeal in difficult moments. It proves it.

Nigel Green is deVere CEO and Founder


Also published on Medium.



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