Monday, 17 October 2011

The global effect on property


By THEAN LEE CHENG

Saturday October 15, 2011


THE signs of the times are here, and they are not unique to Malaysia. The concerns about the global economy are real. Whether one is an avid property watcher or a young person considering a downpayment on one's first home, there are certain things to take into account.
Says property consultant and valuer Elvin Fernandez of the Khong & Jaafar group of companies: “It is clear and becoming clearer by the day that the growth will slow down because it cannot keep up with just continuous stimulus around the world. Whether this state of affairs will continue depends on how sales fare as we complete this year and move into next. It is also clear that volatility will continue into the new year, which explains why developers are revamping their plans and changing strategies.”
Analysts have downgraded the property sector or had a negative outlook on it after they noted that average take-up rates of launches by property developers dropped from 80%-90% a year ago to a forecast 50%-65% in the second half of this year.
To understand what is going on in our current property market and to get some pointers about its future direction, we need to look back a little.
When property prices began to inch upwards in the second half of 2009, in the wake of the fall of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, there was cheer all round. But as prices continue to escalate into the first half of 2010 and then the second half, property watchers and buyers began to take note of the ballooning values in the landed property sector. The momentum shifted to high-rise, although to a lesser degree.
In response, developers fast-tracked their launch programmes. Some were quick enough to launch products in the second half of 2010, while many of the rest were able to do so this year.
Housing Buyers Association vice-president Brig-Gen (R) Datuk Goh Seng Toh said: “People bought in anticipation of higher prices later on.”
This situation of “buying before price goes up further” is evident not only in the Klang Valley but was especially so on Penang island.
Says Real Estate & Housing Developers' Association (Penang) chairman Datuk Jerry Chan: “Because of land scarcity and worries that prices will go even further, people bought. Why? Because it was anybody's guess what was the ceiling. Is it too much to pay? That was difficult to answer because prices seem to have gone beyond what people expected.”
It was this frenzy of buying in selected locations that fed the worries about a bubble, coupled with the easy credit and low interest-rate regime. This double whammy of easy credit and low interest was not just evident in Malaysia. It has also played out in China, Singapore and other countries in the region.
Banking on property
What is interesting is that the United States has gone through this situation a couple of times.
Says Fernandez: “The United States in the 1950s and 1960s were idyllic. After World War II, there was a certain amount of stability but there was this belief that a little inflation will boost the economic engine in exchange for more jobs.”
It worked and the US economy flourished. Inflation inched up and as it did so, workers demanded wage increases to keep up with higher prices, companies raised prices to compensate for the rising wages, and it became an upward spiral. Recession was the only thing that can break the cycle, and it came in the mid-1980s.
That, both Fernandez and Chan agrees, is what is happening in the United States and then Europe today. In the 1990s, the then US Fed chief Alan Greenspan also kept interest rates too low for too long, which led to a speculative bubble in real estate.
“We are ignoring the dangers of the twin combination of easy credit-low interest and a speculative property market,” warns Fernandez.
The prices of stocks and homes are every bit as vulnerable to inflation as chicken and sawi. He adds: “This notion that one will always make money on property investments is made popular by people who have speculated and gained from such activities, and their success stories are told time and again. We are now seeing in Europe, the United States and previously in Japan, that one can lose with property investment.”
He says although the property market has some distinctive factors, like any other market, it still runs on demand and supply and underlying fundamentals. “Because it is a market that has no shorting mechanism, it has a tendecy to rise rather than fall, unless the fundamentals pulling it down are strong,” Fernandez points out.
In Malaysia, this enchantment with properties the last two years has intensified because of a lack of alternative investment options, the availability of easy credit and as an hedge against inflation.
The government moves are a factor as well. Last year, the Government announced seven mega development projects to spur the economy. Two of these were mentioned in Budget 2012 the development of government-owned land around Sungai Buloh and the KL International Financial District (KLIFD). Both are expected to take off in the second half of next year. The Government has invited some developers to participate.
The finance sector has also profited from the property boom, with property loans being the main driver of growth for the banking industry, accounting for 40.6% of the overall credit expansion. The residential segment accounted for 27% of total loans. Analysts expect property loans to remain the key driver of credit expansion this year and in the near future. Although there was a slowdown in loan applications for residential mortgages after the implementation of the 70% loan-to-value cap on the third and subsequent house financing, the momentum has picked up again since March.
Making a mark in new territories
The sovereign debt problems brewing in Europe and the United States can impact consumer sentiment in property purchases, said RAM Ratings head of financial institution ratings Promod Dass. “The fact is, property is a cornerstone of any economy, and there is a property angle in just about any major venture. Even the proposed my rapid transit (MRT) system is known as “a property-and-rail play.”
Says Fernandez: “Many of the country's plans are property-dependent. We may not be able to live up to that expectation. It is like a father having too many children, and all of them want to spend his salary.”
The demand for property is driven by many factors. In today's prevailing uncertainty, demand is driven by job security, sentiment and affordability, says Tan Sri Leong Hoy Kum, managing director and group chief executive of developer Mah Sing Group Bhd.
“We have a relatively young population, which means there will be a demand for starter homes. Whether for landed units or condominiums, the demand for larger units and high-end housing will definitely be slow. So we are changing our strategy,” he adds.
“Instead of concentrating on high-end housing, we will do mid- to high-end on fast-turnaround basis. We will launch three to nine months from the day we buy the land. If semi-detached units, it will be RM1.4mil and below. If it is a landed strata, it will be priced lower, and if it is high-rise, the built-up area will be smaller. Our focus will be on affordability.
“The high-end sector will definitely soften in terms of sales in the next 12 month or so. Houses in the RM5mil and above range will be difficult to sell. The same goes for big units. The European crisis may be prolonged but we are hoping for a soft landing.”
About two weeks ago, Mah Sing announced that it has purchased 90ha in Rawang. The move to less-prime locations will be another strategy to aid affordability and to overcome land scarcity in the popular areas. The company is the second top developer to recently signal this move to less-prime locations.
SP Setia Bhd is the other; it bought 673 acres in Rinching, located mid-way between Semenyih and the Bangi old town.


















As the woes in Europe and United States cast a pall over global economy, what will be ahead for locations around the iconic Petronas Twin Towers in the Kuala Lumpur City Centre, often regarded as the pinnacle of Malaysian property?
Signs of slowing?
Henry Butcher Marketing Sdn Bhd chief operating officer Tang Chee Meng says developers have noted the signs of an imminent slowing of the market. “Developers are today revamping their sizes. They are taking their projects to Singapore, China and Britain to sell. Or they work with banks to provide innovate mortgage packages. Some developers are also having friend-bring-friend commission in order to move sales.
In a buoyant market, this will not happen. The larger units completed a couple of years ago in the KLCC market may continue to remain vacant with pressure on rentals.
“Today, the majority of the sales are from developers, the primary market. In the secondary market, property agents are not getting many calls. The situation with huge leaps in prices is not as serious as last year or in the first half of this year. It is only certain type of properties in selective locations.”
“The European woes are weighing on investors. In that sense, the market is correcting itself. Developers may say these external global situations do not impact us. But there are many discerning people out there and they take note of what is going on in the US and in Europe,” says Tang.
A real estate agent specialising in properties in Mont'Kiara, another location that is closely watched, says the Sunrise MK28 has reduced its original price of about RM680 to RM700 per sq ft to RM590 to RM600 per sq ft. In Desa ParkCity, where prices of landed units have gone up by as much 300% or even more, the larger units of some of its latest launches are still available.
Comparing prices
About a decade ago, especially when the interest in KLCC-Petronas Twin Towers began, and in tandem with the proliferation of high-end landed and high-rise residentials, developers and property professionals took great pride comparing property prices in Malaysia with regional countries and concluded that the prices of Malaysian properties were far below those of China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Thailand. Projects around the Petronas Twin Towers were compared with London's Hyde Park and New York's Central Park. Today, such comparison continues to be made.
Says Fernandez: “This comparison has not stood the test of time. This suggests that our properties are not open to such comparisons and that such comparisons are not an appropriate measure. The drop in prices of between 20% and 25% soon after the 2008 crisis show that the market is mainly driven by our own governing fundamentals.
“The KLCC market, until today, has not rebounded to their original levels. The second point is that location is driven by a large expatriate community, which we do not have.”
Which is another sign of the times we are living in today.



Boost from KL International Financial District


Saturday October 15, 2011



THE Kuala Lumpur International Financial District (KLIFD) is a key enabler to strengthen the position of Kuala Lumpur as the global financial city of choice, transforming Kuala Lumpur into an international hub for banking and finance as well as related professional services.
KLIFD has been identified by the Government as an Early Entry Point in its comprehensive Economic Transformation Programme to more than double per capita income by 2020. The Government wholly owns1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB), the master developer for KLIFD.
The RM26bil project is located in the heart of Kuala Lumpur’s southern tip. It sits on 75 acres encompassed by Jalan Tun Razak, Jalan Sultan Ismail and the Putrajaya elevated highway. It will be overseen by 11 local and foreign consultants appointed by 1MBD to push forth its development.
In March, 1MDB carried out a pre-qualification and request for proposal process through its subsidiary 1MDB Real Estate Sdn Bhd.
Among the selected local companies are traffic management consultantPerunding Trafik Klasik Sdn Bhd, quantity surveyor Perunding NFL Sdn Bhd, landscape architect Akitek Jururancang Malaysian Sdn Bhd and land surveyors Jurukur Perpaduan Sdn Bhd and Jurukur ESA Sdn Bhd.
The infrastructure engineering consultants are EDP Consulting Group Sdn Bhd and Buro Happold Consulting Engineers, a UK and US consultant which also acts as KLIFD’s sustainability consultant.
Others include security and risk engineers ARUP Jururunding Sdn Bhd(from Malaysia) and Hong Kong-based ARUP Group International. A consultant from Qatar, KEO International Consultants, has been selected as programme management adviser.
The appointments are in addition to the two master planners, Akitek Jururancang Malaysia Sdn Bhd and Machado Silvetti & Associates, recently selected from an international design competition.
1MDB owns the 30.35ha on which the KLIFD will be developed. The entire financial district is slated to be completed in two decades, with its first phase operational by 2016.
Under Budget 2012, to accelerate the development of the KLIFD, the Government will offer income tax exemption of 100% for a period of 10 years.
Also, property developers in KLIFD will benefit from income tax exemption of 70% for a period of five years.

Monday, 3 October 2011

More protection for house buyers

Tuesday, 27 September 2011 12:35
the Star report by Malaysian Chronicle



RAWANG - The Housing and Local Government Ministry will table a motion to amend the Housing Development Act at the Dewan Rakyat in December to tackle the issue of abandoned housing projects.
Minister Datuk Chor Chee Heung said yesterday this would include ensuring developers put a 3% deposit of the project's cost, Bernama reported.
“Developers now only need to deposit RM200,000 and have a piece of land before a licence is issued,” he said.
“With the new amendment, if the project runs into problems, the deposit will be used to cover the costs,” he said, adding that the amendments would also require developers to complete the houses before selling them.
The change, to take effect in 2015, would require buyers to pay 10% of the house, and the rest only when it is completed, he told reporters after handing over keys to 54 owners of abandoned houses which had been rehabilitated at Taman Prima Hijau here.
With the amendments, Chor said, housing developers could be prosecuted under the Penal Code for failing to complete a project.
Meanwhile, the Information, Communication and Culture Ministry will table the Postal Services Bill 2011 to replace the Postal Services Act 1999 at the next Parliament meeting, said Deputy Minister Datuk Joseph Salang.
The new Act would ensure quality postal services and promote the growth of an effective, competitive and innovative postal industry, he told reporters after opening the 15th Biennial Delegates Conference of the Union of Postal Clerical Workers Peninsular Malaysia.
“We want to boost the confidence of consumers on postal services and to ensure the safety of workers, goods and postal network in line with the changing times.”
http://www.malaysia-chronicle.com/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=20121%3Amore-protection-for-house-buyers&Itemid=3

Tuesday, 27 September 2011

Low-cost housing being abused, say developers

This is reported in the Malaysian Insider.


September 26, 2011


KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 26 — Developers said today low cost housing mandated by state governments are missing their intended objective and becoming ghetto areas for immigrant workers, who form up to 15 per cent of Malaysia’s 28 million population.
This comes as pressure has been increasing on developers to build more affordable homes for the Malaysian public. Putrajaya also recently launched two new property schemes for young executives earning up to RM6,000 a month in urban areas, in a bid to stave off effects of rising property prices. 
“Low-cost houses are being sold as rental properties and are full of Bangladeshis,” said Che King Tow, Real Estate and Housing Developers Association (Rehda) council member at a briefing to the media today.
“The low-cost housing schemes are not market-driven but politically-driven.”
Rehda president Datuk Seri Michael Yam later told The Malaysian Insider that the wider society was cross-subsidising low-cost houses as they are sold for RM42,000 but cost between  RM60,000 and RM70,000 in construction alone and without factoring in the land costs.
The cross-subsidy is borne by those who purchase conventionally-priced houses.
“There is a concern that the cross-subsidy has gone to the wrong people,” he said. “If you think about it, the rental income is quite good.”
Che added that it would be better for a more market-driven approach to be taken rather than one imposed by the state.
He said that Rehda is proposing that a national database be established to register those interested in buying affordable houses, which he said would allow developers to plan accordingly and prevent abuse by people trying to purchase such properties for rental income.
Yam said that to make housing more affordable, authorities should allow densities to rise as it would amortise the cost of the land among a larger number of purchasers.
He added that the states should intervene less in the property sector and allow developers to be as efficient as possible, saying this would help lower development costs.
Putrajaya also has a unit, Syarikat Perumahan Negara Berhad (SPNB), which is now building 14,470 housing units of various types across the country.
The Najib administration has also launched the My First Home programme, proposed in Budget 2011, that targets homes within the RM100,000 and RM220,000 price range nationwide.
Under the scheme, young workers earning below RM3,000 monthly can procure 100 per cent financing with a 30-year repayment period from selected financial institutions, to buy such homes.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak kicked off the first phase of the 1 Malaysia Housing Programme (PR1MA) in July, which involves the construction of 42,000 houses on 20 strategic sites. Each unit would be sold between RM150,000 and RM300,000 depending on location and size.
Among developers involved in phase one of PR1MA are Putrajaya Holdings, SP Setia, Tradewinds, Cyberview, Sime Darby Property, MRCB Resources and 1MDB.
The project involves 825.1 acres of land in total.

Friday, 23 September 2011

Rise in rates sends prices, sales tumbling

I always wonder whether "raising interest rates" is the best measure to contain a "hot" real estates market.  The news below in Hong Kong is a good read.

By South China Morning Post
Wednesday, 21 September 2011 16:46


HONG KONG: A spate of bad news on the home front, including another rise in interest rates, has sent Hong Kong home prices and deal numbers tumbling.


The latest blow to market confidence came last Friday, Sept 16 when the city's two biggest home lenders, HSBC and Bank of China (Hong Kong), raised their mortgage interest rates.

Despite price discounting in the secondary market of up to 7% by anxious sellers, just 15 flats were sold in the city's 10 biggest estates at the weekend, with zero deals recorded in five of them. The sales were down by more than half from the 33 deals done in the 10 large estates over the previous weekend and compare with an average of nearly 40 deals per weekend in the year's first half.



Just six new flats sold over the weekend of Sept 17-18, the lowest weekend total for the year and down from eight the previous weekend, regional head of property research at Samsung Securities (Asia) Lee Wee Liat said. In the first half of the year an average of 100 new flats were sold each weekend.

The cause of the latest declines was Friday's increase in rates, the fifth for the year, agents said. The higher borrowing costs come on top of uncertainty about the global economic outlook, nervous bidding at recent land auctions, falling stock prices and the release by developers of new projects at prices that are close to, and in some cases lower than, prices in the secondary market.

HSBC increased the interest rate on mortgages based on the Hong Kong interbank offered rate (Hibor) from Hibor plus 1.8%-2.3%, to Hibor plus 2.3%-2.7%. Hibor is the rate banks charge for lending to other local banks.

HSBC also raised its prime-based rates from prime minus 2.7% to prime minus 2.1%-2.4%. The new rates took effect on Monday.

Bank of China (HK) raised its Hibor-based rates to Hibor plus 2.0%-2.5% from Hibor plus 1.8%-2.3%. More local banks are expected to follow the market leaders.

"The new round of mortgage rate hikes initiated by HSBC last Friday dampened secondary-market sentiment," Samsung Securities' Lee said. "Some homeowners lowered their prices, but potential buyers maintained their wait-and-see attitude."

The senior sales director at Hong Kong Property's Whampoa Garden branch, May Chan, said only one flat changed hands on the estate over the weekend, after the owner cut his asking price by 7% from HK$3.8 million (RM1.52 million) to HK$3.58 million.



"Half of the eight appointments we made on behalf of buyers were cancelled over the weekend after the higher mortgage rates were announced. Sales had already begun slowing, but the news of another increase in home loan rates turned the market sentiment from bad to worse," she said.

A sales director at Centaline Property Agency's Tuen Mun and Tin Shui Wai branches, Perry Fong Kai-ming, said home seekers had responded to the latest news by deferring their purchase decisions. Buyers were worried about more increases in lending rates and tighter credit policies, he said.

The five estates with no sales at the weekend were South Horizons, Mei Foo Sun Chuen, Laguna City, Discovery Park and Metro City.

"In some housing estates such as Park Island in Ma Wan and Sunshine City in Ma On Shan, we see transacted prices down 3% to 4% in just one week. Buyers are cautious in the face of the bad news," Ricacorp Properties head of research Patrick Chow Moon-kit said.

According to Centaline Property Agency, the affordability of a 600 square foot flat — as measured by the monthly mortgage payment as a proportion of household income — has deteriorated from 41.8% to 43.8%, based on a Hibor loan of 60% over 20 years.

Nicholas Brooke, chairman of the Professional Property Services Group, said a combination of factors had eroded buyer confidence.

"It is not the increase in interest rates as such that is spooking the market but rather the combination of government intervention, global economic uncertainty and a general concern about the future as well as a clear upward trend in interest rates driven primarily by the switch from the Hong Kong dollar to the yuan that is causing the market to tread water."

The economy was clearly slowing and developers were likely to release flats on a controlled "drip-feed basis", he added.

Cheung Kong (Holdings) has postponed the launch of La Splendeur in Tseung Kwan O, a joint venture with the MTR Corp, to this week to allow more mainlanders to visit its show suites over the weekend. — SCMP



http://www.theedgeproperty.com/global-market-watch/8322-rise-in-rates-sends-prices-sales-tumbling.html

Friday, 9 September 2011

Strata Title to be issued upon hand-over of condo or apartment

According to Sin Chew Daily report on 6th Sept 2011, the Ministry of Housing and Local Government will table an amendment to the Strata Titles Act 1985 to make it compulsory for developer to hand over housing units to purchasers with strata titles.