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Analytical Professor

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Looks like companies can spend less on marketing and advertising already...

Thanks edm for the welcome but I havent buy it yet lei......Stil have to wait for the 2 shwflats to be ready. Most prob gona buy a ready unit & just bring my bags. :biggrin:Hahaha. If everything goes well then Yes, end of the year shld move in. I am pretty sure abt the place, just love it. But one of my frens who bought Setia Eco Gardens insist that I go over to his place to take a look too. He is trying to swing me to the dark side. LOL:biggrin:
 

Analytical Professor

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What a horribly hot weekend. Gosh....

Hated it like mad....

roasted in my own home despite aircons and hi velocity fans at full blast.

Enjoyed my home :smile::smile:

But not a bit of the weather :(:(
 

Analytical Professor

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Visited KIP Mart in the evening at Tampoi.

Most of the herbs/leafy vegetables had shrivelled.

But got a box of potatoes for only Rm 3.9. That was real cheap i guess.
 

Analytical Professor

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Commodity Turmoil as Prices Plunge
Gabriel Chen - Straits Times Indonesia | May 07, 2011

Commodity prices have gone into freefall in recent days as investors take flight amid near panic over the health of the global economy.

Oil, rubber, copper, gold and silver have been dumped in a savage sell-off, sparking similar bloodshed on stock markets in the United States, European and most Asian bourses.

In just five days, S&P's GSCI index of 24 commodities has fallen 11.4 per cent - the longest losing streak since August.

The once-booming commodity sector has looked fragile this week but it was Thursday's brutal falls that really rocked world markets.

Oil was trading at around US$99.8 a barrel on Thursday, near its lowest level in almost two months while silver has crashed more than 25 per cent since its record high of US$49.51 an ounce on April 28. It fell more than 10 per cent on Thursday alone.

Jittery investors reacted strongly to the dramatic price falls and sent Asian markets tumbling Friday.

Japan's Nikkei Stock Average lost 1.45 per cent, Singapore's Straits Times Index was down 0.33 per cent, South Korea's Kospi Composite dropped 1.52 per cent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index shed 0.44 per cent.

"There are fears that global growth could be threatened but it isn't warranted," said Barclays Capital economist Leong Wai Ho. "The... underlying drivers are still for growth in the medium term."

The bailout of commodities may have been overdone given unexpectedly strong employment figures out of the United States last night.

Investors had tipped a grim number but private companies surprised by adding 268,000 jobs last month, the fastest pace in five years and well ahead of economist expectations of an 186,000 increase. The figures made for a strong opening on Wall Street yesterday, with the Dow up 1 per cent at the start.

Observers also say the commodity sell-off was triggered purely by panic and does not spell the start of another global financial crisis.

But the threat of sluggish global growth can hit the commodities market. It was the expectations of greater demand as the global economy picked up speed that had produced steep rises in prices earlier this year.

Some investors have started losing faith in the global recovery after worrying US jobs data came out earlier this week and Europe reported weak manufacturing figures.

There are also worries that moves by China and India to tame inflation could undermine demand for raw materials.

Commodity prices have been hit by a stronger US dollar on the back of a weakening euro. Commodities are priced in US dollars so a stronger greenback makes them less attractive to buyers using foreign currencies.

Not everyone is convinced that the commodities boom is over. "Markets have corrections all the time and I do not find anything unusual. The bull market for commodities is not yet over," said veteran investor Jim Rogers, who holds commodities in his portfolio.

Bankers also note the rush for shares in the initial public offering of Swiss commodity giant Glencore International. And gold and silver prices began clawing back some of the heavy losses yesterday, suggesting that bargain hunters are on the prowl.

"Several factors have been driving real assets, like gold and silver," said Dominic Schnider, UBS Wealth Management's head of commodity research.

"There has been growing mistrust of paper money. Interest rates in key economies are close to zero. Adjusted for inflation, investors have not been compensated for the loss in purchasing power.

"This has especially been the case in emerging markets where inflation has geared up sharply."

APS Asset Management chief investment officer Wong Kok Hoi said Asian growth has not been derailed and they are looking for opportunities, with the tech sector looking particularly fruitful.


What's this talk of meltdown? AProf, needling us again :smile: ? In fact more good news in yesterday's Singapore Business Times front page.... (but maybe too soon to open...they should wait till Legoland )
 

echanbonfire01

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Prices surge in Iskandar
Posted on | May 7, 2011

By THE STAR

PROPERTY prices in certain areas within Iskandar Malaysia rose dramatically last year, after nearly a decade of lacklustre demand, according to property consultants interviewed by StarBizWeek.

The soaring property prices mainly involves new commercial, industrial and high-end residential units around Johor Baru, the Tebrau corridor and Nusajaya, all within the economic growth corridor in Johor.

KGV-Lambert Smith Hampton (Johor) Sdn Bhd executive director Samuel Tan says that property prices have appreciated by between 45% and 160%, depending on the type of property and location, compared with prices five years ago.


V. Sivadas … ‘The residential sector around Johor Baru is split into two different worlds.’

“A Danga View Apartment unit that was valued at RM240,000 five years ago can be sold at RM350,000 today,” says Tan.

A similar trend in property prices is noted in double-storey terrace houses in Taman Bukit Indah, Johor Baru, which Tan says are fetching RM380,000 (compared with RM250,000 in 2006). A vacant land in the Southern Industrial Logistics Cluster (SILC) in Nusajaya is now being valued at RM37 per sq ft (compared with RM21 per sq ft previously) and a piece of commercial land around Jalan Datuk Abdullah Tahir, is fetching RM320 per sq ft (compared with RM150 per sq ft in 2006).

Rahim & Co (Johor) Sdn Bhd executive director Loo Kung Hoe says the property boom has resulted in “peak excitement” at auctions.

“In the past, people were careful and there was little interest in auctions. Nowadays, they bid as high as they can for both residential and commercial properties,” says Loo.

Factors behind rise

According to Tan, the strong demand for property is being fuelled by fears of inflation, real needs for housing and the purchasing power of Malaysians working in Singapore.

“There are an estimated 300,000 Malaysians working in the republic and property buyers are impressed by the rapidly developing infrastructure and road networks they see in Iskandar Malaysia.”

Tan notes that the housing and commercial landscape in Iskandar Malaysia has transformed with the entry of property developers such as UEM Land Holdings Bhd, SP Setia Bhd, UDA Holding Bhd, Bandar Raya Developments Bhd, Mah Sing Group Bhd and IOI Properties Bhd.

“In the past, buyers were satisfied with basic one-storey houses. Today, buyers look at factors such as prestige, security and the developer’s track record. In another five years, when new residential and commercial areas mature in Iskandar Malaysia, prices will be even higher,” says Tan.

He opines that there is still a lot of upside for the property market in Iskandar Malaysia, especially around the Johor Baru city centre, compared with the Klang Valley.

“The year 2012 will be the tipping point, when projects such as Johor Premium Outlet in Indahpura and Legoland Theme Park in Nusajaya are up and running,” says Tan.

CB Richard Ellis (Johor) Sdn Bhd director Wee Soon Chit adds that the buying euphoria in Johor is also being fuelled by speculation from Klang Valley investors.

Wee says investors’ confidence in the region is also boosted by recent reports of a joint venture between Khazanah Nasional Bhd and Temasek Holdings for a “Wellness City” development in Danga Bay.

Strong demand

Loo says there is a strong demand for high-end residential properties such as Leisure Farm Resort in Gelang Patah (developed by Mulpha International Bhd), as well as East Ledang (developed by UEM Land Holdings Bhd) and Horizon Hills (a joint venture between UEM Land and Gamuda Land Sdn Bhd) in Nusajaya.

Another “hot” growth area in Johor Baru is the Tebrau corridor which encompasses the Setia Indah township, Taman Desa Tebrau, Taman Pelangi Indah, and Sunway College in Taman Mount Austin, according to Wee.

However, PA International Property Consultants Sdn Bhd executive director V. Sivadas, who is based in Johor Baru, says the strong demand for high-end properties has not translated into higher prices in the secondary market for older single and double-storey houses in Johor Baru. “The residential sector around Johor Baru is split into two different worlds,” he says.

“New housing units feature the latest designs and many are in gated and guarded developments. A premium is attached to such units, due to security concerns. Within this housing segment, prices have been strong with upward movements of between 10% and 30% over the last two years. These areas include Austin Heights, Taman Sutera Utama, Adda Heights and Horizon Hills.

“Double-storey terrace or cluster units in these schemes are now averaging between RM380,000 and RM500,000. Larger units such as semi-detached houses continue to attract a steady demand, in both the developer and sub-sale markets. Prices here are in the RM500,000 to RM1 mil range.”

However, demand for new double-storey terrace houses which are not located in gated and guarded developments, in the secondary market is very weak.

“There is little price appreciation upon building completion. In most instances, we note a reduction in sub-sale transaction prices,” says Sivadas.

A recent PA International report also points out that there is little demand for old landed housing units around Johor Baru, with some units even priced at pre-1997 rates.

“We do not expect price escalations here due to these being older schemes, as well as due to the continuous offerings of new landed housing units in the market. However, older schemes in the city area such as Kim Teng Park, Serene Park and Taman Pelangi are an exception to this pricing.”

In the condominium sector, the report says that demand remains strong in Johor Baru, due to limited supply in the market.

Prices for high-end condominiums such as that of Petrie Condominium, Johor Baru and the Straits View in Bandar Baru Permas Jaya have exceeded RM350 per sq ft.

The Straits View condominiums which had transacted sales in the region of RM250 to RM300 per sq ft in 2008, are fetching between RM300 to RM350 per sq ft at present.

Service apartments like Ujana in Nusajaya are sold out, while D’Esplanade Residence @ KSL City in Century Gardens, Johor Baru is expected to “do well” as it nears completion, says the report.

However, the PA International report paints a depressing picture for low- and medium-priced apartments.

Apartments in the RM150,000 price range over the last few years, have dipped to below RM100,000 in the secondary market in most areas.

“The number of units put up for sale by public auction companies continues to be be high. This is happening in areas such as Masai, Pasir Gudang, Plentong and Kulai,” says the report.

Boom time

Sivadas says double- and 3-storey shop offices in newer housing estates such as in Taman Nusa Bestari in Nusajaya and in Taman Sutera Utama and Taman Molek in Johor Baru have appreciated in prices over the last two years.

“In most instances, units facing busy main roads and those in established commercial areas, have appreciated by 50%. New 3-storey units offered by developers are at substantially higher prices. All riding on the wave of this euphoria,” says Sivadas.

The PA International report notes that, 3-storey shop offices in Taman Molek that were launched at RM800,000 (intermediate unit) in mid 2000, have an asking price of RM1.3 million today.

In Taman Desa Tebrau, Johor Baru, a 3-storey shop office launched at RM768,000 three years ago, is hovering between RM900,000 and RM1mil today.

The report also notes that rentals for 3-storey shop offices are in the region RM5,000 to RM8,000 per month (intermediate unit), and RM15,000 to RM25,000 per month (corner unit).

Sivadas adds that gross yields for such properties are lower. They have dropped from 6% to 7% two years ago, to about 5% per annum for intermediate units as rental levels are generally unchanged.

Loo points out that some transactions did not seem to be sensible like the shoplots that were launched last year in Taman Sutera Utama, Johor Bahru at RM2.08mil (intermediate unit) and RM2.3 to RM2.6 million (corner unit).

“Currently, the monthly rental is about RM7,500 (intermediate unit) and could go up to RM13,000 (corner unit). So, the yield is between 4.3% and 6% per annum if rentals remain at the current levels when the new shoplots are completed. Perhaps buyers are expecting higher rental yields in the near future.”

He adds that the existing intermediate shoplots in Taman Sutera Utama, launched in mid 2000 were sold at between RM700,000 and RM750,000 per unit and were presently priced at between RM1.5mil and RM1.7mil per unit in the sub-sale market.

Sivadas says that generally, the office space market has fared poorly since the Asian financial crisis of 1997 and 1998.

“Rentals within office towers in and around the city centre continue to hover at RM1.50 to RM2.50 per sq ft per month, inclusive of service charges, thus making this sector a less attractive investment option.”

Also, the retail sector within the city centre have been stagnant over the past year in terms of pricing and rental levels.

Sivadas places part of the blame on the relocation of the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) to Bukit Cagar in December 2008, which he says has diverted traffic and pedestrians away from the city centre.

He also says that there are abandoned retail complexes in Johor Baru, such as Pacific Mall, Kemayan City in Tampoi, and Lot 1 Waterfront City.

There is also ample supply of commercial complexes, such as Aero Mall at Senai, Tesco at Bukit Indah and Giant at Nusa Bestari.

“With massive commercial projects being planned in Danga Bay and Nusajaya, we expect office rentals in the city centre to remain stagnant for the next year.”

Positive near-term outlook

Areas such as Tampoi, Kempas, Seelong, Senai and Nusajaya have seen a gradual increase in the values of industrial land.

The PA International report says converted industrial lands in Tampoi were sold at between RM30 and RM40 per sq ft within the last two years (compared with between RM20 and RM25 per sq ft in mid-2000).

Prices of converted industrial land in Seelong, Kulaijaya and along Jalan Kempas Lama have doubled or more than doubled within the last two years (compared with mid-2000 prices).

“Nusajaya is also a hotspot. Prices in the Nusa Cemerlang Industrial Park, developed by Crescendo Corp Bhd is up by 50% when compared with 2008,” says Wee.

Sivadas says that while the immediate outlook for Iskandar Malaysia is positive, with various projects in the region expected to have a multitude of effects resulting in more job opportunities and higher incomes, it remains to be seen whether the property boom for new developments can be sustained in the long term.

“The key factors now are sustaining demand, and ensuring that supply does not go out of hand,” says Sivadas.

- Malaysia Property News


I went to MAPEX last Sunday. Held at City Square. They are planning a condo at Nusa Duta town. It will be next to the longkang or lake
 

petesim

New Member
Hello everyone.. this is my first time exploring.
How do u get in touch with the sales people for Fairways Suites and other properties?
Can someone help send me the GPS location.. i will like to drive in to see and do homework
Thank you all
 

Batok Seri

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The aggressiveness extends to driving as in my case, a red Myvi type car (one of those small cars) cuts in on the near side just as I was nearing the first guardhouse on Jalan Bukit Indah. Fortunately I swerve to my left,...

The Myvi most likely merged from the Pearl Glow restaurant road on the RH side.
Driving towards HH on the right lane you may have thought keeping close to the central divider gave you right of way.

Actually if you look closely, the lane markings veers to the left away from the divider to make room for merging traffic.
 

aangsc

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Hubby has electrical cert and is well trained although now in the aircon line...people in these line has high expectation for others work. Very niao one.....hehe....

Curtains will be ready made ones from Ikea but will be doing the curtain tracks ourself. Btw, for the children the curtain rod in Ikea if very cheap. $2.00+ only.

woh....so much diy save a lot. i did some electrical lights w/o cert :biggrin: just follow instruction on colour cable but the ceiling height is too high even for my 2 m ladder. i also use curtain rods from ikea and curtain from giant. I like diy if i have e time :biggrin: but not doing housework...tiring to my back :( . anyone has contact for good electrician? want to fix a few water heaters and ceiling fan.
 

echanbonfire01

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This is one the main reasons why kids shouldnt grow up in JB. Singapore has nice environment for kids to grow and many many rich Malaysians are paying to get their kids to study in Singapore. I have a few encounters with Malaysia cars who simply cut into my lane WITHOUT signalling and it seems a culture. Usually i just slammed on jam and live on it. Another thing is, Malaysian cars usually dont give way to Singapore cars. This is told to me by a Malaysian auntie who has been driving his hubby SG car for 20 years in JB.

from what i see, malaysian drivers most of the time will give way to msia or spore cars. i seldom see them speed up to block you if you signal with intention. but some singapore cars, you signal also, they dont let you in...but i do agree that they do not signal at times.

for kids environment in a home is the utmost importance. if home is a negative place then it will have serious impact
 

rhino

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Hey Congrats Hangyong!
I thought it was all sold out? Could you share a bit more about your unit? How big? Purchase price?
 

contra

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Again another mention of Iskandar from today's Business Times Singapore... we can feel the chatter is getting more frequent - just like the number of postings to this thread! When they soon announce more concrete plans on the bullet train of KL-JB-SIN, prices in JB can only get higher...


"Malaysia
Published May 9, 2011

MALAYSIA INSIGHT
The Klang Valley housing conundrum
Politically, the Barisan Nasional government also badly wants to win back the country's most wealthy state

By PAULINE NG
KL CORRESPONDENT

KLANG Valley residents might soon have more housing options - those of the affordable kind. More precisely, those priced below RM220,000, or just over S$90,000. Responding to complaints that a generation is being priced out of Malaysia's most populous area, Prime Minister Najib Razak has assured them that his administration is looking into the issue. ...

. . .- edit to relevant section - . . .

Private developers have already observed it would be very challenging to build units for anything less than RM350,000 in the Klang Valley and Penang, unless they are built smaller, on government land, and with higher plot densities.

In that regard, it is heartening to hear more Kuala Lumpur developers are heading to Iskandar Malaysia because they believe the upside to be better now that much of the infrastructure is close to completion. House buyers there should arguably get more bang for their buck because land in Johor is still much cheaper despite its proximity to Singapore.

Economic benefits notwithstanding, the sooner Iskandar achieves its tipping point, the more even regional growth on the peninsular will be. It might even alleviate some of the congestion in Penang and the Klang Valley although one suspects house prices are unlikely to dip anytime soon."
 

contra

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Even the esteemed Economist magazine (latest issue with Osama cover) has gotten into the chat act...

A reverse brain drain 06 MAY 2011 , BY THE ECONOMIST
ONE corner of a foreign field is becoming for ever England. It is in Johor on the southernmost tip of peninsular Malaysia, opposite Singapore. At a site called Nusajaya, workmen are finishing a new campus of Newcastle University. Nearby foundations are being dug for Southampton University. And down the road Marlborough College, one of England’s most famous public (that is, private) schools, is building a Malaysian campus from scratch. If all goes well, the 900-odd pupils will hardly notice that they are looking out over palm-oil plantations rather than the Wiltshire Downs. Within a few years thousands of students will be enjoying an English education in this steamy bit of Asia.

“Educity”, as the Johor complex is called, reflects Malaysia’s grand strategy to become a centre for Western education. The country wants to meet strong demand among Asia’s new middle classes for English-language schooling. It also worries about its brain drain (over 300,000 university-educated Malays work abroad). Having watched Asian children flock west to spend a lot of money on British and American schools, the government decided a few years ago to try to reverse the trend. It has campaigned to persuade Western schools and colleges to come and set up branch campuses. The Malaysian proposition to Asian parents is simple and beguiling: come to these famous schools and universities in our country and get the same degrees and qualifications as in Britain or America for half the price.

Australia’s Monash University was the first to set up shop, followed by Britain’s Nottingham University, in 2005. Other Australian universities followed Monash, and in March the Massachusetts Institute of Technology teamed up with a Malaysian body to create Asia’s first Institute for Supply-Chain Innovation. Johns Hopkins University is expected to set up a medical school. The Netherlands Maritime Institute of Technology is already in Educity.

For these Western institutions, the prize is a toehold in the world’s biggest education market. Many have already gone into partnership with or lent their names to schools and universities in Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai. But this is the first time so many have been persuaded to build replicas of themselves in another country, a more permanent and riskier proposition. They are doing so largely because the Malaysian government is bearing the start-up costs. Educity is spending about $100m on the infrastructure and buildings.

Yet other factors count as well. Malaysia is a former British colony and English is widely spoken. The country has a superficially Western feel to it—ideal for Westerners studying or teaching in Asia, and for Asians who want to acclimatise to Western culture. Meanwhile, Malaysia cleverly markets itself to the Middle East as a relatively relaxed Islamic country where young Muslims can mix together freely and, for a few years, slip the surly watch of the morality police back home.

In return for putting up a lot of money, the Malaysian government wants universities to set up faculties in subjects that will be most useful to Malaysia. The University of Southampton, for instance, will only offer degrees in engineering. But the influx of foreign colleges might have more interesting consequences, too. In order to attract foreign universities, the government has had to waive the restrictive and sometimes racist regulations that govern Malaysia’s own universities. In these places, informal quota systems give preference to ethnic Malays in the faculties of sought-after subjects such as law, medicine and engineering. Students are not allowed to join political parties or protest. Now, local students are demanding to know why they should be subject to these archaic rules when the new students are not. Good question.
 

hangyong

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Hello everyone.. this is my first time exploring.
How do u get in touch with the sales people for Fairways Suites and other properties?
Can someone help send me the GPS location.. i will like to drive in to see and do homework
Thank you all

you can visit the website http://www.horizonhills.com.my
it has all the information you need.
you can even try google maps to see the actual location.

one thing you can do, go to the SP Setia showroom at HarbourFront, get the map of Iskandar, and start exploring from there.
 

Meng968

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Hi,

Has been reading this thread for quite a few week, still have not cover all pages.
Hope to finish reading the whole thread before i ask stupid questions. :smile:

Was encourage to join this forum after reading wuqi and many other forummers contributing to this thread. Just want to say "Thank you" for sharing in this thread.

Cheers
Meng
 

hwthwt

New Member
This is one the main reasons why kids shouldnt grow up in JB. Singapore has nice environment for kids to grow and many many rich Malaysians are paying to get their kids to study in Singapore. I have a few encounters with Malaysia cars who simply cut into my lane WITHOUT signalling and it seems a culture. Usually i just slammed on jam and live on it. Another thing is, Malaysian cars usually dont give way to Singapore cars. This is told to me by a Malaysian auntie who has been driving his hubby SG car for 20 years in JB.

Unfortunately, there is too much "junk" in JB. Smaller towns are better places for children. Bigger cities, especially those where easy money is available (high foreign income with little qualification, although the income is considered very low in the country of origin), tend to be those where bad people gather. The problem is worse when cars are too affordable, as a result many people who are emotionally and mentally unqualified become drivers easily, making roads dangerous. I am staying in Nusajaya. I usually avoid driving during public holidays, as the "junk" drivers roam the roads during those periods. Unfortunately, they are the only periods during which most Singaporeans have time to drive into Malaysia.
 

euphony

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Loyal
Hello everyone.. this is my first time exploring.
How do u get in touch with the sales people for Fairways Suites and other properties?
Can someone help send me the GPS location.. i will like to drive in to see and do homework
Thank you all


Hi Pete. What are you looking for? Condo/apartments or landed? What are your preferences in location (1st link/2nd link) etc will help us help you.
As for Fairway suites, get your directions to Horizon hills. Once you're in the development, the moment you reach the first roundabout, the showrooms is diagonally across (i.e. opposite the row of shops), the site for the condo is the fenced up area next to the row of shops. Go in park and have a look. Then go back to the roundabout and continue straight deeper into the township. Go all the way to the end until you cannot proceed further, turn right into a slight slope (you'll pass the guard house) into the clubhouse. Park and find the sales persons/gallery. They are separate for this development. Its a very nice development and as you can see many are smithened by it (me included) but use plenty of patience. The sales pax are quite abrupt especially when it gets crowded.
 
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