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Property News

In violent outburst, Jelatek residents say ‘no’ to Chinese neighbours

Fearing their Malay-majority city neighbourhood may soon be overrun by Chinese, a group of residents in Taman Keramat marched to the construction site of upscale condominium project Datum Jelatek here and violently tore down its cladding today.
The group had warned of “bloodshed” last November if the luxury condo project, which sits on the former site of four blocks of Selangor State Development Corporation (PKNS) flats owned mostly by Malays, goes ahead.
News portal The Malaysian Insider had reported a violent protest breaking out at the condo project site earlier today, but Salleh said the residents reacted aggressively to defend their homes from “Chinese occupation”.

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/violent-outburst-jelatek-residents-no-chinese-neighbours-093100504.html

Although this is happening in KL, but with the recent fragile racial and religious relationship, what happen and allowed to happened in KL may happen in other cities in Malaysia as well.
 
Dangerous if allowed to fester.
Made worse with the internet which tends to increase social reach.
Bad economic situation will exacerbate this problem.
 
All just politics wayang... why protest at Opposition state of Selangor only?
In Johor, how come no protest although billions worth of land already sold 'freehold' to foreigners???
Anyway, all these certainly not good - shows, extremism being more and more tolerated by hidden parties.
 
The current Sultan has toned down considerably over the years after he tried to play punk in Singapore a few times as TMJ but was screwed badly. Since then he has understood the fact that Singapore is an independent island and his ah gong ah ma has given up Singapore to the British. His father sometimes don't get it though.




The two reclamation projects along the Straits for Forest City and R&F has involvement linked with the royal family one way or another, directly or indirectly.
SG when tackling this issue better be sensitive and very careful.
The Federal had already played along by halting all works for assessment and now had given final approval for the works, so now the ball in in SG's court................
 
It's good that they are aware of this situation. But somehow you can't but get the feeling that the reclamation project works is like getting back at Singapore
 
Dangerous if allowed to fester.
Made worse with the internet which tends to increase social reach.
Bad economic situation will exacerbate this problem.

It is always no good in any country when certain group of people are allowed to talk much louder then others and worse, when racial and religious tension is at an all time high.
Development plans were approved by the state before commencement so, the protesters should go to the state municipal council to launch their protest instead of harassing the developers.
 
All just politics wayang... why protest at Opposition state of Selangor only?
In Johor, how come no protest although billions worth of land already sold 'freehold' to foreigners???
Anyway, all these certainly not good - shows, extremism being more and more tolerated by hidden parties.

Wayang or not, the fact is no one dare to touch the Sultan of Johor. Not even the MB or PM. The people of johor regardless of race respect the Sultan.
 
Expert: GST to have minimal impact on property sector
Posted on January 30, 2015 | 794 views | Topic : Featured, Property News.

BY TOH KAR INN

KUALA LUMPUR: The goods and services tax (GST) is expected to be a mere blip on the property sector, with a rise of not more than 3% to 4% in terms of property prices, according to property consultancy Rahim & Co executive chairman Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Abdul Rahman.

Abdul Rahim said although the residential sub-segment is GST-exempt, building materials, labour and machinery are not, so developers would have to take this into consideration.

“There will not be more than a 3% to 4% price hike in residential properties, which is still lower than the 6% GST,” he told a press conference after the launch the company’s Property Market Review 2014/15 here yesterday.

However, he said prices, inclusive of the GST component, were expected to gradually increase in the range of 7% to 10%, which is a slower-but-steady growth compared with the double-digit growth of previous years.

This increment is not only due to the GST, but also the market’s supply and demand mechanism, he added.

“Buyers, sellers and developers are likely to adopt a wait and see attitude,” he said.

Abdul Rahim said while the GST would only have a “temporary and limited impact”, the greater issue in the overall property sector remains one of affordability.

He said such issues would persist, which, in turn, would increase the demand for affordable housing.

This is expected to add pressure on the Government to undertake speedier action.

He said the provision of more affordable housing might result in private developers reducing prices in order to compete with social housing being supplied by the Government.

He said Malaysia’s housing affordability had deteriorated to 3.6 times in 2014 from 2009’s 3.4 times.

The ratio compares the price of an average-priced, double-storey house with annual household income. The higher the ratio, the less affordable the house is.

Although a ratio of three to four times is still within the global average in certain parts of the country, this value has increased dramatically over the previous years.

The year 2009 is the commonly used benchmark year because property prices started their hefty increase from the end of that year.

According to studies by Rahim & Co, the least affordable terraced house is in Sabah, with a ratio of 6.2, followed by Penang at 5.9 and Kuala Lumpur at 5.6.

http://www.starproperty.my/index.ph...st-to-have-minimal-impact-on-property-sector/
 
Malaysia housing affordability worsen
Jan 30, 2015

Housing affordability in Malaysia has worsened over the last five years, based on the ratio of average terraced home price to average annual household income, according to Rahim & Co Chartered Surveyors Sdn Bhd.

“The ratio increased from 3.4 in 2009 to 3.6 in 2012 and 2014, showing that an average terraced house would cost an average household or family in Malaysia, 3.6 times its annual gross income,” said Rahim & Co Research Sdn Bhd director Sulaiman Akhmady Mohd Saheh.

In 2014, the least affordable terraced home in the country was located in Sabah with ratio of 6.2 times, followed by Pulau Pinang (5.6 times), Kuala Lumpur (5.6 times) and Sarawak (4.4 times).

Although housing affordability is debated in every property forum, Rahim & Co executive chairman Tan Sri Datuk Abdul Rahim Abdul Rahman could still see encouraging sales from newly launched projects in certain locations, particularly in established corridors.

“Despite the lower crude oil price and currency, economists and researchers are forecasting 2015′s gross domestic product (GDP) growth to be in the region of five percent to 5.5 percent, which in turn would fuel sustained demand, especially for mainstream residential properties,” he said.

Overall, the firm expects the country’s property market, which has rebounded in 2014 following a slowdown during the previous year, to be stable with signs of slow but steady growth throughout 2015.

Property prices are expected to increase, albeit at a slower pace, despite the rising living costs and various cooling measures.

Specifically, property prices are expected to increase between seven and 10 percent compared to the previous years’ double digit growth.

Farah Wahida, Editor of PropertyGuru, wrote this story. To contact her about this or other stories email [email protected]

http://www.propertyguru.com.my/property-news/2015/1/82119/malaysia-housing-affordability-worsen
 
Braced for a property glut

IS a glut in residential property or a slowdown imminent? IFCA MSC Bhd chief financial officer Daniel Chow seems to think so.

Chow was an invited speaker at a significant property event last week where one of the key speakers showed that actual sales last year for all the major players in the industry, except for one, was much lower than their forecast.

“Everybody recorded negative. There was only one exception. The fundamental rule on economics is demand and supply. When there is oversupply, this is what happens.

“How much is the population growth in Malaysia? Less than 3%. And how much is your purchasing power growth? On average 6% to 7% year by year.

“But the increase in the supply of property is double digit every year. How can you expect the market to absorb all this? There is a limit,” he says in an interview.

He says this is when the properties under the (now banned) Developers-Interest-Bearing Scheme are completed and most buyers who paid only the minimum 5% down payment would have to start paying their monthly instalment and service their housing loan when the property is handed over to them.

Most are just property flippers and their whole intention is to flip it for capital gain. But what if nobody wants to buy? Do they have the holding power? Some were greedy and put in RM10K into three different units instead of RM30K into one.”

So if the person cannot pay the monthly instalment or sell the unit then the bank will do a foreclosure.

I expect to see cheap sales and bank lelong at the end of the year and early next year for certain types of properties in selected areas,” he says.

Chow believes the oversupply will create a downward pressure on the selling price.

http://www.malaysia-today.net/braced-for-a-property-glut/
 
Sounds like a dose of reality on the situation on the ground.
 
Hopefully there isn't too many of those cases. Put 10k each for three properties and take the dibs. When the properties are completed, the installments with the 4.5 % interest will probably add up to rm15k a month?
 
Malaysian property market will be lacklustre in 2015: Moody's
POSTED: 04 Feb 2015 10:28

The demand for residential property in Malaysia will be affected by property cooling measures introduced in 2013 and weak buyer sentiment, said ratings agency Moody's.

SINGAPORE: Demand for residential property in Malaysia is set to slow further in 2015, according to a Moody's forecast.

In a report issued on Wednesday (Feb 4), the ratings agency said that demand for such properties will be affected by property cooling measures introduced in 2013 and weak buyer sentiment.

Ms Jacintha Poh, assistant vice-president and analyst at Moody's, said: "We expect the anticipation of higher mortgage rates in 2015 and the implementation of a 6 per cent goods and service tax in April to dampen sales in 2015 as buyers take a wait-and-see approach.

"But the magnitude of the sales impact will depend on Malaysian property developers' target segment of project launches and pricing."

While demand for owner-occupied homes priced in the middle-income range is expected to remain resilient, properties in popular areas like Johor, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor and Penang - which are targeted at high-income households and foreign investors - will face the greatest challenge in achieving their sales targets, added Moody's.

From 2001 to 2013, Malaysia's average home prices increased at a compounded annual growth rate of 7.3 per cent, faster than the 6.3 per cent increase for gross national income per labour, the ratings agency noted.

- CNA/ac

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/business/malaysian-property-market/1635910.html
 
Boom to Bust in 7 years... that sounds about right for a property cycle. The uptrend started slowly in 2008/9, accelerated from 2010 to 2012, plateaus in 2013, gradually decline in 2014... we should see good buying opportunities in 2016/2017
 
Demand for high-end homes to wane: experts
Feb 06, 2015

While demand for luxury residential properties priced at RM1 million and above is falling due to a supply glut in the high-end market, the demand for affordable houses costing below RM500,000 will continue to be bolstered by Malaysia’s expanding working population, according to experts who attended the 2015 Property Market Outlook seminar.

“Currently, there is an oversupply of high-end condominiums and offices,” said James Wong, the Organising Chairman of the event.

This was obvious as home builders were releasing fewer projects in the past few months, he said. Aside from that, there had been an increase in the number of repossessed properties, while banks have imposed stricter lending criteria.

“We have been seeing correctional signs since the fourth quarter of 2014. Coupled with the oversupply, we suspect this will not be a good year for the property market,” predicted Wong, who is also a Chartered Surveyor and Director for VPC Alliance.

Furthermore, rating agency Moody’s Investors Service recently forecasted that the demand for Malaysian houses will ease further this year given the weak buying sentiment and cooling measures introduced by the government in 2013.

In particular, home builders focusing on Johor, Penang, Selangor and Kuala Lumpur will be the most affected as they will struggle to achieve their sales targets, it said.

As such, Malaysia’s residential property market is expected to slow down in 2015, added Faizan Abdul Rahman, Deputy Director-General of the Valuation and Property Services Department.

“Nevertheless, the residential property market will continue to sustain, underpinned by the growing working population and first-time home buyers.”

He also revealed that the total value of properties sold increased by about 15.8 percent to RM124 billion in the first three quarters of 2014 as compared to same period in the preceding year. However, transaction volume grew at a slower pace.

Farah Wahida, Editor of PropertyGuru, wrote this story. To contact her about this or other stories email [email protected]

http://www.propertyguru.com.my/property-news/2015/2/82951/demand-for-high-end-homes-to-wane-experts
 
Singapore: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
With 2015 underway, there has been some talk of a revival in market activity
Posted Date: Jan 27, 2015
By: iProperty.com


With 2015 underway, there has been some talk of a revival in market activity as well as plenty of speculation over the easing of some or one of the property cooling measures in place.
There have been numerous rounds of changes to the property market for buyers and investors since 2009. The 5-year property cooling measures adopted by Singapore were implemented as ‘macro prudential measures’ and meant to complement the monetary policy as well as contain the property market bubble. Though Singapore was one of the pioneers of such tactics, China, Hong Kong and Malaysia soon followed with their respective variations.
Essentially meant to combat the speculative flipping of properties and to normalise the prices for first-time homebuyers, they have worked collectively to stabilise and pull property prices down. However, the measure that finally made the biggest difference was the introduction of the total debt servicing ratio (TSDR) framework in June 2013.
With the effect slowly felt by the entire property industry, 2015 may jolly well see the lifting or tweaking of certain measures in order to reverse the slowdown and potential curbs in the market. While we certainly hope to tell you exactly what is going to happen for 2015, we unfortunately cannot predict the future.
As such, the next best thing would be to break down the good, the bad, and the ugly of the property market and serve as a guiding light towards a better 2015 ahead.

The Good

HDB Resale: Prices Down, Sales Up
15, 914 resale Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats were sold in 2014 compared to 14, 220 in 2013. Though the numbers were up in the terms of transaction volume, prices dipped slightly. Prices of resale flats in non-matured estates such as Punggol and Sengkang fell 8.3% while those in mature estates such as Queenstown and Bishan saw a 3.1% decline.
The largest drops were in the four- and five-room flats sectors. Prices of three-room flats remained the same while a 1.8% increase may have cheered up some executive flat sellers. Recent additions to the resale market such as flats at The Pinnacle @ Duxton did extremely well with two units sold at S$900,000 and $918,000. Property analysts are expecting four- and five-room flats here to hit the S$1 million mark soon. With its prime location, unique design and only being five years young, that may not be such an impossible task.
Overall, the projected decline in 2015 for the HDB market will mirror that of 2014 at a single-digit fall of 5-8%. Buyers may be buoyed by this news and have a good run this year as well. Industry experts are expecting a stable transaction level in the first two months of 2015 followed by an increase in activity in March after the Chinese New Year break.
City Fringe Homes: A Wider and Possibly Cheaper Pool
Filling in the gap between luxury and mass-market homes are the city fringe properties. However, sitting in this position means being more exposed to market forces such as a lull in the luxury property market. This may be a good thing as buyers may be looking at cheaper options but if a wider and possibly cheaper pool of options pops up in the suburbs in the form of mass-market suburban homes, this might be the first sector to suffer a backlash.
There has been a recent drop in city fringe home prices as developers are offering discounts to help boost sales. As the supply of these homes increase with approximately 2,411 new units being launched in 2014, so will the urgency to move units. City fringe homes registered a 5.3% price drop as compared to 4.3% in the luxury homes market and 2.2% in suburban private homes.
Projects where prices were lowered include The Panorama in Ang Mo Kio, Sky Habitat in Bishan and D’Leedon on Farrer Road. Alhough luxury homes hogged the headlines in 2014 with their decline in sales volume, property analysts are confident that the price decline will be minimal as most owners of city-centre homes will have the holding power to hang on to their properties.
Home Prices to Decline Further in 2015
This year the rate of decline for private home prices is expected to exceed that of 2014. Last year’s drop was estimated at 4% whereas industry analysts project an 8% drop this year. This new estimate for the private property sector will put it on par with resale HDB flats. In 2014, the public housing market reflected a 6% drop in prices.
Some market factors from last year are here to stay:
1) Tightened credit market
2) Stricter immigration policies
3) Weakening demand
4) Increasing supply of new homes
5) Higher stamp duties
While interest rates were low at a point in time last year, they are expected to rise this year, resulting in an even less favourable environment for the buy-and-sell of residential properties in particular.
This may put a fair bit of pressure on home sellers who may have to lower prices in order to make a sale. With developers competing for the same buyers with offers of discounts, rebates and other enticing options, resale private properties might struggle to stand out.
Landlords may also find that it is a tenant’s market as an onslaught of homes become ready for occupation in 2015. The most recent residential projects to come into the market this year include the 622-unit The Luxurie and 590-unit The Riversound Residences in Sengkang.
Coupled with a number of new launches planned for 2015 and fewer foreign buyers taking the bite, the only properties which may remain popular are mass-market homes in locations close to MRT stations, schools and shopping malls.
Office Rising, Residential Dropping
In Singapore alone, the outlook for office space looks extremely positive as supply remains low. With many more developmental and redevelopment opportunities arising within the next few years, the demand for office space is likely to rise and support commercial property prices and rents as a result.
On the residential front, property prices are expected to see a drop of up to 10% as the full impact of the large and fast increase of new properties finally hit the market. However, the luxury home market may see an influx of new investment money especially for properties with good long-term value.
More Transparency in Property Prices
A more accurate snapshot of the market to kick in during the first half of 2015 has been hinted by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) in a Straits Times Forum letter. This means that property buyers, investors and even policymakers will be able to get their hands on the full price of individual units in developer-sold properties.
Previously, buyers have generally been relying on the median prices of units in each residential project on the URA website; only when units have been purchased and only those with caveats lodged with the URA will have their prices disclosed.
With this, buyers may be better placed to negotiate their deals instead of relying on developers’ statistics which could have been slightly inflated with certain developers discounts not included.
HDB Resale: A Question of Supply and Demand
According to data compiled by SRX Property, HDB resale prices are looking at further declines with the government changing both the supply and demand, resulting in a far greater effect over the private resale market where only demand was affected. With more than 6,000 HDB upgraders in 2015 and in 2016, there will be a lot more supply in the resale market and in such a situation prices tend to come down quite a fair bit.
With the decoupling of the Build-to-Order (BTO) pricing from the resale market, more units are being introduced at rates below the market price which is good news for HDB homebuyers.

The Bad
Decline of Singapore Home Prices May Not Be Fast Enough for Some
Prices of residential properties, both private and public, may see a slow but continued decline in 2015. In 2014, the resale non-landed property market was ruled by an undulating price chart. After a recent rise in prices in October, prices once again fell in November. Property experts have found it impossible to predict future trends from such irregular movements and can only report the figures as they are.
In October for example, despite an increase in the number of mortgage sales and non-performing loans, prices of resale homes picked up nevertheless. Most of the information comes from URA’s quarterly statistics on private property transactions with caveats lodged. However, this may not truly reflect home sales volume and prices as they exclude factors such as developers’ discounts and rebates. Nevertheless, URA has mentioned disclosing prices of individual units in the near future and a more frequent report would perhaps be helpful to the industry.
On the HDB resale front, the Minister for National Development Khaw Boon Wan has said that he hoped to see “single-digit” fall in prices in 2015, indicating a gentle and gradual decline similar to that in 2014. The government is likely to tread lightly in this area as a drastic fall in home prices will bring about dissent from current homeowners and possibly affect their position in the next election. Buyers can expect a fall of about 8% in 2015.
Decline of Home Prices Not Reflective of Cooling Measures’ Power
It all boils down to the holding power of both buyers with their mortgages and home loans as well as developers with their unsold units. Despite a year of seemingly repressed property market growth, the actual decline in home prices as a direct effect of the property cooling measures may not be as steep as it feels like. In fact, URA figures show only a 3.9% drop in prices since 1 October 2013 to 30 September in 2014.
Since the property boom of 2009, home prices have increased 65% till the end of 2013 whereas the drop this year is a mere 4%. This means that property prices are still more than double of what they were before 2009.
Though the average total quantum price of homes may have dropped, psf prices are maintained at a reasonable level as the main change comes from diminishing property sizes. Though buyers’ affordability now ranges between S$1 million and S$1.3 million – figures which have held steady for the past five years – the median sizes of new homes have fallen from 1, 195 sq ft in 2009 to 753 sq ft in 2014. This is a sure sign that developers are still holding on to their asking prices while giving less in terms of liveable space.
Resale homes are holding up better than new homes however with a 3% drop as compared to a 6% drop of the latter. This is largely due to developers’ offers of discounts on unsold units. Examples of these can be seen at The Vermont At Cairnhill and Sky Habitat where more units were moved after a 10-15% cut in prices.
Moving into 2015, property analysts are expecting sales volume to be similar to 2014’s although home prices are unlikely to experience a drastic drop. Instead, a gentle decline into a comfortable equilibrium is what most experts are prone to agree on.
TDSR Not Going Anywhere
While the government is looking at easing and potentially lifting of some of the property cooling measures, we believe that the one measure that will stay firmly in place for the whole of 2015 will be the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework.
With residential prices set for further declines in the midst of a supply-laden market, many industry analysts feel that some of the earlier measures such as stamp duties, additional buyers’ stamp duties and even the loan-to-value limits may be tweaked by the authorities but not the TDSR framework.
Going by signals from both the private and public sectors, the government shows no sign of a U-turn with key figures reiterating that there has not been a significant enough decline in prices to make major changes to the measures. However, as the market weakens, there may just be some minor tweaks to give the market a nudge.

The Ugly
With the recent spikes in the three-month Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (SIBOR) which rose to 0.62% in the first week of January from 0.4% in October 2014, the consensus among experts is to expect even higher mortgage payments in 2015 due to the looming interest rate increase in the US.
According to a report by Maybank Kim Eng Research, a one percentage-point rise in SIBOR increases monthly mortgage payments by 12% assuming an 80% loan-to-value ratio and 25-year loan duration. The worst case scenario would be that of interest rates rising above the gross domestic product growth of 3.5% which would result in borrowers facing total debt-facing costs of above 60% of their income. The last time the three-month SIBOR was at that level was nine years ago back in 2006 before the global financial crisis.
While the variable mortgage rates are reset only once every three months, delaying the impact on most home borrowers, the alarm bells are starting to ring with the resurgent US economy showing no signs of stopping which could spur the US Federal Reserve to raise borrowing costs, according to United Overseas Bank Ltd and Maybank Kim Eng Research.
One possible silver lining would be that of the earlier than expected removal of some property cooling measures if we see a significant fall in property prices in line with the rise in interest rates.
For more information, please visit iproperty.com.sg.
 
'Extremely' challenging year for developer
Saturday, 7 February 2015
BY: THEAN LEE CHENG

There are too many offices, malls, hotels and high-rise residentials and few affordable housing projects

IT was a somewhat sombre 8th Malaysian Property Summit on Wednesday with property consultants and a taxman highlighting how prices will move post-goods and services tax (GST) as a result of an over supply in most sub-segments. There will be more clarity by the middle of the year.

The main take-away was the over supply in high rise residentals, hotel rooms, office and retail space. The shortage is in affordable housing, shop houses, industrial land and landed units.

The event was organised by the Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents and Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia (PEPS) .

Says organising chairman James Wong: “There is a mismatch of what the market demands and what’s available, with developers not paying attention to affordable housing the last two years as they concentratre on high-end and upper middle housing.”

Jones Lang Wootton senior vice-president David Jarnell says 2015 will be an “extremely challenging year” for developers who will have to be less greedy. “The sector is definitely moving into slower growth,” he says during a panel discussion.

PEPs president Datuk Siders Sittampalam says the impending GST will not have a major impact on pricing.

“The fundamentals of the market will affect pricing. But the GST will affect developers’ cost,” he says.

Obervers say unlike in Thailand, Singapore, Australia and Hong Kong, when the GST – or its equivalent – was introduced, there was a mild property boom in these countries. But this did not happen in Malaysia. Buyers and real estate personnel are waiting to see how prices will move after April.

The general sentiment is that developers may have to absorb the GST and the days of pricing one launch higher than the previous one are over.

Office sector

Presenting his paper on office space, Christopher Boyd of CBRE, says as of the end of 2014, total office supply stands at 96.6 million sq ft, excluding those in Putrajaya and Cyberjaya.

It was less than 10 million sq ft in the early 1970s.

“We have more office office space than Singapore, same level as Manila and Bangkok,” he says.

Last year, only 300,000 sq ft of space was absorbed by the market, six times less than in 2013, he points out.

Occupancy, currently at about 80%, is expected to deteriorate this year and beyond. Likewise, rental rates. The market is seeing a flight to quality and older buildings will struggle, but tenancies tend to be “sticky” as contracts are already signed and it costs to move, he says.

Occupancy is expected to move downwards with 18 million sq ft scheduled to be completed by end of 2017 in Greater KL, he says.

Falling oil price may affect demand as traditionally, oil and gas and banking/finance sectors require large amounts of office space in central/strategic areas in the city.

Oil and gas (O&G) players will be cautious about expanding or relocating in 2015, he says.

Rentals of quality offices are above RM8 per sq ft, with three offices breaking the RM10 mark, namely Menara Petronas, Menara Maxis and Integra Tower at The InterMark.

“Landlords of better quality new buildings have remained steadfast, and for the most part, held rents firm or raised them slightly. But is this situation going to last in 2015 as the over supply situation starts to be felt, and O&G prospects drop out?

Retail and hospitality

The retail scene tend to work in tandem with the hospitality sector. Adzman Shah Mohd Ariffin, ExaStrata Solutions chief real estate consultant says the rising number of malls and the increase in integrated developments which combine residential with retail component will further weaken sentiment. The increase in online shopping is another factor.

Adzman says 10 malls are due to enter the market this year, offering 5.25mil sq ft of net lettable area in the Klang Valley, with five million sq ft more in 2016/2017. Mall owners are doing all sorts of promotions and shows to attract shoppers because when they peg rental to sales, the onus falls on them to make sure their tenants do well. Occupancy from 2009 to the first half of last year was about 85%.

In the hotel sector, there is an over supply of rooms, says James Wong of VPC. He says there are about 200,000 hotel rooms in Malaysia with occupancy of between 60% to 65% compared with 80% to 85% in Singapore and Thailand.

Hotel room rates are the second lowest in Asean after Cambodia when in terms of economic status, Malaysia is in the Top 5.

“Local authorites do not know what the other local authorities are approving,” he says. Based on his research, there is a huge oversupply, with 60,000 rooms in the four to five star category, with the Klang Valley having 21,000 of them. The hotel and tourism sector attracted a total of 69 projects with approved total investments of RM3.88bil in the first half of 2014. Domestic investments accounted for most at RM3.7bil or 96%.

The number of approved hotel/tourism projects declined by 15.85% in the first half of 2014 compared with the same period a year ago. Capital investments declined by 41.67%.

Residential

Foo Gee Jen from C H Williams, Talhar & Wong says the number of serviced residences in the Klang Valley has overtaken those of condominium units.

Serviced residences are residentials built on commercial land. Their monthly service charges and utilities will be priced about 25% to 30% higher than a condomium project, which is built on residential land.

In 2010. the ratio between the two was 60% condominiums and 40% serviced apartments. It is now 46% condominium and 54% serviced residences.

He also drew focus on the dire shortage of affordable housing and the two million families who earn RM3,000 or less a month. Their affordable level is RM200,000.

This group represents a third of the country’s household and their needs have not been met even as the Government goes about talking about affordable housing priced at RM400,000 a unit.

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http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/...ely-challenging-year-for-developer/?style=biz
 
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Johor Baru to get 80,900 high-rise residentials
Monday, 9 February 2015
BY: THEAN LEE CHENG

KUALA LUMPUR: Authorities in Johor Baru have approved 80,900 units of high-rise residentials, of which 8,000 are currently being constructed, said KGV International Property Consultants.

This figure is expected to increase to about 90,000 units by 2017.

Executive director Samuel Tan said the 10%, or 8,000 units, was not an issue if the other 90% were not built.

“As it is, many developers in the area are already pulling their brakes. Some may cancel (their plans),” he said at the 8th Malaysian Property Summit organised by Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents and Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia.

If the developers limit the supply for the next two to three years, it would help until the four game changers, which would change the face of Johor, nears completion.

These four are the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore high-speed rail, the rapid transit system linking Johor with the city state, infrastructure projects and the Pengerang petroleum complex.

Tan said high-rise residentials had been the staple of developers in Johor since 2013 with Country Garden launching 9,000 units at one go that year in Danga Bay.

Since then, the mainland Chinese developer has changed its strategy as it has realised that the Johor market is unable “to take such a large number”.

Tan said the value and volume of transactions for all the property sub-segments comprising residential, commercial, development and others saw a huge jump in 2012 and 2013.

Volume increased from about 7,400 transactions to reach about 20,000 in 2012 and 2013. In average value terms, it jumped from RM456,000 to RM940,000 in a span of just two years.

This spike was followed by a drop in 2014, with value dropping to about RM840,000 and volume down to about 18,000 units, which is still high by comparison to the earlier years of Iskandar Malaysia that was officially launched in 2006.

“It’s been a marathon, not a sprint. And it is time for a breather,” Tan said.

He said Iskandar would go through different stages of growth but what was important was that “it must generate sustained growth and give confidence to the stakeholders.”

Going forward, he expects the interest to shift from residentials to shop offices priced from RM1.7mil with a monthly rental of RM5,000 and above.

The main areas of interest would be Nusajaya, Tebrau, Southern Link and Kulai/Senai. Private factories would be concentrated in Nusajaya, Kulai, Seelong/Senai and Pengerang in the future.

Quasi-government industrial parks would be in Sedenak and Tanjung Langsat.

http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/...to-get-80900-highrise-residentials/?style=biz
 
Johor Baru to get 80,900 high-rise residentials
Monday, 9 February 2015
BY: THEAN LEE CHENG

KUALA LUMPUR: Authorities in Johor Baru have approved 80,900 units of high-rise residentials, of which 8,000 are currently being constructed, said KGV International Property Consultants.

This figure is expected to increase to about 90,000 units by 2017.

Executive director Samuel Tan said the 10%, or 8,000 units, was not an issue if the other 90% were not built.

As it is, many developers in the area are already pulling their brakes. Some may cancel (their plans),” he said at the 8th Malaysian Property Summit organised by Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents and Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia.

If the developers limit the supply for the next two to three years, it would help until the four game changers, which would change the face of Johor, nears completion.

These four are the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore high-speed rail, the rapid transit system linking Johor with the city state, infrastructure projects and the Pengerang petroleum complex.

Tan said high-rise residentials had been the staple of developers in Johor since 2013 with Country Garden launching 9,000 units at one go that year in Danga Bay.

Since then, the mainland Chinese developer has changed its strategy as it has realised that the Johor market is unable “to take such a large number”.

Tan said the value and volume of transactions for all the property sub-segments comprising residential, commercial, development and others saw a huge jump in 2012 and 2013.

Volume increased from about 7,400 transactions to reach about 20,000 in 2012 and 2013. In average value terms, it jumped from RM456,000 to RM940,000 in a span of just two years.

This spike was followed by a drop in 2014, with value dropping to about RM840,000 and volume down to about 18,000 units, which is still high by comparison to the earlier years of Iskandar Malaysia that was officially launched in 2006.

“It’s been a marathon, not a sprint. And it is time for a breather,” Tan said.

He said Iskandar would go through different stages of growth but what was important was that “it must generate sustained growth and give confidence to the stakeholders.”

Going forward, he expects the interest to shift from residentials to shop offices priced from RM1.7mil with a monthly rental of RM5,000 and above.

The main areas of interest would be Nusajaya, Tebrau, Southern Link and Kulai/Senai. Private factories would be concentrated in Nusajaya, Kulai, Seelong/Senai and Pengerang in the future.

Quasi-government industrial parks would be in Sedenak and Tanjung Langsat.

http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/...to-get-80900-highrise-residentials/?style=biz

Another not so optimistic view on residential future from the expert.
Of the 4 game changers he mentioned, 3 are still "talk only" while the PIPC may be delayed further because PETRONAS's massive cut in expenditure.
So, in a nutshell, investors please consider carefully before commitment.
 
Another not so optimistic view on residential future from the expert.
Of the 4 game changers he mentioned, 3 are still "talk only" while the PIPC may be delayed further because PETRONAS's massive cut in expenditure.
So, in a nutshell, investors please consider carefully before commitment.

For consolation, the infrastructural projects are not just 'talk only'. Many road projects are being built all over Johor, with EDL and Coastal Highway being the most important accomplishments in the last 3 years. Haha
 
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