Not sure how much the owner paid for it. Assuming he paid 350k rm full cash and now renting out at rm 1100. Thats 3.77% before tax and other arising expenses. Not too bad for both owner and tenant, both side got a decent deal. If this owner pay tax dutifully then the yield drop to 2++%.
Btw, this is a real rent paid by a tenant, not those quoted on iproperty , etc. Also, it is rented as an empty unit with only standard developer provided furnishing.
Depends on how one looks at it. If for myself, where I am very cautious about buying Johor properties as a foreigner for investment, I won't take the risk.
My simple calculation is as follows:
RM350k / RM1100 = 318 months or 26.5 years to recoup the full investment! That's too long a time frame.
Rental yield calculation is not so meaningful to me here because I have to give myself a lot of "safety margin" due to:
1. Flip flop policies in Malaysia that may disadvantage foreigner buyers
2. Property not easily resold in the market so there's a likelihood I may have to hold it for decades
3. Oversupply of condos in Johor
4. Type of property (Studio--too small) not favourable to family or Malaysian buyers
5. Unfavourable RM currency exchange which is dropping over the years
6. Periods where it is difficult to find new tenants once contract is over
We have not accounted for rental tax, property tax, repairs and refurbishment, management fees, etc. That will add to the costs for the owner.
But if I am the tenant myself, like I said, RM1100 is dirt cheap! So why not? The landlord is my slave in this case.