Tuesday, October 8, 2013

More demand for secondary property


Prices of new homes in primary market too high for most people
Geh: 76% of urban wage earners can’t afford homes in the primary market.
Some 70% of residential property transacted in the country today are in the secondary market, while the remaining 30% are newly launched projects.
Raine & Horne Malaysia (Penang) director Michael Geh said more people were going after secondary property because of the pricing which ranged between RM72,000 and RM350,000.
“This market has been very active in the last 12 months and I foresee that it will be very active for the next six months, in terms of sales and rental,” he said at the recent Malaysian Secondary Property Exhibition (MASPEX) Penang 2013 at the Penang Times Square.
“Another reason for its popularity is that the secondary property is already built which means buyers can move in immediately.”
Geh said that in the primary market, many residential units were now being sold at a high price due to market demand and inflation among other factors.
“It is only due to the recent Bank Negara credit curbs that the rise in property prices has slowed a bit,” he said.
“These high price tags for new residential projects has made owning a home a distant dream for the middle class.


“The rental market will thrive in such circumstances as more turn to renting instead of buying their own homes.”

On the affordability level of new houses, Geh said that according to the Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Abdul Rahman Dahlan, about 76% of urban wage earners in the country earned RM5,000 or less each month.
“This means 76% of the urban working population can’t afford to purchase their own homes in the primary market,” he said.
Meanwhile, Malaysian Institute of Estate Agents president Siva Shanker said between 5,000 and 7,000 people visited the three-day fair.
“We received some 2,000 enquiries, and about 200 of them turned into sales,” he said.
“We are still gathering information on the deals closed at the fair.”
An estimated RM1.5billion worth of secondary property was showcased during the three-day event.
The event featured more than 1,000 units of residential property in Penang and a few in Kuala Lumpur.

房政部探讨计划 奖掖建可负担房屋


(吉隆坡7日讯)城市和谐、房屋及地方政府部长拿督阿都拉曼指出,该部正在研究及探讨为有意要承建可负担房屋的发展商,提供相关奖掖,以在国内增设更多可负担房屋。
他说:“这是一项长期性的计划,目前还在商讨阶段,可建议向发展商发放的奖掖包括提供税务及进口准证方面的优惠。”
他是于今日出席“世界人居日”推介礼时,如是指出。
另外,阿都拉曼也说,他保证在人民房屋计划下出售的房屋单位价格,不会随着建筑成本涨价而提高。
确保房屋单位 不随成本提高
他说,房屋单位价格在东马及西马将各别维持在35万令吉及42万令吉的售价,保持不变,政府目前并没有计划要提高房屋售价,这些房屋单位宽度介于500至750平方公尺,设有3间房及一个晾衣处。
他续称,该部也希望政府能在2014年财政预算案中考虑增加可负担房屋计划的财政预算。- 光华

Monday, October 7, 2013

City & Country: Showcasing courtyard homes in Penang


OVER the years, Malaysian developers have turned Penang island into one of the hottest property markets in the country. In the mix is Runnymede Group of Companies.
Established in 1994 by its managing director Datuk Ramzan Ibrahim with Lembaga Tabung Angkatan Tentera, the group took its name from the heritage building Runnymede Hotel in Penang.
Prior to starting Runnymede, Ramzan worked for Citibank, which he joined in 1974. “I underwent intensive training at Citibank,” he recalls. “And after two years, the bank put me in property. There was a massive global property market meltdown in 1975 and the bank decided to recruit 60 officers from all over the world to be trained to handle the property business.
“We were sent to Paris for training for 3½ months where we learnt valuation and quantity surveying and were taught all the technical knowledge needed to understand the property market well.”
Clearly, all that training stood Ramzan in good stead over the years as Runnymede was able to withstand not only the 1997/98 Asian financial crisis, but also the 2008/09 global meltdown. On top of that, it has managed to survive in the highly competitive property industry.
“The key is how you structure your transactions, purchase the land and, more importantly, identify your property and select the site for your development,” remarks Ramzan.
His advice to young developers is: “Don’t be greedy. In terms of prices, you must ensure you can sell some units to break even. For instance, the slowdown today was caused by the central bank’s move to stop the market from overheating. One has to be receptive to it.
“You could come up with some innovative structure or move on to another project that could diversify your risks. If you can see there will be a slowdown and that your cost will be affected, you have to adjust accordingly. You must be on your toes because the property market is cyclical. When the times are good, you must move quickly.”
We always ask ‘what if?’ So we always build into our plans a Plan B. - Ong
Ramzan’s right-hand man and technical director Ong See Lian attests to his boss’ emphasis on risk management. “We always ask ‘what if?’ So we always build into our plans a Plan B. In case something happens to the original plan, we can start on Plan B straightaway.”
The Sanctuary’s Vilaris Courtyard Homes 
Runnymede’s maiden project in Penang is the 28-acre The Sanctuary in Batu Uban. Situated about 10 minutes from the Penang International Airport and five minutes from Queensbay Shopping Mall, The Sanctuary is a premier gated community and is being developed in four phases.
The RM160 million Phase 1, which is also called The Sanctuary, sits on 12.81 acres and features 56 high-end bungalows, 11 semi-detached houses and two townhouses. This phase, which boasts RM1.5 million worth of security features, was completed in 2010 and is now fully occupied.
Runnymede is now launching the RM125 million Phase 2, which is called Vilaris Courtyard Homes. According to Ramzan, Vilaris is a combination of the words “villa” and “laris” (which means to sell well in Bahasa Malaysia).
The 5.36-acre Vilaris offers 56 courtyard homes with a minimum area of 24ft by 80ft. The built-ups start at 3,940 sq ft and the launch price at RM2.3 million. The take-up rate is about 50% after 24 units were snapped up at an earlier private preview.
As Vilaris is a low-density development, space is not an issue. “We are not a quantity developer but niche,” Ramzan points out.
Once completed, the courtyard houses will offer design elements that are not common. “When we were designing the houses, we thought of the people who would be living in them, especially the different generations,” says Ramzan. “Also incorporated into Vilaris is a modern rendition of traditional Peranakan [or Straits-born Chinese] designs, such as inner courtyards.”
How the courtyard homes will look like once completed
Interestingly, the Vilaris show unit features a porch that slopes beneath the first level of the house. “We have basically tucked the cars below the house,” Ramzan explains. “So when you open the sliding doors for ventilation, you have an unobstructed view.”
According to Ong, the porch is also designed in such a way that it serves as a space for small functions.
There are two entrances to the houses. One has to ascend some steps to reach the main entrance while the second is on the lower level, which leads one to a space that Ramzan says has three possible uses.
It could be a granny flat with access to a small back garden for the older generation to potter around. It is also private because of a linear garden in the back. “Boundary to boundary, there are 20ft between the houses,” Ong says.
The space could also be a SoHo. “It would be ideal for an office for those who work from home,” says Ramzan. “It is separate from the rest of the house and will not disturb the occupants.”
Lastly, it could be used as guest quarters, a den, a children’s rumpus room or an audio-visual room. The key word here is flexibility.
The courtyard on the first level of the homes brings the Peranakan element to light. It allows in plenty of natural light, which is something Ramzan is passionate about. “Natural light and cross-ventilation are very important,” he says, gesturing to the double-volume windows of the staircase to prove his point.
The first level is an open space that flows seamlessly from the living and dining areas to the kitchen. The airiness and spaciousness give the homeowner flexibility in designing the interior to his taste, says Ramzan. However, under the deed of mutual covenant, the homeowner must maintain the façade of the house. The en suite bedrooms are on the top floor of the homes.
Another unique design element that the developer has built into Vilaris is the option for some of the units to have a lift. At present, 19 units have lifts, says Ramzan, adding that not all homebuyers want a lift. However, if one buys a unit with space for a lift and wants one installed before construction starts, Runnymede will do it for a fee. After vacant possession, the homeowner has to undertake the installation and cost himself.
Ramzan says Phase 3 of The Sanctuary will feature three condominium towers with 500 units but will not reveal the details, except to say the phase will be different and something not seen before in Penang. A preview is scheduled for the first quarter of next year.
Top: The linear park within the development. Bottom-Left: The family area in the Vilaris show unit. Bottom-Right: The design allows plenty of natural light into the homes
The last parcel will feature a stratified high-rise, but all Ramzan and Ong are willing to share is that it will be eco-friendly. Previews will possibly start in 2015.
As the Penang property market is still quite active, Ramzan and Ong see bright prospects for the rest of this year and next year, barring unforeseen circumstances.
“The market will not move as aggressively as it did last year because of Bank Negara Malaysia’s initiatives, but it will still be on an upward trend,” opines Ramzan. “The speculators are quite quiet now. They are the ones who use DIBS [developer interest-bearing scheme] to buy four or five houses and wait. But they will slowly vanish. When that happens, the market will be much healthier.”
Ong agrees. “The market will be sustainable and property values will continue to rise as land gets scarcer and the population increases. Malaysia will become attractive to foreign buyers as well because relative to other major cities in Asia, our properties are still very affordable.”
At present, Runnymede has landbank in Penang, Kuala Lumpur and Western Australia, where it has a one-acre residential project on Swan River in Perth and a 25-acre tract in the Margaret River region for a resort and residential development. The details of these projects are still being ironed out.
The group also has 20 acres of development land in Penang and 12 acres in Kuala Lumpur, plans for which are still being drawn up.

This article first appeared in The Edge Malaysia Weekly, on September 23, 2013. 

Sunday, October 6, 2013

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Friday, October 4, 2013

Mapex expected to ring in RM300m sales

PETALING JAYA: Real Estate and Housing Developers' Association Malaysia (Rehda) is upbeat that the Malaysia Property Exposition (Mapex) next month will generate some RM300 million in new property sales.



According to Mapex organising committee chairman and Rehda immediate past president, Datuk Ng Seing Liong, the value of the properties on display will top RM20 billion.

"We are quite bullish on Mapex as more people are coming out to buy their first property. We are also expecting a large number of owner occupiers to come forth," Ng said at a media briefing on Mapex recently.

Mapex, which will be held at the Mid Valley Exhibition Centre from October 25 to 27, will showcase over 20,000 properties from 90 property developers.

The developers include NazaTTDI, Bina Puri Properties, Glomac, I&P Group, IJM Land, IOI Properties, PKNS, Tropicana Corporation, Bandar Utama Development, MKH and new player, Eco World Development.

There will be 242 exhibition booths displaying properties priced between RM270,000 and RM5 million, located in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Johor, Malacca, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang and Sarawak.

SP Setia Bhd and Salvo Property Group will also showcase their respective developments in London and Australia.

Ng said that Mapex is a good platform to shop for properties as buyers will get first-hand information about the developers, their respective projects and location, and yield comparison.

Key players in the industry will be there to offer useful tips on making sound property investments.

There will also be services and advice offered by banks such as Citibank Bhd, Standard Chartered Bank and Bank Islam Malaysia Bhd, as well as government agencies.

"I encourage those who have not purchased their first property to look at Mapex. Your home is, at the end of the day, your investment," said Ng.

Mapex will open its doors from 10am to 9pm daily and admission is free.

Business Times

Penang and Zenith to sign undersea tunnel job on Sunday


KUALA LUMPUR: Consortium Zenith BUCG Sdn Bhd will sign a preliminary agreement with the Penang government this Sunday to carry out feasibility studies and detailed design works (FSDD) for the proposed Penang undersea tunnel, which reportedly will cost RM6.3 billion.

“This is the prelude to the major road and tunnel works that we will execute after we have submitted the feasibility studies and after it has been approved,” Zenith BUCG chairman Datuk Zarul Ahmad toldThe Edge Financial Daily.

“The main agreement will come after we receive this approval, then we will proceed with the detailed design and detailed environmental impact assessment (DEIA). Once the DEIA has been approved, we will start construction,” he said.

On Sunday, Zenith BUCG will also sign an agreement with China Railway Construction Corp International (CRCC), a China state-owned conglomerate, for a detailed design of the project, engineering, procurement and construction of the major roads and tunnels.

Penang chief minister Lim Guan Eng and CRCC’s chairman will be present for the signing ceremony this Sunday.
Zarul: This is the prelude to the major road and tunnel works that we will execute after we have submitted the feasibility studies and after it has been approved.
CRCC is currently in a joint venture with Zenith Construction Sdn Bhd for the RM6.3 billion project. Together they own a 70% stake in Zenith BUCG. The remaining members in the consortium are Beijing Urban Construction Group, Sri Tinggi Sdn Bhd and Juteras Sdn Bhd, each of which hold a 10% stake. However, it is not clear yet how much equity each partner will pump into the deal.
In a previous interview with The Edge, Zarul said bankers, both local and international banks, were keen to provide funding for the project. The 10-year job will see the construction of a 6.5km undersea tunnel connecting George Town with Butterworth, and three bypasses on Penang island of over 20km, including a tunnel portion to divert traffic.

The project will be funded without a government soft loan. The funding structure will involve the Penang government awarding 110 acres of its entitled landbank on Eastern & Oriental Bhd’s Sri Tanjung Pinang 2 and a 30-year toll concession to operate the tunnel.

The 110 acres that Zenith BUCG will receive are split, with 50 acres along the shoreline of Gurney Drive and the other 60 acres on the reclaimed island itself.


This article first appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, on October 03, 2013.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Concern over rising house prices


KOTA KINABALU: Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin has expressed his concern over escalating prices of houses, which have made it increasingly difficult for people to own homes.
“House prices have skyrocketed. I often hear complaints that terrace houses can cost as much as RM500,000. Who can afford such houses?” asked the Deputy Prime Minister.
Muhyiddin said that due to family obligations, even those earning RM10,000 would have difficulty servicing loans for a RM500,000 house, which used to cost between RM140,000 and RM200,000 several years ago.
He was speaking to reporters after officiating at the ground-breaking ceremony for the People’s Housing Project (PPR), costing RM80mil, in Kepayan Ridge here yesterday.
Muhyiddin said a comprehensive approach was needed to address the demand for affordable homes, involving the federal and state governments as well as the private sector.
Muhyiddin said that while the Federal Government was willing to help fund the schemes, states needed to provide the land.
“We may need the involvement of financial institutions, such as the Employees Provident Fund and the banks as well,” he said.
Muhyiddin added that Urban Well-being, Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Abdul Rahman Dahlan had been tasked to hold discussions with state governments to identify the sites and determine the funds required to build a million affordable homes nationwide.
He said the Federal Government was subsidising about RM88,000 for each affordable housing unit.
“The cost of constructing each unit is about RM130,000 while they were being sold at RM42,000,” he said, adding that those who rent the units pay RM124 a month.
In his speech, Muhyiddin said that although the Federal Government would provide allocations for affordable housing projects, the target might be derailed if the sites were not available or a huge sum was required to acquire the land.
“Thus, we hope that the Sabah government can provide suitable sites, not only in Kota Kinabalu, but also in other areas in the state,” he said, adding that Sabah was given priority for affordable housing projects to cater to the needs of the lower income group.
Meanwhile, Abdul Rahman said that nearly 70,000 affordable housing units had been built at 92 schemes nationwide. - The Star

Mastermind in real estate scam nabbed by police in PJ


SHAH ALAM: Two members of a real estate scam syndicate were nabbed by police while in the midst of “negotiating” a deal with a potential victim.
Police arrested the two men at a coffee shop in Jalan SS3/59, Taman Bahagia, Petaling Jaya, around 1.30pm last Friday.
Selangor Commercial Crime Investigation Department chief Asst Comm Chong Mun Phing said the men, part of a real estate syndicate, were meeting with someone on a “business deal” during the operation.
“We arrested the two men, both aged 58. One of them was the mastermind of the syndicate,” she said at the state police headquarters yesterday.
She said the group’s modus operandi was that the mastermind, posing as a senior agent from a reputable real estate firm, would approach his target looking to sell or lease a business property.
“He would then get an accomplice to pose as a buyer, who would pay for the property with a post-dated cheque.
“The mastermind would also receive a post-dated cheque for his commission,” she said.
However, the mastermind would falsify the date and cash out the commission cheque before the original cheque bounces.
The police seized ATM cards, photocopies of ICs and business cards belonging to the mastermind under multiple aliases.
ACP Chong said the syndicate has been linked to at least 18 cheating cases in Selangor involving RM80,200 from their victims, with more similar cases in Kuala Lumpur and Negri Sembilan. - The Star

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Plight of kampung land owners


Where’s the prosecution against the 205 unlicensed housing developers?
ABOUT two years ago, an English daily highlighted the plight of land owners who had entered into joint ventures with unlicensed developers to build houses on their (home owners’) land.
Most of these deals involved land in the kampung (or villages). When these partnerships turned soured and were subsequently highlighted in the press, theHousing Ministry warned it was going to catch these businessmen, most of whom were small-time developers out to make a quick buck.
However, until today, no action seems to have been taken on these errant developers while the victims continue in their miseries and financial nightmares due to abandoned projects and botched joint ventures.
The Housing Ministry had warned that it was going to catch many businessmen, even small-time ones, as it was going to make it a requirement that all those who wished to develop a housing estate of only five houses should get a developer’s licence.
The Ministry seems rather proud of its wide-ranging powers and had a swooping determination (to weed out these unlicensed developers). It is really unfortunate nothing seems to have come out of that incident.
Swarms of entrepreneurs of the kampung variety, and some city slickers too, had invaded the countryside, and signed on owners of kampung land on the promise of turning them (the land owners) into developers. The wish was to turn idle kampung land into properly-built houses to sell to kampung people, usually by having joint ventures with the land owners.
“Give me your land to develop and I will give you X number of houses, and I shall take Y number of houses for my troubles; no cost to you, no hassles with government servants, no bank loans; no worries at all.” The current deal is 30:70; 30 % for the land proprietor and 70% for the housing developer.
Tricks of the trade
Kampung people as usual were wary; they were not going to buy till the project had got under way, and the proof to them was to give at least a house to the land owner and an enormous upfront deposit as the most convincing evidence of the developer’s sincerity. Perhaps, an upfront RM500,000 would be an ideal bait.
Firstly, said the developer, he needed the money to start building the land owners’ houses so it was not difficult to persuade them to charge their lands for the purpose. The other houses will have to wait including mine, said the developer most sweetly: no risk there you see, the land is still yours.
The developer then left for the city to apply for his licence which required the payment of a deposit to the Housing Ministry, and, of course, there were other payments to be made to various parties in the Government and arrangements had to be made with a construction company; all of which helped to collect the loan money from the land-owner-chargor.
However, the developer has not been heard from for some time now. The land owner/ would-be kampung entrepreneur/chargor went to the Housing Ministry to complain and demanded action to be taken and he was confident this will be done. You see, he knows the wakil rakyat.
Alas, said the legal officer to the kampong man: “So sorry, you had dealt with a person who has no license to be a developer. Under the law, we have no powers to prosecute an unlicensed developer who has abandoned the project.”
“Take action against him (the housing developer) for not having a licence; he has done all that a developer does including (entering into) contracts with intending purchasers and collecting deposits from them. There are at least 10 of them,” said the kampung man.
It is said, “the law is an ass” or that seems how we have made it out to be.
What the Housing Ministry’s legal officer could not bring himself to say is that the legal officers had tied their own hands by adopting a strange, restrictive reading of the law that to qualify as a housing developer, he should have undertaken to build and actually sell, at least, five houses, and to the legal officers it meant producing at least that number of house buyers to testify that they had indeed bought houses from a bogus housing developer!
The sale and purchase agreements and other documentary evidence and the evidence even of the developer’s own staff do not constitute evidence; the developer must plead guilty or there must be at least five buyers coming forward to give evidence; till then there is going to be no legal action against the bogus housing developer.
A request made by the Housing Ministry to the Bar Council for its advice on the professional liability of solicitors who act for unlicensed developers, sent more than a year ago, is still under consideration. At the latest count, there were at least 115 law firms, according to the records of the Housing Ministry, who did not seem to care to find out if their developer-clients were licensed or not.
The irony is it does not seem to matter whether the developer is licensed or not; they all abandon their projects with impunity.
Sadly, most of the lands in the rural areas are Malay Reserve Land which come under greater protection from the state but the banks are now gearing up to foreclose the only wealth the would-be kampung entrepreneur ever had, and had intended to bequeath to his children the way he had inherited it, coming from nenek moyang days.
Cry of the naive victims
Now, where do we go from here when the very people who initiated the housing laws shun their responsibilities? Shouldn’t buyers from unlicensed housing developers have the same protection as those buying from licensed ones? Where are the rescue plans for the naive victims of these Malay Reserve Land? Mind you, there are mostly current and retired civil servants.
Note: It has been two years since the list of the unlicensed housing developers has been unearthed.
Chang Kim Loong is the honorary secretary-general of the National House Buyers Association (www.hba.org.my), a non-profit, non-governmental organisation (NGO) manned by volunteers. He is also a NGO Councillor at the Subang Jaya Municipality Council. - The Star

Hunza plans to start RM7bil project in Bayan Baru in 2015


AFTER its Gurney Paragon project, Hunza Properties Bhd plans to focus on the development of commercial projects on the island and in Seberang Prai.
The group plans to start a RM7bil commercial city project in 2015 in Bayan Baru in the south-west district, a RM700mil commercial-cum-residential development in Juru, and a hotel in Tanjung Tokong.
Group executive chairman Datuk Khor Teng Tong tells StarBizWeek that the commercial city project, to be located on 16.1ha in Bayan Baru, would take 10 years to complete.
“There will be at least two four-to-five-star hotels, a shopping mall, college, high-end condominiums and office towers.
“We have engaged Australian and Singaporean architects to provide consultation on the design and concept of the project,” Khor says.
The shopping mall would be twice the size of the present Gurney Paragon shopping mall.
The project site is four times the size of the Gurney Paragon land.
“We are now building 690 units of flats to relocate the squatters on the site,” he adds.
While the group had expected the Gurney Paragon project to place Hunza in Penang’s development spotlight, the Bayan Baru project would propel Hunza to the national level, according to Khor.
The group expects demand for high-end schemes in Penang to rise, as the infrastructure on the island is improving with the completion of the second bridge, slated by October.
“There is also the RM8bil infrastructure package which includes the 6.5km undersea tunnel project linking Gurney Drive and Bagan Ajam, the 4.2km Gurney Drive-Lebuhraya Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu bypass, the 4.6km Lebuhraya Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu-Bandar Baru Air Itam bypass and a 12km road connecting Tanjung Bungah and Teluk Bahang, which are being planned to take the infrastructure in Penang to the next level,” Khor says.
The group is also planning a high-end hotel project in Tanjung Tokong, according to Khor.
In Juru, the group plans to develop a RM700mil commercial-cum-residential scheme which will include a RM60mil to RM70mil four-star hotel on 14.9ha.
“This will be the group’s first hotel, which will have 250 to 300 rooms. The scheme also includes a hypermarket, leisure facilities, and commercial and residential properties,” he says.
Khor says the planning proposal for the scheme would be submitted to the local authorities soon.
“We hope to commence work by the third quarter of 2014. The whole project will take three to five years to complete.
“The hotel will be managed by professionals and will provide steady revenue stream for the group besides the Gurney Paragon Mall,” Khor adds.
On the group’s residential schemes, Khor says it will launch the RM500mil Alila 2 project on 4ha in Tanjung Bungah next year.
“There will be 270 condominium units. We will apply for the green building index and construction quality assessment system certifications for the project.”
In Seberang Prai, the group has launched in the third quarter some 173 two-storey terraced houses in Bandar Putra Bertam, Kepala Batas.
“The project has to date achieved sales of more than 50%,” he adds. - The Star