Sunday, January 13, 2013

Malaysian consortium to sell all 800 units in UK project by end-April


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 12 — The Malaysian joint-venture consortium for the £8 billion (RM38.9 billion) Battersea Power Station, which launched its local sales programme for the first phase today, is targeting to sell all 800 units by end-April.
The consortium comprises SP Setia Bhd, Sime Darby Bhd and the Employees Provident Fund.
SP Setia chief executive officer Tan Sri Liew Kee Sin said the consortium had allocated 400 units for the Malaysian market and the balance for the Singapore and Hong Kong markets.
“For the London market, which was launched on Wednesday, we have allocated over 200 units and given the overwhelming response from the sales, we might consider revising it upwards,” he said at a press conference after witnessing the launch of the sales programme here by Minister of Housing and Local Government Datuk Seri Chor Chee Heung.
Liew said the official sales figure would only be released on Monday.
The London Borough of Wandsworth granted detailed planning permission for phase one of the Battersea Power Station development on December 13, 2012.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer confirmed the United Kingdom government’s support for a £1 billion loan and a guarantee to extend the Northern Line underground monorail to Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station.
“The £1 billion is for the full value of the project and with this backup from the British government, the monorail extension will be ready,” he said.
Confident that the consortium would benefit immensely, Liew said profits would only be recognised upon completion of the first-phase development in 2016.
Battersea Power Station Development Co chief executive officer Rob Tincknell said phase two of the development would involve transforming the 1.8 million square feet power station into a mixed development of retail, offices, leisure, restaurants and over 300 residential units.
The first phase of the project, named Circus West, has a gross development value of £900 million, a mix of 800 units of one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments, townhouses and penthouses, as well as a blend of offices, shops and leisure and hospitality facilities.
Prices start from £338,000 for a studio, £423,000 for a one-bedroom, £613,000 for a two-bedroom and £894,000 for a three-bedroom apartment while a penthouse unit would cost £6 million. — Bernama

Tanjung Court folk protest against management firm


GEORGE TOWN: Some 30 residents of Tanjung Court Condominium in Bandar Baru Air Itam staged a protest outside the office of their property management company to air their grievances over several issues.
The condominium’s residents committee spokesman George Khoo said it was a wake-up call for officers of Bandar Baru Air Itam Management (BBAIM) Sdn Bhd to buck up on their performance.
“There are many issues that have not been resolved by the company to our satisfaction including its failure to collect maintenance fee arrears which amounts to more than RM200,000,” he told reporters yesterday.
“We have met the officers many times. Some of the promises made by them were not honoured. They are tardy in implementing things and they usually come up with all sorts of excuses.
“There was about two weeks’ delay in the implementation of Touch N Go system which was supposed to take off on Nov 8. Till now, the system is not fully operational since the anti-pass back system is not ready,” he said.
Khoo said the committee had requested that the security company be changed many times but it had fallen on deaf ears.
However, he said the security company’s service was abruptly terminated within 24 hours and a new one appointed to take over on Friday night.
“We believe this was done after they learnt about our protest. Before this, the officers have told us that they need to give one month’s notice to the company. They said it was not easy since they have not paid the company for two months,” he said.
Khoo said the company had not come up with any plans to increase revenue collection in Tanjung Court resulting in the condominium’s accounts being in the red for four years consecutively.
“I hope the company is not planning to raise maintenance fees. This is not acceptable to us,” he said.
He said residents were also not happy with the eight-odd contractors who are paid monthly for their services including sweeping, maintenance of lift, upkeep of swimming pool, chargeman and electrical services.
“There is lax supervision by BBAIM. We don’t know how these people were hired in the first place. We don’t know the duration of their contract and why their contacts are being renewed when the service rendered is of poor quality,” he said.
“We are paying about RM5,000 per month to the cleaning contractor. The common areas are still dirty. We have been talking about this problem endlessly but there is no solution in sight,” he said.
State Housing, Urban and Town Planning Committee chairman Wong Hon Wai and Paya Terubong assemblyman Yeoh Soon Hin, who were present at the protest, said they would look into the residents’ woes.
Wong said he would arrange for the residents to meet BBAIM directors who are top officers of Farlim Group Bhd.
Yeoh said the residents committee had expressed its wish to form its own management corporation to look after the property.
“Farlim Group should look into this matter. It can give up its right to manage the property,” he said.
BBAIM assistant manager M. Mutusamy said they would invite the residents committee to discuss the issues raised by it.
He said the company had appointed bill collectors to knock on the doors of those who failed to settle their maintenance dues.
“If they still fail to pay the money, we can bar them from driving into the condomi- nium by disabling their Touch ‘N Go cards,” he said. - The Star

Construction courts soon


PUTRAJAYA: A specialised construction court will be set up in Kuala Lumpur and Shah Alam soon to hear construction disputes as demand for projects continue to rise, Chief Justice Tun Arifin Zakaria said.
“Construction cases are unique as they involve technical issues, multiple parties and varying terms of payment. Thus, a specialised construction court would be beneficial to the industry. By having specialised judges, it will help in the speedy disposal of such cases,” Bernama reported him as saying at the opening of the Legal Year 2013 here.
The chief justice said the new court was among several initiatives to enhance performance and work quality.
Arifin said to address the significant increase in the number of cases brought forward to this year in the Federal Court, two Federal Court panels would be sitting every week from March.
He said to enable the Malaysian Bar and the Attorney-General's Chambers to improve their case presentations in complex cases, an electronic presentation system facility would be used.
Arifin said with the support of the Attorney-General's Chambers, the judiciary was seriously considering the establishment of a mediation division in the Chief Registrar's Office to undertake the promotion of mediation amongst litigants.
The chief justice also said that since Oct 16, the Federal Court had started issuing press summaries of the judgment of the court to assist the public in understanding the reasons behind the court's decision.
He said, it was part of the judiciary's efforts to make justice more transparent.
Arifin reaffirmed the judiciary's commitment to uphold its independence, saying the institution would strengthen itself against any attempt to undermine this attribute.
This would be done through training and closer supervision of members of the judiciary, he said.
“I wish to call upon members of the Bar Council and the public to restrain from corrupting the judges and officers in order to gain favours from them.
“For, in any corruption, there is a giver and a receiver. You all can stop it at your end,” he told some 400 people, comprising judges of the Federal Court, Court of Appeal, High Court and Sessions Court, judicial officers, members from the Bar Council and from the Attorney-General's Chambers and retired judges at the ceremony.
Arifin said the High Courts and subordinate courts nationwide had continued to maintain their high performance.
He said the High Courts disposed off more than 120,000 civil and 6,000 criminal cases while the Sessions Courts disposed off more than 130,000 civil and 27,000 criminal cases. The magistrate's courts disposed off 250,000 civil and more than 134,000 criminal cases.
He said 90.1% of the cases disposed off at the High Courts were within the nine-month timeline set, while the figure was 85.8% in the Sessions Courts. In the magistrate's courts 81.6% of cases were disposed off within the six-month timeline.
In his speech, Malaysian Bar president Lim Chee Wee said it had pledged its support to the chief justice to combat corruption, adding that it would approach and work with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission whenever there was a serious hint of corruption involving its members or the Bench. - The Star

Friday, January 11, 2013

The Cove Wanted


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Investing in a property is still best


THE Christmas and New Year celebrations offer us good reasons to indulge in extra spending — shopping for presents, overseas trips, parties and rewarding ourselves more lavishly than usual.
But now that the fireworks are over, what’s next?
The talk of the town these days is that the coming 13th general election have to be called before April 2013. We will know whether the ruling coalition will govern this country for yet another term. To endear themselves to the voters, the opposing coalitions are dishing out promises of reform and concession, but are we aware how these overtures, if implemented, will affect our pockets?
Reform and spending power
Well, any reform that will increase the spending power of the people is welcome. We are anxiously waiting for reforms that will lessen our tax burdens, abolish road tolls, increase subsidies on essential goods (particularly petrol), lower the prices of cars and provide free education opportunities for all.
However, these reforms are not made available to us — yet. Instead, the looming prediction that Parliament may be dissolved appears to have caused the general public to display a sense of anxiety and unwillingness to make financial commitments in property until the coming general election is over and the government of the day has assumed office.
With or without these perks, most of us still make financial resolutions with every intention of fulfilling them. But as the months pass, it is common for us to lose sight of our goals.
Conventional standards often call for a progressive career, comfortable home in a good neighbourhood, respectable ride, savings for children’s education and retirement. Sounds simple and achievable, but we know from experience that distractions creep in to dwarf our hard-earned savings aimed for these plans.
It boils down to our priorities and preferences. If you have X amount of cash, what would you do with it? Invest wisely
The prudent approach is to invest your hard-earned money in avenues that yield long-term returns. Early gratification like rewarding ourselves with a fancy vehicle (I refer to vehicles beyond our means) before securing our first property may not be a great idea, as that would be funding a depreciating asset.
I know a young professional who owns a Ferrari but lives in a rented a house. I can’t blame him as I did the same! Although, mine was not such a luxurious ride.
Buying a property may seem like a heavy commitment now with half-a-lifetime’s worth of mortgage repayments, especially if you are young and uncertain of your future plans.
Renting appears to promise freedom of one’s cash, but in the long term, you would be glad to have tightened your belt as property values could rake in lucrative returns over the years.
As an example, I refer to a family friend, Ting, the retired general manager of an elite country club. In his younger days, the accountant reckoned that it would be more feasible to rent a house rather than buying one.
In a way, he was right in that the rent was much lower than the mortgage payments. That was in the late 1980s.
However, the world economy rose in the early 1990s, followed by a global stock market super-bull run, and local property prices have since been soaring without pause. The value of a RM200,000 link house rocketed to over RM300,000 within a few years during that period.
On seeing the phenomenon, he hastily bought his first property, a double-storey link house in an exclusive country club resort for RM400,000. That house is currently valued at about RM1.2 million.
He has since paid off his mortgage and does not have to worry about paying thousands of ringgit in rent every month.
Had Ting held off on buying that piece of property, he would have been paying monthly rent of RM3,000 till today, and thereafter, mortgage payments of easily RM5,000 every month. His timely decision saved him from all of that.
Understandably, young adults who have just entered the work force may face difficulty doing the same and some may require parental assistance. If that is not an option, it would help to have a thorough savings plan drawn up.
It is our culture in Asia for working adults to continue living with the parents as this alleviates us of the burden of paying mortgage payments or rent every month, allows us to enjoy laundry services and home-cooked meals. With such comfort, it’s easy to be unmotivated and complacent.
For young adults, the chance to buy a house or condominium unit is fast slipping away, what with the doubling of prices in the last several years. Friends and clients who are property developers say prices in the city centre, have risen from RM800 per sq ft in 2004, and to RM1,600 in 2012.
Rising property prices
Property prices rise with demand, especially demand from foreign investors, some of who have set up home in the city centre, what with the successful implementation of the Malaysia, My Second Home Programme (MM2H).
Therefore, the past few years have seen developers change their strategy in a bid to attract foreign investors.
Recently, we often hear the marketing for “bungalows in the sky,” lavish units exceeding the more conventional 1,500sq ft to 2,000sq ft. Some of these luxurious condominiums are larger than 3,000sq ft. Clearly, these products are not catering to the young working class.
These days, a double-storey link house in any prime location is selling at above RM1mil and a 1,200sq ft apartment is going for approximately RM700,000.
Pretty soon, such properties will be unatainable for the younger generation.
Furthermore, there’s Bank Negara’s credit tightening measures such as the 70% loan cap on the margin of financing for a third property purchase and other stringent lending criteria for consumer banks to follow.
Owning property isn’t going to get any easier as the years pass.
A fair perspective of the potential capital appreciation can be gained via a comparison between the KL and Singapore city centres.
A 1,500sq ft apartment in prime areas in Singapore is priced around S$4mil (RM10mil), whereas a similar unit in the Golden Triangle costs some RM2.5mil to RM3mil.
If we were to use worldwide trends in property price appreciation as a guide, we would see property prices in Kuala Lumpur have room to rise.
With relatively low property prices in the city centre, and rental yields at 6.21% (which is among the highest in the region; with Singapore at 2.94% and Hong Kong at 3.23%), investing poses an excellent proposition.
I read recently that in Hong Kong the unit rate (per square metre) for an apartment costs US$19,323 (RM59,000), while Singapore follows closely at US$16,727.
Fortunately for us, Kuala Lumpur lags, at US$2,182 in spite of our relatively high standards of living.
Consider this — the sub-prime financial crisis and the subsequent financial turmoil in the European Union did not have any negative impact on prices in our property market and the recent The Star Property Fair 2012 attracted throngs of buyers and investors. To me, this shows the high demand for property in Malaysia.
In my opinion, local property prices will not be determined by the results of the general election. Whichever coalition wins, property prices will continue to rise. So, it is up to you to make the right money moves in 2013 and make your dreams come true.
May God bless you and your loved ones with love, peace, joy and excellent health! - The Star
n Chermaine Poo, a chartered accountant by profession, was trained in corporate finance. A former beauty queen, she has since gained popularity as an actress, TV host, commercial talent and emcee. If you have any questions on money matters, send her an email at info@chermainepoo.com or follow her on www.chermainepoo.com, www.facebook.com/chermainepoo and www.twitter.com/chermainepoo.

1,000 apply for 234 apartments


THE PENANG Housing Department has received more than 1,000 applications for the 24-storey low medium-cost apartment Shineville Garden in Air Itam.
State Town and Country Planning, Housing and Arts Committee chairman Wong Hon Wai said the project being developed by Zantalite Enterprise (M) Sdn Bhd is scheduled for completion by year-end.
The 24-storey block will house 234 units and will be sold at RM72,000 for each of the 700sq ft, three-bedroom units.
“The state has imposed on the developer to widen a 350m-long stretch in Lebuhraya Thean Teik from the Lebuhraya Thean Teik-Lorong Batu Lanchang traffic light junction,” he told a press conference recently.
He said the developer was required to widen the 60ft-wide (18.3m) stretch by another 40ft (12.2m).
Wong said the road expansion project — from four lanes to six — would also include a free-flow left-turn for traffic from Lebuh-raya Thean Teik to Lorong Batu Lanchang (towards the Little Sisters of The Poor), which is expected to be completed once the road is widened.
He said the condition was imposed to ensure there is no traffic bottleneck at the Lebuhraya Thean Teik-Lorong Batu Lanchang traffic light junction with the additional population once the housing project is completed.
There are two other housing projects by Zantalite Enterprise — Shineville Park condominium and Shineville Villas terrace at the 4ha land.
Zantalite Enterprise executive director Ong Soo Yong said the company was trying to resolve the road alignment problem with the Penang Municipal Council and the land office before being able to start the road-widening project.
“We expect to widen the road by the first quarter of the year and the road widening project will take about three to four months to complete,” Ong added.
For details, call the state Housing Department at 04-6505392. - The Star

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Venice Residence Wanted


Those who wish to sell or let his or her Venice Residence, Batu Maung, Penang, pls contact us soonest possible. Ready buyer is awaiting for you. 


Beli Rumah Tanpa Wang Pendahuluan Di Pulau Pinang

Mengapa sewa bila anda boleh membeli rumah tanpa wang pendahuluan? Para professinal kami dapat menbantu anda mencapai impian anda sekiranya anda memenuhi syarat-syarat bank, hubungi kami segere untuk mengetahui lebih lanjut tentang program ini.

Dengan program ini, impian anda bukan lagi angan-angan tetapi satu cara untuk memiliki rumah sendiri dan dalam jangka panjang untung dengan kenaikan harga rumah yang sudah menjadi susah untuk dijankau oleh ramai orang.

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

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Ferringhi Height Wanted


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Rumah Dikehendaki Dengan Segera

Jika anda hendak menjual rumah pangsa, pangsapuri, tanah, kedai dan kilang, anda dialu-alukan untuk menhubungi kami dengan segera untuk membincang tentang penjualannya. Pembeli sedia ada sedang menunggu.

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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Bukit Dumbar Residences For Rent (3T3)

Looking for terrace house in Bukit Dumbar, Gelugor? If yes, you would find this lovely brand new house perfectly fit your high requirements. Quiet neihgbourhood with quality furnishing. In addition, strategically located near Penang bridge, Tesco and all amenities. What more do you expect? Contact us now for inspection without delay....going, going, gone!

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Major property companies said to need financing to fund projects


PETALING JAYA: Several property developers, including UEM Land Holdings BhdSP Setia Bhd and Mah Sing Group Bhd, have embarked on fund raising and more developers are expected to do the same to raise their respective war chests.
According to RHB Research Institute Sdn Bhd, other developers which could need financing over the medium term include IJM Land Bhd, Sunway and Eastern & Oriental Bhd.
“But the fundraising would not be in the immediate term and we are comfortable with their purposes,” the research house added.
RHB Research expects fund raising exercises to happen over the medium term, which it said could be a better timing as the market stabilises post-general election.
“We also feel more comfortable given the financing purposes of these three companies. IJM Land is expected to use the proceeds mainly to fund its The Light Phase 2 commercial project in Penang, which is very marketable given the successful take-off of Light Linear, and funding requirement is mitigated as the company is also likely to tie up with strategic partners at project level for a 38-acre site,” the research house said. Sunway, on the other hand, will use the money mainly for the construction of its property investment assets over the next three to four years, which will be disposed of to the real estate investment trusts when they mature.
The key property assets are Sunway Pinnacle, Sunway Pyramid 3 and Sunway Velocity Mall, which are potentially worth a total gross development value of RM1.3bil-RM1.5bil.
As for E&O, money will be used mainly to fund the reclamation and development of Seri Tanjung Pinang 2. Last year, UEM Land issed RM600mil 5-year sukuk, 15% placement exercise for SP Setia to raise RM900mil to RM1bil as well as rights issue for Mah Sing to raise RM400mil.
RHB Research expects the likely correction for the property sector this round ahead of the election to be less drastic, as the previous selldown in early 2008 could also be partially led by the initial outbreak of the subprime crisis in the United States.
“We expect the physical property market to recover this year, supported by our analysis on population growth cycle and our gross domestic product growth forecast of 5.4% for 2013, as well as the influx of liquidity,” it said.
It added that foreign buying would be an additional boost to the overall market, as regional countries such as Hong Kong and Singapore continue to tighten measures to curb foreign property purchases.
The research house believes market sentiment would likely take precedence over the sector fundamentals in first quarter.
“We advocate investors to look for bargain-hunting opportunities when valuations become attractive. We prefer larger cap stocks such as IJM Land, UEM Land, Sunway and UOA.” - The Star

SPNB to build affordable homes


MALACCA: Syarikat Perumahan Negara Berhad (SPNB) will build 21,000 units under the People-Friendly Homes programme this year, itschairman Datuk Wira Idris Harun said.
He said SPNB would build the houses, costing RM65,000 each, with a RM20,000 subsidy and a 2% interest subsidy on the loan.
Idris said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak had allocated RM320mil to SPNB last September to build 22,855 residential units. - The Star

Monday, January 7, 2013

Penang Real Estate | Penang Property | Penang Properties: Fully Furnished Terrace For Rent (2T5)

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E Park Wanted


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Straits Quay Wanted


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Quayside Wanted


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Sunday, January 6, 2013

Desa Putra Wanted


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Property Along Main Road Wanted


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Sunny Point Wanted


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Vantage Point Wanted


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Saturday, January 5, 2013

Palm Court or Pangsapuri Nipah Wanted


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Rahim: Build more affordable housing


WHILE the overall property sector has stabilised last year, with further consolidation this year, Savills Rahim & co executive chairman Datuk Abdul Rahim Rahman says his main concern is the affordable housing sector.
“Instead of 30% low cost housing allocation, a policy from the 1980s imposed on developers, let us do 20% low-cost housing and 10% in affordable housing, or 15/15 with medium cost housing priced between RM100,000 and RM400,000, and within 10km of the developer's development site.
“This provision of medium cost housing must be imposed on developers,” Rahim says.
Rahim says as a result of government policies in the early 1980s, Malaysia now has more than one million of low cost houses which were built at a cost ranging between RM25,000 and RM42,000 depending on the state, as land is a state matter.
But despite having built more than one milion low cost houses, the location and allocation of these houses has not been successful. There are some areas which have too many low-cost housing until there are no takers, while in other areas, there are not enough of them, says Rahim.
Another issue is the location of some of these houses. A developer, says Rahim, may be developing in a high-end area but the location of its low-cost housing are located far away in a place which lack public amenities and transportation.
Rahim says not only are low cost housing misplaced, but Malaysia's young working population are also displaced as a result of the steep rises the past couple of years.
He says there are 3.5 million out of the country's 28 million population who earn between RM1,500 and RM5,000 a month. But the number of houses priced between RM100,000 and RM400,000 are only 2.3 million.
“This means there is a shortage of more than one million units within this price range,” he says.
On a broader level, Rahim says assuming a household of about 4.3 per household, the country has more than 6.3 million households but the country only has 4.5 million of housing which he would defined as liveable and fit for habitation. This excludes squatters and houses with no proper access and no sewage systems and proper stairs.
He says there are about one million housing which are not fit for habitation and the government need to allocate funds to make these housing fit for habitation. Most of these are in the rural areas.
While making the one million houses fit for habitation, there is still a shortage of 1.8 million “habitable” houses,” he says.
But today's pricing has made affordability an issue, which the government and the private sector need to address, and speedily.
“As for 2013, I expect the landed residential sector to continue to be stable, despite the cooling period in 2012,” he says.
“We desperately need more affordable housing,” he says.
The government has budgeted for RM1.9bil to build 123,000 affordable housing. - The Star

High prices remain an issue


FOR the last few years, two issues have hogged the market affordability and the steep rise in prices in the landed residential sector, which subsequently spilled over to the high-rise condominium market in the Klang Valley and in other cities. There are a few exceptions.
While affordability will continue to bog down the sector this year despite the easy credit environment, there seems no respite from the high prices of previous years, as prices remain stubbornly high.
Notwithstanding that, there has been some semblance of sanity in 2012.
Consultants polled concluded that the overall property market took a long-awaited and much-sought-after breather last year with “minimal price increases”.
Several developers say the pending general election has dampened the market somewhat. Generally, consultants and developers prefer “a slow and steady” rise in prices, as steep rises may mean steep falls.
Property consultants say the market was “stable” in 2012, with active transactions in the second half.
CBRE's executive Paul Khong expects this year to remain “relatively flat” while DTZ Nawawi Tie Leung Property DTZ's executive director Brian Koh says “prices have gone too far ahead of the curve for many potential upgraders, unless developers adjust their pricing to more realistic levels.”
Two factors are working against such a scenario.
The first is land cost. Land prices have gone up a lot the last several years, says Fiabci (Malaysia chapter) president Yeoh Thit Sang. Higher land cost translates into higher prices. Generally, for high-rise high-end residential land cost ranges between 15% and 25% in Kuala Lumpur compared with 25% and 40% in Singapore, says Yeoh.
“There has been a scramble for land by developers and many of them are buying land in Kajang and Rawang, some buy unconverted agricultural land, which means they will have to pay a premium to get it converted.”
Another challenge is the shortage of labour, a fact acknowleged byBolton Bhd and the Sunway group.
Most of the building and construction workers in Malaysia come from Indonesia. Foreign investments are flowing into Indonesia and this has created a healthy job market there, which means they can seek work at home instead of leaving their families, says Yeoh.
“Our contractors are finding it tough to find skilled labour. We have successfully trained them and they now have a pool of skilled labour working in their own property sector,” says Yeoh.
This, he says, explains why the property players and the Government are considering using the Industrialised Building System (IBS) which requires a huge capital outlay.
New launches versus established housing
New launches are expected to do better than the secondary market chiefly because of “financial engineering” prevalent in the market in the form of Developers Interest Bearing Scheme and other freebies “given” by developers, which are actually factored in the price of the house.
Jordan Lee & Jaafar Sdn Bhd managing director P. Tangga Peragasamsays so long as “progress” is equated with development, income levels and trying to match (up to) the developed nations, “financial engineering” will continue.
“We should instead be looking at conserving our resources, planning our developments properly and looking into issues like safety, comfort levels, transport, environment, pollution. instead of being so fixated on progress',” he says.
Says PPC International Sdn Bhd managing director Siders Sittampalam: “We predict a slowdown in the mid to high-end segment of the market.”
With few exceptions, developers have, in 2012, reported that anything RM1mil and above have been challenging to sell. This is expected to spill over into this year.
Notwithstanding this, BRDB's Serai have generated 60% sales last year. This, says marketing director K.C. Chong was due to its location, the BRDB branding and the super luxury and niche factor of Serai at between RM1,300 and RM1,500 per sq ft.
This takes us then to the Kuala Lumpur City Centre (KLCC). In that location, some of the units are hovering more than the RM1,600 mark.
The question that begs to be asked is, how is that Serai is able to generate sales while the units in and around KLCC are languishing? Serai offers units 4,000 sq ft and above.
Sources say city-living attracts the younger generation who do not have the purchasing power to build a home in the KLCC area. The KLCC market is for the high network individuals who want city living and there are not many of those around. Generally, Malaysians who have that buying and earning power may opt for a location in Damansara Heights or Kenny Hills, which offer a more home and suburban feel.
Another issue is the traffic congestion in the city, which can be a huge drawback.
The likes of niche developments like Serai and KLCC condominiums aside, it is the masses and the 30 to 40-something that most developers are targeting today.
The last couple of years, due to steep price hike, developers offered small one-bedroom units in the region of 500sq ft.
Such units have limited audience comprising singles or two-somes. This segment of the market enjoys a huge investment market. A large segment of this market may enter the secondary market or be put up for rental.
Jordan Lee & Jaafar Sdn Bhd's managing director P. Tangga Peragasam says rentals have not moved up with property prices, returns may be low when compared with prices.
“This situation will continue to have some effect on the sector this year. If inflation sets in because of the low interest rates, then the effect could be different, especially if interest rates are forced upwards by inflation.
Tangga says hotspots in the Klang Valley will continue to be Petaling Jaya and surrounding areas. Those areas coming within new proposed MRT stations will also see appreciation in values. - The Star

Of Kim Kardashian and Armenian Street


WHAT has celebrity Kim Kardashian got to do with Armenian Street? Well, for a start, she’s surely the most famous Armenian and the only one that young people can identify with although she lives in the United States.
She is a fourth generation Armenian and while her mother is English, she speaks strongly of her ethnic origins although she was born and raised in Los Angeles. Kardashian is a massive reality TV show star and more recently made global news for being pregnant with rapper Kanye West’s child.
Armenia is a landlocked country surrounded by Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iran, Georgia, but the Armenian diaspora are now spread all over Europe, Australia and the US.
During the early days of Penang, there was a significant number of Armenian businessmen and traders who made Penang their home.
Most of these Armenians were brought in from India and many settled in Penang, Malacca, Yangon, Singapore and Batavia, the old Jakarta.
But more importantly, they helped to make Penang grand. High on the list has to be the Sarkies Brothers — Martin, Togram and Arshak — who set up the E & O Hotel and the Raffles in Singapore. Certainly, these hotels remain among the grandest in the region.
The brothers also ran the Sea View Hotel in Tanjung Bungah and for a while the Crag Hotel in Penang Hill, according to reports.
The other famous Armenian included trader and planter Arathoon Anthony — in which Aratoon Road, off Burmah Road, is named after. He later founded the stock broking firm of A.A. Anthony and Co.
The Anthonys, according to reports, were among the Armenian diaspora that settled in Shiraz in Persia, now modern Iran, and then in Mumbai and in Kolkata before coming to Penang.
The well-known George Town Dispensary, opposite Komtar in Penang Road, was set up by Dr Thaddeus Avetoom, who is said to have set up practice in Beach Street.
Those keen to find out more about these respected Armenians can read the work by Nadia Wright who has researched the communities in Malaysia and Singapore.
Ilsa Sharp wrote: “The Sarkies of the E & O shared with their fellow Armenians a cultural trait: the sort of flamboyance and open extravagant often associated with Russians, or even Italians. The Armenians love entertaining, good company, song and dance, the arts, food and wine — even in hostile climes, they always try to plant their beloved grapevines, as they also did in Penang, at the church rectory.”
The local Hokkiens calls Armenian Street pun thau kong hang as there was a Tua Peh Kong kongsi-house in the street and is said to be also known as the Kian Tek Tong secret society where they kept their gods. Some older Penangites call the street phah tang keh or striking copper street as there was once Malay braziers’ shops there.
In fact, Armenian Street was once known as Malay Lane because it was an early Malay settlement.
According to Khoo Salma, there were powerful Malay chiefs at Armenian Street such as Syed Mohamed Alatas and Che Long — who forged an alliance with the Red Flag secret society.
Khoo Tian Poh, the Red Flag head, even gave his daughter to Syed Mohamed to be his second wife.
Today, Armenian Street has regained its shine — thanks to the work of Lithuanian artist Ernest Zacharevic with his beautiful murals there and in Muntri Street, Weld Quay, Penang Road, Ah Quee Street and Cannon Street.
Armenian Street is part of the heritage trail and has now become a must-stop for visitors, who want to catch a glimpse of the state’s history and the wall paintings. - The Star

Chor: Easing of condition to help the young own property


PETALING JAYA: The move to further liberalise conditions for the My First Home scheme is to make it easier for young working adults to own their first property, said Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Seri Chor Chee Heung.
He said young adults who just joined the workforce, especially those in the Klang Valley, Penang and Johor, would need a permanent place to stay.
“I believe that with this new move, more young people will take up this scheme to fulfil their dreams of owning their own property,” said Chor, adding that renting was not justified because they would not eventually own the property.
Under the new conditions which came into effect on Jan 1, young adults can apply for loans to buy houses immediately after getting jobs. Previously, they had to work for at least six months before they could qualify.
The requirement to have a minimum savings record of three months in banks had been axed while the income limit of borrowers was raised to RM5,000 from RM3,000 previously.
For joint borrowers, the income limit had been increased to RM10,000 from RM6,000.
Describing the move as “one of the best news” for young adults, Chor said this showed that the Government had their interest at heart.
On whether such a move would get more young people in debt, he said this was one of the Govern­ment’s initiatives for them to own their homes and “no one was forcing them to buy”.
Beauty writer Samantha Chow, 23, said she would stick to her five-year plan to buy a condominium.
“I know what I earn and how much I can afford. I do not want to be in debt,” she said.
Account executive Yong Li May, 23, said she had no immediate plan to buy any property, adding that she would need to find out more about the scheme.
“At the end of the day, it depends on affordability as I do not want to pay high instalments,” she said.
However, National House Buyers Association secretary-general Chang Kim Loong claimed that the move would encourage impulse buying, which might lead the youths into debt at an early age.
“The Government should not be seen as marketing agents for developers or promoting financial obligations for banks. Youths should not be bound into debt so young for the next 25 to 30 years,” he said. - The Star

Office space developers need to adjust supply to market conditions


THE fundamental that bears watching for the office market is rents, and rents are a function of business profitability.
Ultimately, the general levels of profitability of businesses in any city sets the sustainable level of rents for that city and it also explains the different levels of rent that prevail for different cities.
The current average level of Grade A office rents in Kuala Lumpur can be pegged at RM6.50 to RM7 per sq ft per month, and the long term initial yield or return for Grade A office space is about 7%, on a net property income basis. From time to time this yield has compressed to lower numbers, pushing values up, but over the long term, the market seems to return to the “equilibrium level” of seven when the exuberance dies.
The existing office space in Greater Kuala Lumpur or the Klang Valley grew from 76.38 million sq ft in December 2004, to 99.62 million sq ft, by September 2012, i.e. adding 23.24 million sq ft or a high 2.91 million sq ft a year on average between the intervening eight years, according to figures from Napic.
Occupied space on the other hand increased by 1.95 million sq ft a year on average.
The office submarket, from an overall point of view, is in a state of oversupply. 23.85% of total space being vacant is certainly a high figure when a normal percentage ought to be between 5% and 10%.
Apart from this, there are 16.86 million sq ft of incoming space (under various stages of construction) and a further 5.21 million sq ft of planned supply, which are space that has been approved for development but for which construction has not commenced as yet.
This, however, could balloon to a substantially higher figure if all the new office space in the contemplation (now or in the near future) from major commercial projects, especially the ETP related projects, are taken into account.
In 2013, and the years to come, the challenge for developers (institutional and entrepreneur-driven alike) of office space is to make extraordinary efforts to adjust their supply to conditions in the market, or to find specific niches, new demand of the required magnitude stemming from the ETP projects notwithstanding.
The green agenda with its 10-odd percentage of added cost and lower annual running cost needs a higher rental to ensure long term sustainability and this question is yet to be confirmed as yet in Kuala Lumpur although early evidence from the first few green buildings indicate such possibilities.
Having said all that, it must be remembered that the office market cannot be looked at, solely, through the lens of total numbers. The market exists in various submarkets, depending on location and product type and each segment has specific demand and supply dynamics of its own.
A flash back to the Asian Financial Crisis of the mid-1990s and the Global Financial crises instruct us that the office market in particular, and unlike the residential subsector, is inclined towards higher degrees of volatility, and it did sink below replacement cost in the first crisis and stayed below that level for many years, whilst in the second crisis it took a dive of 20%, and has not recovered to previous peaks, five years hence.
The Klang Valley office market is by far the predominant office market in Malaysia. Penang, by comparison has only 9.03 million sq ft of equivalent, modern, existing space and Johor Baru, 6.21 million sq ft, but the fundamentals that drive those markets are similar.
The retail sector is also driven by income from rents and rents for this sector are dependent in-turn on retail turnovers and it is this that bears the closest study and monitoring.
Turnovers depend on the multitude of shoppers, including tourists, and their propensity to spend. In Kuala Lumpur the long-term rental return on average for Grade A shopping centres used to be about 8%, but this is on a structural transit towards 7% as shopping centres become a more mainstream asset.
Real Estate Investment Trusts or REITS which are at a high point in investor interest on account of a confluence of factors including the spill-over from continued, quantitative easing measures in the developed countries, are also being led by REITs with a bias towards the retail sector. The new, stapled structure for REITs that is to be introduced by the IPO from KLCCP properties, with its total portfolio of RM15bil, may add a further boost to this asset class the timing, in the introduction of such a big portfolio, insofar as the REIT industry as a whole is concerned, could be a major positive for the industry.
The retail submarket (modern shopping centres) in the Klang Valley is relatively stronger than the office market, but it also has shadows of looming oversupply as more centres from the pipeline come onstream. But a well-managed retail centre by its inherent higher sophistication (than an office building), has better strength, to tide over temporary downturns because once a shopping centre captures the loyalty of a target segment of clientele, usually through a prolonged period of astute mall management, it is extremely difficult for new comers to dislodge it.
Last year's buzz in the retail subsector in the Klang Valley was the addition of new malls such as the Setia City Mall and the Paradigm Mall and the introduction of fresh brands such as H&M and Uniqlo, two fashion brands that have come into the country and have started to shake up that segment.
Other sectors such as food and beverage and cineplexes are doing well in most of the shopping centres.
The hotel subsector is ruled by the twin, and interrelated income fundamentals i.e. the room revenue and occupancy rates. The value of a well-managed five-star hotel can be pegged at about RM1.5mil a room with a net yield of between 7% and 8%.
In the agricultural sector, oil palm plantation values, as indicated by asking and concluded prices, and since the heightened period of volatility in palm oil prices since five to six years ago, are still not clearly settled within a range to enable an easily predictable typical value.
We know that values, for the top, well-managed estates have gone up from the RM15,000 per acre benchmark of the past, but the new benchmark level, as to whether it is in the low RM20,000 or the higher RM20,000 is as yet to be clearly established.
Better clarity may come when global conditions in the bigger commodities market and underlying demand from the big emerging markets are also more settled. - The Star
Elvin Fernandez believes in the free market and timely nudging by policy makers and key market participants to iron out any, and only where needed, imperfections in the system. To do this, and over time, they need a steady stream of in-depth market knowledge and insight.

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Friday, January 4, 2013

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