QUOTE(lamode @ Dec 29 2013, 11:15 AM)
QUOTE(twincharger07 @ Dec 29 2013, 12:25 PM)
Shall not be a bad news for highrise.HER no impact.
This post has been edited by xyyap: Dec 30 2013, 08:59 AM
Investment CYBERJAYA - Next Phase of Growth, Rebooting CYBERJAYA
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Dec 30 2013, 08:57 AM
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#141
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Dec 30 2013, 09:02 AM
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#142
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QUOTE(noblebaby @ Dec 29 2013, 12:21 AM) What he meant is people who is able to afford millions RM house in cyber wont bother the toll charges. Ketua pergi melancong?Similar to those who stay in millions SGD house in East coast wont bother the SGD6-7 to enter MBFC every morning. I know some kia shu ppls in Singapore will slow down or even stop infront of ERP gatentry just to save the 50ct lol This post has been edited by xyyap: Dec 30 2013, 09:05 AM |
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Jan 2 2014, 01:41 PM
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#144
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MEX 2
QUOTE(Ah jib @ Dec 31 2013, 05:19 PM) New highways to KL International Airport BY IZWAN IDRIS PETALING JAYA: UEM Group Bhd, which owns a 51% stake in toll concessionairePLUS Malaysia Bhd, has submitted a plan to the Government to build a new 45km highway connecting Senawang and the KL International Airport (KLIA) in Sepang, offering road users coming from the south a direct link to the airport that bypassed the often congested stretch between Seremban and Nilai on the North-South Expressway (NSE). The proposal also includes the construction of a 6km direct link from the Paroi exit on the Kajang-Seremban Expressway (LEKAS) to the Senawang interchange. This section of the proposed new highway would be toll-free, sources said. Construction cost for the Paroi-Senawang-KLIA-Salak Tinggi (SKLIA) highway was estimated at RM2.2bil, excluding land acquisitions that could add another RM500mil to the bill. The new highway would require Government support to make it viable, sources said. “Part of the toll-free connection between Paroi and Senawang will involve the construction of a new elevated highway on top of the existing road, while the remaining part of the bypass road will be build entirely on a new alignment,’’ a source said. As it is, there are at least 11 traffic lights between Paroi and Senawang on a 10km stretch of road that snakes through several industrial areas and housing estates. StarBiz on Dec 12 reported that PLUS wanted to build the Paroi-Senawang bypass road as part of its strategy to reduce the increasingly serious traffic congestion in the area, as well as on the NSE between Sungai Besi and Seremban. The proposal to build an alternative route is designed to ensure a smoother traffic flow from LEKAS to its Senawang interchange. PLUS will also be able to divert some of these traffic to its highways and minimise the potential loss of revenue should the project is taken up by its rivals. Stretching from Kajang Selatan to Paroi, the LEKAS highway was opened in 2008. It is 50% owned by IJM Corp Bhd, which had a few years back made a proposal to extend the 44km highway from Paroi to Senawang. That bid, however, was rejected by the Government. Meanwhile, there is another proposal to enhance the connectivity for road users to KLIA. Maju Expressway Sdn Bhd (MEX), which owns the concession for the KL-Putrajaya Highway (MEX) is undertaking a study to construct an 18km extension from its Putrajaya interchange to KLIA (MEX2 highway). The phase two of the highway was projected to cost about RM1bil to build. If approved, MEX claimed that its highway will provide the fastest route to KLIA from the Kuala Lumpur city centre. PLUS is the concession holder for the NSE, NSE Central Link (ELITE), North Klang Valley Expressway (NKVE), as well as the Seremban-Port Dickson Highway. TheEmployees Provident Fund (EPF) owns the remaining 49% stake in the concessionaire. UEM group is a unit of Khazanah Nasional Bhd. The Government, under its Budget for 2011, had already announced that it will provide financial support under a RM1bil facilitation fund “as a tipping point” to private sector-led initiatives in the construction of infrastructure projects. The highway from Paroi to KLIA was identified as one of the projects. UEM’s proposal for the SKLIA called for the alignment to be extended from KLIA to Salak Tinggi, linking the proposed highway to its interchange on ELITE from Senawang on the NSE. That would help improve traffic projection on the new highway, but it remained unclear whether it can attract enough traffic to make it viable without Government financial support. Most highways in Malaysia received some form of compensation or soft loan from the Government that helped make these projects viable enough for the private sector to take up. |
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Jan 2 2014, 01:54 PM
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#145
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QUOTE(CK15 @ Jan 1 2014, 09:01 PM) Think correct. Thanks!Paya Indah Wetland: http://www.malaysia-traveller.com/paya-indah-wetlands.html http://www.tripadvisor.com.sg/Attraction_R...s-Selangor.html |
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Jan 3 2014, 07:43 PM
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To compile Cyberjaya Photos @ Lowyat!
@ Facebook! |
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Jan 5 2014, 11:24 AM
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Side thread. Read carefully again...
Believe KL MRT 3 will be hard @ will take donkey years to materialize. This post has been edited by xyyap: Jan 5 2014, 11:25 AM |
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Jan 5 2014, 11:31 AM
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#148
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Jan 5 2014, 11:37 AM
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#149
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QUOTE(ManutdGiggs @ Jan 5 2014, 10:04 AM) Cj ll one day b a nice township of its own specialities. Just hope Dev dun over building high rises. Some landed ll give cj beta value. Ok to have more highrises in the future.But have to create more job opportunities, & family size condo price have to be capped at RM 500k+ Being proxy to Putrajaya, wish government continue to build up the accessibility, especially High Speed Train & MRT |
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Jan 5 2014, 08:18 PM
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#150
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Jan 5 2014, 08:21 PM
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QUOTE(New Klang @ Jan 5 2014, 02:31 PM) Semenyih, Kajang, Klang prices already moving very fast. Can't agree more, good for buyers looking for Own Stay NOW.So CBJ valuation is much much cheaper. I am aiming my cannon here. Garden Residence subsale RM 800k+? https://forum.lowyat.net/topic/2353563/+300 |
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Jan 5 2014, 08:49 PM
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#152
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Jan 5 2014, 08:53 PM
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#153
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Jan 6 2014, 10:21 PM
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#154
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Jan 12 2014, 11:32 PM
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#155
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Jan 14 2014, 10:44 AM
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Shared services sector booming, fresh grads missing out:
http://www.themalaymailonline.com/tech-gad...ads-missing-out JAN 10 — Companies in the shared services and outsourcing sector seem to be doing well, with existing players expanding and 56 new companies having opened up last year. The job opportunities are there in abundance, yet somehow fresh graduates are missing out on the opportunities that await them in the sector. Even some faculty members are not aware of the booming sector, according to Multimedia Development Corporation (MDeC) chief operating officer Ng Wan Peng (pic). MDeC oversees the Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC Malaysia) project, which includes what the agency calls the SSO Cluster. At a media briefing on Jan 9, Ng said some university faculty members have admitted to her that they were not aware of the success of the SSO cluster, where average salaries are higher than in the other MDeC clusters of InfoTech and Creative Content. This is why, since 2013, MDeC has been working with industry partners and relevant government agencies, such as Talent Corp, to raise the awareness amongst the 190,000 graduates joining the Malaysian talent pool yearly, on the career paths that lay before them. While in the past MDeC has focused on attracting information technology graduates to the sector, today the focus is on a broader pool of graduates to alert them to the opportunities that lie there, she said. For instance, the breakdown of jobs created from the 56 new SSO companies last year, 35 of which were non-Malaysian, shows that 27per cent are in BPO (Business Process Outsourcing), 62per cent in ITO (IT Outsourcing) and 11per cent in KPO (Knowledge Process Outsourcing). With the larger companies in the sector having mature processes and strong training programmes, together with strong on-the-job learning, it is no surprise that Mabel Tan, director of Shell Business Service Centre Sdn Bhd, said that her company looks for graduates with the right attitude and who want to learn. The nature of SSO jobs is that individuals can be trained for the roles. Both Ng and Tan pointed out that many of those in the SSO sector today are not in roles that tap the knowledge they picked up in university. “For instance, most of our IT SSO jobs are done by those who did not graduate with degrees in IT,” said Tan. Having said that, while the technology field is hot, finance and accounting are even hotter. Shell Business Service Centre has 2,000 jobs in SSO plus about 500 consultants, all Malaysians, who consult all over the world for the Shell Group. Yet Tan said that over the past three years, “there has been huge growth in the SSO sector for finance and accounting.” Recognising this, Talent Corp has partnered with the main accounting bodies in Malaysia to help build greater awareness about the career choices of accounting students beyond trying to join the main accounting firms. A strong perception among graduates and their parents is that most SSO jobs are akin to contact centre careers which are monotonous and not challenging. — DNA picHowever, it found a strong perception among graduates and their parents that most SSO jobs are akin to contact centre careers which are monotonous and not challenging. “We have to correct this mindset among them,” said Siti Norliza Mohd Sahar, head of Graduate Employability at Talent Corp. This perception has not hurt Shell Business Service Centre however, which has grown its SSO headcount from eight people in 1997 to 2,500 people in 2008, before outsourcing 1,500 IT-related jobs to other SSO companies in Cyberjaya. It has cemented its place as among the best shared services hubs in the Shell Group, with 65 per cent of its work being done for other Shell units around the world. MDeC plans to use the success of the likes of Shell Business Service Centre to help educate graduates on the possibilities that lay ahead for them. For Tan, what lays ahead is to position Malaysia so that it can win the responsibility to conduct upstream engineering for the Shell Group. That will be big – if it happens. Meanwhile, the Shell Group is initiating the transfer of brand-related and media work from Europe to Cyberjaya. Cost advantages are one part of it, but the other is that Malaysians have the skills set to handle this. Besides their language advantages, one other intangible strength is the ease by which Malaysians can work across cross-cultural teams. With Shell Business Service Centre in Cyberjaya serving 90 countries, it helps to be comfortable with different cultures, and Tan proudly attested to the high comfort level her team has with those from various cultures. |
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Jan 14 2014, 03:38 PM
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#157
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QUOTE(hasec @ Jan 14 2014, 02:58 PM) At the Edge Investment Forum on Real Estate in May this year, prospects of Cyberjaya were Slow & Steady better!discussed:- Kumar Tharmalingam, the Executive Director of Sunway Bhd commented that he believes Cyberjaya has reached its second stage of growth; the first stage was when it was launched and the second is when it’s maturing. He expressed that Cyberjaya will be more like a satellite town in the next few years as the population is growing. Previndran Singhe, the CEO of Zerin Properties said that Cyberjaya is a good location for investment, as there is a lot of commercial and institutional activity taking place there. In order for the investors to stay ahead of the competition, it was advised to choose a development that is differentiated by product, with good management and developers. Ho Chin Soon, the Director of Ho Chin Soon Research Sdn Bhd said that the proposed Putrajaya MRT ends at the Putrajaya express rail link station and a feeder bus will enable most residents of Cyberjaya to use the Putrajaya MRT line. The centre of gravity of Greater KL is heading south and Cyberjaya is poised to benefit. He added that Cyberjaya is easily accessible via the Maju Expressway currently. Source: The Edge Investment Forum 2013 on Real Estate Garden Residence, Cyberjaya benefits from this, since it's 5 minutes drive from the Putrajaya express rail link station. The 2 story Semi D there can fetch up to 1.8M - 1.9M easily this year This post has been edited by xyyap: Jan 14 2014, 03:48 PM |
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Jan 15 2014, 12:12 AM
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#158
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Do you think Cyberjaya is a property Hotspot?
YES [ 223 ] [43.64%] NO [ 217 ] [42.47%] DON'T KNOW [ 71 ] [13.89%] Total Votes: 511 Very fierce vote. When this thread hit 300+ pages, come on let this thread continue: https://forum.lowyat.net/topic/3039100/ Give me 1000+ buyers |
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Jan 15 2014, 09:43 AM
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#159
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QUOTE(Soros007 @ Jan 14 2014, 04:05 PM) Baby needs 3 months to make QUOTE(CMW123 @ Jan 14 2014, 04:25 PM) |
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Jan 15 2014, 10:33 PM
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QUOTE(Trivium @ Jan 15 2014, 02:24 PM) Hi guys, Own Stay better than Investment.Recently I went to Galeria Jualan Own by Setia Haruman master developer of cyberjaya, They very gain into SoHo @ CBD perdana 3, seek advice from all of u, there's any good side investing to this project, I really new in this property line... |
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