QUOTE(icemanfx @ Mar 13 2022, 03:30 PM)
Covid19 and MCO effect on properties, Q&A Session on the effects
Covid19 and MCO effect on properties, Q&A Session on the effects
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Mar 14 2022, 01:11 PM
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Senior Member
1,023 posts Joined: Jun 2019 |
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Apr 12 2022, 03:25 PM
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All Stars
21,458 posts Joined: Jul 2012 |
Despite Malaysia’s reputation as a country with a penchant for shopping, several malls in the capital city appear to be at risk of shutting down, with barely any of their commercial units still occupied and a drop in the number of shoppers and visitors.
It is a situation exacerbated by the onset of Covid-19 which left the economic sector reeling from the consecutive lockdowns imposed since early 2020 in a bid to keep the spread of the virus under control. And it is a situation that threatens to continue even with the country’s transition towards the endemic phase which began earlier this month. MalaysiaNow’s recent visit to a well-known shopping complex in Ampang, Selangor, found the three-storey building a ghost of its former self. Nearly 90% of the shoplots were unoccupied while the few that were open were mainly traditional massage parlours. More from https://www.malaysianow.com/news/2022/04/12...ls-fall-silent/ |
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Apr 12 2022, 06:37 PM
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Junior Member
940 posts Joined: Dec 2007 From: Shah Alam,Selangor |
Centrepoint and Galaxy has been slowly dying even before 2019
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Apr 13 2022, 06:26 AM
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Senior Member
2,834 posts Joined: Dec 2020 |
Very simply. There are too many malls. Everyone jumped on the serviced apartment + commercial mall/shops combo. Many are white elephants now.
No Chinese tourists = no commercialism. The only relevance shopping malls have now is to be experiential destinations not so much for shopping. Hence these malls that were stuck in the 80s/90s model will die. This post has been edited by Cavatzu: Apr 13 2022, 06:30 AM |
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Apr 13 2022, 01:28 PM
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65 posts Joined: Oct 2021 |
QUOTE(Cavatzu @ Apr 13 2022, 06:26 AM) Very simply. There are too many malls. Everyone jumped on the serviced apartment + commercial mall/shops combo. Many are white elephants now. Meaning it may impact the price of commercial property but not much impact on residential property?No Chinese tourists = no commercialism. The only relevance shopping malls have now is to be experiential destinations not so much for shopping. Hence these malls that were stuck in the 80s/90s model will die. |
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Apr 13 2022, 04:34 PM
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2,834 posts Joined: Dec 2020 |
QUOTE(yushk @ Apr 13 2022, 01:28 PM) Haiya there has been so much discourse on this already. Malaysia has not really benefited from this home ownership drive that has impacted places like US or Singapore where home prices have gone up 30% or more in the past 2 years. You have the lowest interest rates on record yet affordability is a real issue for the average folk. Business confidence in the country just needs to improve for the money to flow through again. bill11 liked this post
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Apr 13 2022, 08:17 PM
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Junior Member
65 posts Joined: Oct 2021 |
QUOTE(Cavatzu @ Apr 13 2022, 04:34 PM) Haiya there has been so much discourse on this already. Hope the environment will become better and better in the future. Malaysia has not really benefited from this home ownership drive that has impacted places like US or Singapore where home prices have gone up 30% or more in the past 2 years. You have the lowest interest rates on record yet affordability is a real issue for the average folk. Business confidence in the country just needs to improve for the money to flow through again. |
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May 9 2022, 01:49 PM
Show posts by this member only | IPv6 | Post
#348
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All Stars
21,458 posts Joined: Jul 2012 |
![]() 'Overhang' in subsale is believe to be a few times of primary/developers. https://www.thestar.com.my/business/busines...that-never-pops |
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Jul 4 2022, 10:03 AM
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All Stars
21,458 posts Joined: Jul 2012 |
Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) will raise rates by 25 basis points on Wednesday, its first consecutive rise in more than a decade, to rein in inflation stemming in part from a weaker ringgit as the US Federal Reserve hikes aggressively, a Reuters poll found.
BNM, although dealing with low inflation compared with many other economies, unexpectedly raised its key overnight policy rate by 25 basis points to 2.00 percent at its May meeting. All 22 economists in the June 27-July 1 poll forecast rates to rise by another 25 basis points to 2.25 percent at the July 6 meeting. The central bank last raised rates twice in a row in mid-2010. https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/627024 If covid19 was the earthquake, rate rise is the aftermath tsunami. |
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Jul 30 2022, 02:20 PM
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All Stars
21,458 posts Joined: Jul 2012 |
QUOTE(HikayatSalju @ Jul 30 2022, 11:02 AM) A whopping 1.9 million out of 9.6 million residential units purchased in Malaysia are unoccupied, according to numbers released by the statistics department in June, raising questions about the housing situation in the country amid the scramble to find affordable homes. Department director-general Mohd Uzir Mahidin said the data was collected in the 2020 population and housing census, and showed a steep increase from the 700,000 units registered as unoccupied just 10 years before in 2010. In Pahang, 18% of homes purchased are not fully occupied while in Melaka, the numbers are even higher at 30%. Speaking at a press conference, Uzir had attributed the situation in part to homeowners using such houses as temporary accommodation or homestays. In other cases, he said, the owners might possess a house in a particular area but work elsewhere. A similar trend has been ongoing in the US, where one out of every 10 homes is unoccupied – equivalent to about 16 million units. This is one of the highest figures in the world, followed by Japan (eight million), Brazil (7.9 million) and France (three million), according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Property expert Cha-Ly Koh said cities in Malaysia appeared to have been built without data or a comprehensive understanding of conditions. "A key metric that we track is the over and undersupply of housing in Malaysian cities," Koh, the CEO of a property data company in Petaling Jaya, said. "The areas with oversupply naturally translate to vacancies." Speaking to MalaysiaNow, Koh said that unoccupied homes were the result of two main issues, namely the use of houses as a commodity and policies that are not based on real data, coupled with the situation in the real estate market. Rosli Said of Universiti Malaya's architecture faculty said those who invest in real estate might do so in the belief that such assets will not depreciate in value. But he said this would also depend on the type of house as well as its location. "The data issued by the statistics department includes the units that are located in areas with low levels of economic activity," he said. "This leads to a lack of demand for these units. This is one of the factors leading to vacancies in houses offered for rent." About 59% of rental demand comes from the private sector with the rest attributed to civil servants. According to Rosli, tenants from the private sector gravitate towards areas with economic activity while government employees do not depend on location. If this trend continues, he said, only houses for rent in areas with economic activity will remain in demand while the number of unoccupied units in other locations will increase. At 76.9%, Malaysia's home ownership rate is one of the highest in the region. Nevertheless, owning a home is also considered difficult and unaffordable. "If housing is treated as a commodity, whether it shelters a family or not becomes a secondary concern," Koh said. "That's why you hear stories of discriminatory landlords who would rather leave their units vacant than rent them out to families who need them." Describing this as an artificial shortage, she said the government was taking the easiest route by simply building more houses. She said this was why government policy usually asked developers to cross-subsidise the construction of affordable housing, or increase the density of housing projects. However, units bought for housing are allowed to remain unoccupied for the accumulation of wealth, she added. "The government KPI may have been met but the shelter pressure has not been relieved," Koh said. "This cycle repeats itself to the point that it has risen to the 1.9 million vacant homes reported by the statistics department." Rosli meanwhile said the country might witness a housing crisis as tenants are increasingly unable to afford homes while investors cannot make repayments to financial institutions if the units that they buy, especially wholesale, fail to obtain the expected rent. At the moment, he said, there was no appropriate act to deal with the problem of speculation despite the constant changes to the real estate profit tax. "Appropriate measures should be enforced by limiting the purchase of affordable units, for example to five units," he said. He said local authorities could also help resolve the issue by limiting the rental period of "rent to own" homes to five years. The "rent to own" scheme was introduced several years ago to allow prospective buyers to test out a particular piece of property by renting it before deciding whether to buy it once the scheme ends. Under this scheme, no advance payments are required. Rosli suggested that advance payments be included in the monthly rent in the form of an annuity for the first five years. "This way, the buyers will not be burdened because they will continue to own the house at the same rental payments as the first five years," he said. Koh meanwhile said that increasing the property supply would not resolve much. Even though there are already 1.9 million unoccupied units, she said, it is difficult for first-time buyers to purchase these units from the original owners as they would need six to seven times the amount of cash compared to buying a unit in a new project. "Instead of supplying more housing to the market, the government could simply effect some changes to the rules and unlock these 1.9 million units to those looking to purchase a home," she said. "Young people should not be encouraged to buy new housing projects," she added. "Older or existing housing projects are better located, anyway." https://www.msn.com/en-my/news/national/the...52UH?li=BBr8Mk9 Cavatzu liked this post
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Jul 30 2022, 02:58 PM
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2,834 posts Joined: Dec 2020 |
QUOTE(icemanfx @ Jul 30 2022, 02:20 PM) 1.9M/9.6M so roughly 2 out of 10 homes is unoccupied with a lot more on the way and co-living antics. We really are number 1 in unsavoury categories. The critique on town planning is so apt. Hoot9Her liked this post
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Jul 30 2022, 03:27 PM
Show posts by this member only | IPv6 | Post
#352
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1,239 posts Joined: Jan 2022 |
Seems like 2nd home plan need to lower down requirements.
Foreigner min purchase price also need to lower down. Outside of KL min 2mils really die hang, not to said kl 1mil min also hard to push. |
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Jul 30 2022, 03:29 PM
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Junior Member
940 posts Joined: Dec 2007 From: Shah Alam,Selangor |
Launch more RSKU and RumaWIP is the best
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Jul 30 2022, 03:31 PM
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Senior Member
2,834 posts Joined: Dec 2020 |
QUOTE(wotpian @ Jul 30 2022, 03:27 PM) Seems like 2nd home plan need to lower down requirements. Umm it’s a hard one. The trend now is to discourage property for investment purposes. Let alone encourage foreigners to buy your country’s property. It just depends which swing the capitalism pendulum goes. The visa programme is already a discouragement of foreigners buying here if the lacklustre stats haven’t already done the work.Foreigner min purchase price also need to lower down. Outside of KL min 2mils really die hang, not to said kl 1mil min also hard to push. |
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Jul 31 2022, 01:03 AM
Show posts by this member only | IPv6 | Post
#355
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74 posts Joined: Jul 2022 |
Shouldn't things be improving now that the country has opened up?
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Jul 31 2022, 02:09 AM
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1,296 posts Joined: Nov 2019 |
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Jul 31 2022, 07:03 AM
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2,834 posts Joined: Dec 2020 |
Ongoing or systemic issues don’t go away overnight just because a pandemic crisis is somewhat over. The true extent of the aftermath is not apparent yet. icemanfx liked this post
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Jul 31 2022, 11:33 AM
Show posts by this member only | IPv6 | Post
#358
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All Stars
21,458 posts Joined: Jul 2012 |
QUOTE(Cavatzu @ Jul 31 2022, 07:03 AM) Ongoing or systemic issues don’t go away overnight just because a pandemic crisis is somewhat over. The true extent of the aftermath is not apparent yet. If covid19 pandemic was a earthquake, the aftermath economic recession could be a tsunami.This post has been edited by icemanfx: Jul 31 2022, 12:39 PM |
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