The Phnom Penh Post

Malaysia tackles property glut

- Hazlin Hassan

MALAYSIA’S plan to lower the minimum price at which foreigners are eligible to buy homes is meant to tackle the property glut, but analysts warn it could create a property bubble instead.

Earlier this month, the government announced that it will lower the threshold price from one million ringgit to 600,000 ringgit (from $240,000 to $140,000) per condominiu­m unit, in a bid to reduce the number of unsold apartments, which are worth 8.3 billion ringgit, in Malaysia’s major cities.

Azrul Azwar, chief economist at conglomera­te Johor Corporatio­n, said the move could encourage developers to build more high-rise units priced above 600,000 ringgit each, as well as spur property owners to jack up their prices in the secondary market, leading to a bubble.

“Developers should be compelled by market forces to bring down their selling prices as part of corrective measures to bring the oversuppli­ed high-rise residentia­l property market back to equilibriu­m,” he said.

He added that the government should instead punish property developers with hefty fines for unsold units.

The new policy has also roused fears of a “foreign invasion” of buyers from Singapore, Hong Kong and China.

Johor has 51,000 unsold properties, of which between 60 per cent and 70 per cent are priced at 600,000 ringgit and above.

Azrul notes that the new policy could reduce much of the southern state’s property overhang.

It is “almost certain to open the floodgates for Singaporea­ns to snap up urban highrise properties in Johor that would cost them less than $200,000. The lower price floor is likely to help reduce much of [ Johor’s] property overhang but at the cost of a foreign invasion, particular­ly from Singapore, Hong Kong and China”, the economist told the Straits Times.

Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng has clarified that t he lowered t hreshold is only applicable to ex isting condominiu­m and apartment units t hat are unsold. It will a lso only apply from Januar y 1 next year till t he end of t he year.

“It does not include new projects that are yet to be launched. This measure is expected to benefit the property sector without affecting the interest of Malaysians,” Lim said.

Experts have also accused the government of pandering to developers’ profit motives with this policy, by encouragin­g them to build more highend condos that most Malaysians cannot afford.

Figures from real estate consultanc­y Knight Frank show that 602 condo units were completed in Kuala Lumpur in the first half of this year, resulting in a cumulative supply of nearly 57,000 units.

And in the second half of this year, a further 7,197 units will enter the market.

“The pace of growth in transactio­n volume appears to lag behind incoming supply. Thus, the mismatch between supply and demand continues to widen,” Knight Frank said in its report.

Opposition leader Ismail Sabri Yaakob has said Malaysia should emulate the Hong Kong government, which has proposed charging developers a 200 per cent tax on the estimated annual rental value of unsold units.

“This is a better alternativ­e to control oversupply of unsold properties, hence ensuring developers build houses based on requiremen­ts and demand, not profitabil­ity and greed,” he said last week.

Last week, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said the new policy is aimed at averting an economic crisis.

“We have to sell them or developers will get into trouble. An overhang in property will result in a national crisis, which has happened in Hong Kong and Tokyo due to overdevelo­pment,” he added.

 ?? THE STRAITS TIMES ?? An upscale residentia­l developmen­t in Forest City, Johor. The southern Malaysian state has 51,000 unsold properties, of which between 60 and 70 per cent are priced at 600,000 ringgit ($140,000) and above.
THE STRAITS TIMES An upscale residentia­l developmen­t in Forest City, Johor. The southern Malaysian state has 51,000 unsold properties, of which between 60 and 70 per cent are priced at 600,000 ringgit ($140,000) and above.

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