Philippine Daily Inquirer

Property sector remains bullish, says UBS

- By Doris C. Dumlao

THE PHILIPPINE property market is on a roll, with land values already exceeding peak levels prior to the 1997 Asian financial crisis for the first time, but have yet to reach worrisome levels, an economist from investment bank UBS said.

In his Dec. 18 research note “Philippine­s By the Numbers (2014),” UBS economist Edward Teather said that in the local asset market, the property sector had picked up and had yet to show signs of stopping.

“Real price gains in Manila property prices have been less buoyant than those on the equity market and real Manila property prices do not look stretched,” Teather said.

He also noted that the local equity market had held up well relative to peers even as the global markets deteriorat­ed in late 2014. The Philippine Stock Exchange index rose by 22.8 percent to close at 7,230.57 this year.

Teather said stock markets and other asset prices were among the best forward-looking indicators for economic growth and profits. He noted that a sustained rise in stock markets could also have significan­t effects on consumptio­n and investment, given its wealth effects on consumers and the lowering of the cost of capital for listed firms.

Property prices can have a similar effect, with residentia­l property valuations particular­ly relevant for household balance sheets, he added.

“Philippine financial markets appear to have tempered their expectatio­ns of strong growth in the coming quarters as equity markets have stabilized,” Teather said.

Based on an earlier report by property consulting firm Colliers Philippine­s, land values in the Philippine­s had already exceeded their peak for the first time since the 1997 Asian financial crisis. This was after the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) sold two lots in Fort Bonifacio, measuring 1,600 square meters each, to privately held firms Focus Palantier Inc. and Goldenwill Inc.

Focus Palantier won the bidding for the first lot for P500,000 per square meter while the latter bagged the second lot for P458,000/sqm.

Also considerin­g Ayala Land Inc.’s purchase of the abandoned Jaka tower in Makati’s central business district (CBD), Colliers estimated that average prices in

Makati and Fort Bonifacio CBDs had appreciate­d by 18.7 percent and 38.2 percent, respective­ly, in the third quarter of 2014 compared to the levels in the second quarter.

The property boom in the country in recent years has been supported by a regime of recordlow interest rates, rising household income and a stable banking system alongside improved consumer confidence.

Teather said as a sector of the local economy, constructi­on was small. However, he said constructi­on spending by all sectors of the economy meant that constructi­on was an important part of investment expenditur­e.

“Base effects are likely exaggerati­ng the recent pickup in constructi­on but given that we expect the flow of easy money to continue rel- atively unabated into early 2015, before US yields start pushing up market rates, there is scope for near term strength to persist,” Teather said.

For overall investment growth, the UBS economist expects the easy credit environmen­t to be supportive this 2015 but less so than in 2012-2013, citing headwinds from the peaking credit cycle.

“The investment to GDP (gross domestic product) ratio has trended higher and we expect that this should continue, reversing the decline of the last decade. The risk is that investment growth has been constructi­on-centric and may prove vulnerable to higher interest rates and when these rise from extraordin­arily low levels,” Teather said.

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