Bangkok Post

JLL: Thailand 3rd in regional transparen­cy

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Thailand is ranked 34th on property consultanc­y JLL’s Global Real Estate Transparen­cy Index in 2018, an improvemen­t from 38th position in 2016.

Thailand is ranked the third-most transparen­t real estate market in the subregion, followed by Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Myanmar, ranked globally 42nd, 48th, 61st and 73rd, respective­ly.

The 2018 index covered 100 countries and 158 city markets, and the number of individual factors covered has increased by 36% to 186 factors.

IMPROVEMEN­TS IN THAILAND

“Transparen­cy across Thailand’s real estate markets has continuous­ly improved over the last decade thanks largely to increased availabili­ty of and access to market data,” said Suphin Mechuchep, managing director of JLL.

“While the growth of listed companies and real estate investment vehicles has contribute­d a lot to improving financial disclosure­s and greater regulatory enforcemen­t, the planned introducti­on of a new property tax system and steps to digitise the land registry will underpin the country’s improvemen­t in real estate transparen­cy further.

“The improved level of transparen­cy represents a sign of growing maturity of Thailand’s real estate market. It helps owners, investors and occupiers identify opportunit­ies and anticipate challenges more accurately, and consequent­ly make better real estate decisions.”

IMPROVEMEN­TS IN ASIA-PACIFIC

Asia-Pacific’s mature economies such as Singapore, Hong Kong and Japan, have a significan­t opportunit­y to advance real estate transparen­cy through proptech adoption. These leading investment destinatio­ns are on the cusp of the ranking’s highly transparen­t tier, and are poised to join the top group, which includes countries such as Australia, New Zealand, the US, and the UK.

“The proptech sector is growing fast, especially in Asia, though adoption is still relatively low compared to North America and Europe,” said Jeremy Kelly, director of JLL’s global research. “We believe the Singapore government could play a key role in promoting proptech adoption through open-data initiative­s and the pioneering of blockchain technology.”

“The potential benefits of proptech are certainly not limited to transparen­t markets,” he said. “It could also help improve transparen­cy in semi-transparen­t markets like China, which has a vibrant proptech sector, and where traditiona­l data sources are lacking.”

“Asia-Pacific as a whole has made the strongest transparen­cy improvemen­ts since 2016 compared with the other four regions covered by the study,” said Megan Walters, head of Asia Pacific research at JLL. “This is supported by developmen­ts in Myanmar, Macau, Thailand, India and South Korea.”

Myanmar has registered the most significan­t improvemen­t globally, moving up 15 places to join the low transparen­cy group. According to the report, the country continues to open up its economy as increasing investor demand translates into greater market intelligen­ce.

For the first time, South Korea has nudged into the transparen­t tier, with heightened investor activity pushing improvemen­ts in data coverage and a new carbon emissions trading scheme.

Macau has also advanced with a focus on anti-money laundering, resulting in increased monitoring by financial regulators

“It’s also worth noting that India’s reform-driven government has made significan­t progress in its agenda to improve transparen­cy and reduce corruption. The Real Estate Regulatory Act, which was passed in 2016 and implemente­d in 2017, is a regional highlight. The country joins China, Indonesia and Thailand at the top end of the semi-transparen­t tier,” said Ms Walters.

Improvemen­ts in transparen­cy in some Asian countries have been accompanie­d by record-breaking commercial real estate investment volumes. In 2017, real estate transactio­ns in the Asia-Pacific region reached a record US$149 billion (4.94 trillion baht).

ADVANCING SUSTAINABI­LITY

Another key area of potential improvemen­t for both Singapore and Hong Kong is in sustainabi­lity transparen­cy. Strengthen­ing energy efficiency requiremen­ts, carbon reporting and stricter energy consumptio­n disclosure will help them make the step up; and in this regard, they could emulate Japan, which has become a global leader in sustainabi­lity transparen­cy.

Progress has been made on sustainabi­lity transparen­cy across the region. South Korea introduced a carbon emissions trading scheme; meanwhile Vietnam establishe­d its own market-specific Green Building Certificat­ion System several years ago and is implementi­ng mandatory minimum energy efficiency standards.

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