Category Archives: Property Market / Real Estate

The next property bubble will be in Asia

Low interest rates and easy money are in danger of creating a new property bubble – in Asia.

Prices plunged in 2008. But markets are recovering surprisingly quickly. Private home prices in Singapore rose by 15.9% in the third quarter. Hong Kong housing has almost retraced all of last year’s 20-30% slump. In India, DLF, the country’s largest developer, claims it took just two hours to sell out a new 1,250-apartment development, even although prices were raised by 30%.

Before the bust, Asia didn’t see the manic levels of property investing that the US or Britain did. It’s a bit misleading to talk of Asian residential property as a single market, but broadly speaking, prices at the peak weren’t in bubble territory. Sure, there was speculation in some parts of most markets. But the crash didn’t leave huge sections of the population in negative equity. The worst hurt by the fall were developers in countries such as China and India, who built too much too quickly at too high a price. Continue reading

Record high sales for small homes: CBRE

Developers provide for more units of 500 sq ft or less

A study by property consultancy CB Richard Ellis (CBRE) has confirmed what everyone suspected – small apartments have become more common. And their sales hit a record-high this year. But whether owners or tenants can get used to tighter living space is another matter, says CBRE.

The firm looked at caveats lodged between January and September and found that 412 new non-landed residential units measuring 500 sq ft or less had been sold – 38 per cent more than the 299 sold in the whole of last year.

The number of small units taken up has risen steadily for several years. In 2006 and 2007, 171 and 275 such apartments were sold respectively.

‘Developers are providing more of these small-format units and home-buyers are snapping them up, especially in 2009,’ said CBRE Research executive director Li Hiaw Ho. ‘The rise of small-format units has served to bolster overall transaction volume in the residential market.’ Continue reading