Tag Archives: Asia Property

Buy real estate, property funds: Aberdeen

Investors should buy real estate assets and funds that invest in property in the UK and Asia because a potential rebound in prices and economic growth will counter inflation risks, Aberdeen Asset Management Plc said.

While UK properties offer ‘attractive’ yield, real estate in Asia is supported by the strength of the region’s economic growth, Michael Turner, head of global strategy and asset allocation at Aberdeen, said on Tuesday.

He recommended buying into real-estate investment trusts and funds that hold property, without giving specific names.

‘People should allocate more money than they do now in real estate as a hedge against inflation,’ Mr Turner said. ‘Real estate, whether or not there’s inflation as a result of macro policy, is attractive in its own way.’

China, India and Australia have tightened monetary policy to curb inflation as the global economy recovers from the worst recession since World War II. Interest rates in advanced economies can remain accommodative for an ‘extended period’, while policy in ‘a number of emerging economies’ may have to be tightened ‘relatively soon’ because of signs of accelerating inflation or credit booms, the International Monetary Fund said in a Jan 19 staff note.

Minutes from the Australian central bank’s March meeting, released on Tuesday, said that policymakers raised borrowing costs this month for the fourth time in five meetings because the risk of faster economic growth stoking inflation outweighed the potential for renewed financial market turmoil.

In the US, where the housing market is still flat, the Federal Reserve on Tuesday repeated its pledge to keep its main interest rate near zero for an ‘extended period’.

It is a different story in Asia and Britain. UK house prices rose in February at the fastest pace in more than seven years, research group Acadametrics Ltd said on March 12. Nine of 10 Britons say that buying a home is a ’sensible investment’ even after the nation’s worst housing slump in three decades, a survey by YouGov Plc published on March 2 showed.

In Asia, property prices have risen as economic growth in the region outpaces the rest of the world’s. Hong Kong’s home prices surged almost 30 per cent last year, Centaline Property Agency Ltd said this month. Australian home prices jumped 13.6 per cent in 2009.

The World Bank forecast in January that the global economy would expand 2.7 per cent this year. China’s economy, the world’s third biggest, will top last year’s 8.7 per cent growth rate in 2010, the nation’s central bank estimated this month.

Singapore’s gross domestic product is forecast by the government to grow between 3 per cent and 5 per cent this year.

Source : Business Times – 18 Mar 2010

Destination Asia

ASIAN buyers of luxury real estate may be raising their profiles in New York and London by picking up luxury homes at eye-popping prices, but they haven’t been neglecting the property markets closer to home either.

While property prices in more mature Asian markets such as Singapore, Hong Kong and Thailand are still some way from their historical highs – courtesy of the beating they took due to global financial crisis – they have been moving up in tandem with stock markets, and attracting interest from individuals in the upper end of the high net-worth range.

‘The very affluent go where they choose to,’ says William E Heinecke, chief executive of Thai conglomerate The Minor Group, which among its diverse interests is a key player in the hospitality and lifestyle industries, with hotels, resorts and residential properties throughout the region. ‘A lot of people come to Thailand for the weather,’ he says. ‘As a result, if you can afford it, you have homes where you spend time.’

Minor launched its first high-end residential property project in 1995 at the Four Seasons Residences in Chiang Mai. Its growing portfolio of luxury developments includes The Estates Samui in Koh Samui, and the high-rise St Regis Residences in Bangkok is slated for completion next year. Prices for its various properties range between US$2 million and US$6 million.

Mr Heinecke says that Indian and Chinese nationals, who may have domicile in key major cities around the world, have emerged as strong players in the mega-luxury bracket, but traditional buyers from other Asian countries as well as Europeans and Americans are also active in the region. ‘As long as people have money and lifestyle is important, they are going to continue to buy in great locations,’ he says.

He adds that a significant new trend involves branded luxury residences which are located within a hotel property and can be part of the rental pool, commanding rates of several thousand dollars a night. ‘When owners visit their properties once or twice a year, it makes sense to have them professionally managed,’ says Mr Heinecke.

Mr Heinecke says that the quality at the luxe end of the market continues to improve, and there is also no shortage of high-end properties and people who are willing to buy them.

‘The bar continues to go up, and competition raises the bar,’ he says.

The luxury investment bar continues to go up as well in Singapore, where the recent launch of hotel and property developer YTL Corporation’s Kasara – The Lake collection at Sentosa Cove has yielded a highly positive result. The boutique development’s 13 villas have all been sold, at prices ranging from S$14 million to over S$25 million.

Of the buyers, seven were foreigners from Asia while six were locals. In general, there are several types of high-end buyers, says Kemmy Tan, director of international real estate at YTL Singapore.

Asian buyers are typically from Hongkong, Indonesia, Malaysia and China, with an increasing number of expatriate Indians as well. ‘American buyers may hold US passports but may not be living in the US, or they may be in places like Hongkong and have some interest in Asia,’ says Ms Tan. At the peak of the market, there were also investors from places such as Ireland. ‘When they invest, they invest with a longer-term view.’

Despite – or even because of – its restrictions on foreign ownership, Singapore has long been a significant target for investors. ‘They are property investors who own homes in key cities,’ she says. ‘If values are expensive in their home countries and Asia looks attractive, they will come here – these are definitely people with multiple homes in different cities and resorts.’

Buyers of properties in resort destinations are different from those who buy in Sentosa Cove, says Ms Tan. ‘They buy in Phuket and Bali for the resort lifestyle – those who buy here want the best of both worlds. They might have business interests and they want the comfort of city living. For wealthy investors, especially during the financial crisis, they are looking for good buys in ’safe’ locations.’

The proportion of foreign investors versus locals has increased tremendously in the past few years, she adds. And the good news is there is still some upside.

‘Real estate has always been a good hedge against inflation,’ says Ms Tan. ‘For luxury property, we are at least 10 to 15 per cent below the peak, so there’s room to move up.’

Elsewhere in Asia, there have been recent reports of a US$45 million riverfront mansion on the market in Shanghai’s financial district – an indication of the real estate boom in China. If those kinds of prices look a little scary, then there are always less heated up markets like Taiwan, where analysts report that foreign investors make up less than one per cent of the property market. Where opportunities go, of course, the money will always follow.

Source : Business Times – 13 Mar 2010