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Malaysia to take 3 years to recover from market slump PDF Print
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Wednesday, 17 December 2008 09:08

(South China Morning Post) - Malaysia's property market will take three years to recover from its slump, the slowest revival in more than two decades, reflecting the reach of the worldwide financial crisis, according to Regroup Associates.

"In the past four weeks, I've been staring at an abyss," said Allan Soo, managing director and founder of property consultant Regroup. "What's changed is the global recession."

A worldwide slowdown has sparked real estate slumps from Britain to Singapore, causing Malaysian developers such as Magna Prima to scale back projects. Values of luxury homes in Kuala Lumpur, where prices surged to a record last year, may fall as an oversupply looms, according to Soo, who declined to give a specific forecast.

Malaysia's property market took about a year to recover from the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis, he said. The rebound from the latest slump might start in 2010 and take as long as the recovery from the 1985 recession, Soo added.

Compared with last year, interest from prospective buyers had dried up, he said. "Inquiries would come in right after we put up a signboard on properties. Now, there're none."

Home prices will come under further pressure as the number of high-end apartments in Kuala Lumpur doubles to more than 30,000 in the next three years, according to Regroup.

Economic growth in Malaysia next year is expected to slow to 3.5 per cent from about 5 per cent this year, according to the government's estimates.

Still, losses for homeowners might be capped because most bought properties in 2006 before the peak for less than RM1,000  (HK$2,174) per square foot, Soo said. The entry of foreigners last year pushed prices to more than RM2,000 , he added.

Signs of fewer home purchases have already emerged. Bank loans approved for home purchases in October fell to its lowest since February, according to the central bank.

SP Setia, Malaysia's largest developer, expects a 22 per cent decline in property sales to 1.1 billion ringgit in fiscal 2009, according to Citigroup. The Kuala Lumpur Property Index has slumped 51 per cent this year, outpacing the main index's 40 per cent slide.

Magna Prima said last month it cut the projected revenue from its biggest property development in northern Kuala Lumpur by almost half.

Comments (8)Add Comment
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written by batsman, December 17, 2008 09:24:15
Damn developers - hope the market in Bukit Antarabangsa never recovers
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written by CPY, December 17, 2008 09:51:37
3 Years. At that time, i graduate from College, but for working folks out there, its tough! smilies/sad.gif
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written by ahmadneil, December 17, 2008 10:03:43
The gov't meddle in the economy in ways that have confused businesses and the community at large.Our country have never recovered from the openness and tolerance it had enjoy during the boom years.Foreign investors have never returned to Malaysia in their pre-crisis numbers.
Institutions matter.Leadership counts.These are not ordinary times.But they won't last forever.How we-as individuals,as family members,as employees and as citizens-respond will determine not only how quickly but in what form we emerge from these tumultuous times.
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written by asguard, December 17, 2008 10:18:51
Malaysian government is screw-up just in every sector of economy... just don't how about next year which the impact will be feel by the business community! The federal government has no proper backup plan in case things gets worse or likely they will screw-up again... and loves to issue various statement like we will study the matter, or we exam the matter ....but the bottomline is that no action is being taken just one word NATO.......
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written by Garend, December 17, 2008 10:19:17
I totally Agree... it is time... TIME TO CHANGE.... Kick those Blood-suckers out from power.. and force them live like the normal ppl.. see how they fare...
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written by Motherchell, December 17, 2008 13:05:54
I thought Najib said we were resilient!!? Where is all the petronas funds? The umnoputras are bleeding like hell the banks are after them . They just cannot drink tap water anymore --- as they are used to the spring waters of France.
They dont have the brains parked in the financial quaters of the govt --- only robbers and thiefs!!
http://sjsandteam.*********.com/
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written by raverz, December 17, 2008 15:36:01
A person earning RM3000

Phone = RM100
Lunch (at work) = RM100
B'fast, tea & dinner (at home) = RM400
Car Payment = RM700
Petrol (only to work n back) = RM300
Insurance = RM300
EPF = RM330
Income tax = RM70
Groceries = RM200
Study Loan = RM200
Internet Astro (cheapest versions) = RM100
Not so grand total (without family, entertainment etc.) = RM2800

Where does property come into all this?

Cheap condo unit around the city (to save petrol, toll, etc.) = RM250k.
Monthly payment is RM1800.

And yet, UM is offering lesser number of seats for undergrads but more for post-grads. No money to pay study loan oso la beb....mana nak belajo lagi??

Public uni's giving more seats to foreigners but local's fee's are not subsidised, more foreigners means higher rentals for locals ard the area.

This country is a joke!
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written by KotaDamansara73, December 17, 2008 19:43:19
We have to spend less money on Astro, car, internet and petrol and more time in kicking UMNO's ass this coming election.
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