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UPCOMING: Bukit Mertajam / GTM Land & Property

ongoing-development-by-gtm-bm

An on-going mixed development by GTM Land & Property Sdn. Bhd. at Bukit Mertajam, Penang. Strategically located along Jalan Kulim, next to the famous Roman Catholic church – St Anne’s Church.  It is just a mere minutes drive away from Maju Jaya Business Center in Kampung Baru.

This development will feature a mix of residential and commercial properties:

  • 3-storey terrace (20 units)
  • 3-storey semi-detached (8 units)
  • 3-storey shop office (28 units)

This project is still pending for approval. More details to be available upon official launch.

Project Name : (to be cofirmed)
Location : Bukit Mertajam
Property Type : Mixed development
Built-up Size: (to be confirmed)
Total Units:: 20 (terrace), 8 (semi-d), 28 (shop office)
Developer : GTM Land & Property Sdn. Bhd.

Register your interest here

(This information will be used to keep you updated on the project and future development.)
*By submitting this Form, you hereby agree to our PDPA Consent Clause.

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Homebuyers to bear the brunt of rising building costs

construction3Property developers have warned that home prices may rise following the government’s recent move to slap a safeguard duty on the import of certain steel products for three years.

If the safeguard duty leads to a rise in steel prices, Real Estate and Property Developers’ Association (Rehda) president Datuk Seri FD Iskandar Mohamed Mansor said they will have no choice but to pass on the extra costs to homebuyers.

While the intention of the safeguard duty is to protect the local steel industry, the move is not good for the property industry, he said.

“At the end of the day if the contractors and developers can’t absorb the steel price increase, what happens? The increase will be passed on to consumers,” FD Iskandar told a media briefing to reveal the findings of the association’s Property Industry Survey 2H2016 and Market Outlook 1H2017 yesterday.

The government last week announced the implementation of safeguard measures, which see imports of steel concrete reinforcing bar (rebar) being slapped with a 13.42% duty and a 13.9% duty for steel wire rods (SWR) and deformed bar-in-coils (DBIC), starting April 14.

However, the duty for rebar will be reduced to 12.27% after a year and eventually down to 11.1% two years later, while that for SWR and DBIC will be cut to 12.9% after one year and eventually down to 11.9%.

FD Iskandar said the safeguard duty has resulted in a significant increase in raw material costs.

“We used to pay about RM1,700 per tonne for the smaller steel bars and now we are paying anything from RM2,300 to over RM2,500 per tonne,” he noted.

He also pointed to the price of steel bars, which used to cost an average of RM1,712 per tonne in Johor, RM1,847 per tonne in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur, and RM1,729 per tonne in Penang. However, contractors are now paying RM2,570 per tonne.

“Definitely this will increase the price of construction, and construction is the main cost in the gross development cost of a project,” said FD Iskandar.

Besides the rise in prices of steel products, he said the price of a bag of cement has also risen to RM18.40 compared with RM17.30 per bag in Selangor and Penang previously, while that of river sand — which is used in concrete production — has also risen.

According to Rehda’s Property Industry Survey 2H2016, developers have indicated that material and labour costs remain as the top cost components affecting their cash flow, especially with the increase in prices of certain steel products due to the safeguard duty.

Meanwhile, 29% of respondents said the overall increase in the cost of doing business due to higher material, labour and compliance costs, has been the main challenge in providing affordable housing.

In addition to higher raw material costs, FD Iskandar said contractors and developers are also facing higher labour costs. He noted that the labour cost index had risen to 117.4 as at December 2016 from 111.1 a year ago.

“It’s very hard for developers to lower prices [of properties] if costs keep going up. Obviously, developers’ margins are being squeezed,” he said.

FD Iskandar also urged homebuyers to be more realistic when it comes to choosing a preferred location for their potential homes.

“Wanting to own a home in the Kuala Lumpur city centre for less than RM500,000, that is not very realistic. That’s why we also urge the media, the National House Buyers Association and the government to help educate our buyers,” he said.

In Rehda’s inaugural house buyers’ survey that was carried out during the association’s Mapex Property Showcase 2016 held on April 14 to 16, Kuala Lumpur city centre topped the most preferred locations list for homebuyers, followed by Petaling Jaya-Damansara; Cheras and Bangsar; Puchong and Shah Alam; and Cyberjaya.

FD Iskandar also highlighted that accessibility trumps all other home features and facilities when it comes to buying a home.

“Our respondents said the light rail transit (LRT) or mass rapid transit (MRT) [44%] and distance to a transportation hub (30%) are important considerations when it comes to buying a home.

“This is why we urged the government to allocate 40% to 50% of lands near to a transportation hub to build affordable homes because people who are looking to live in these homes are the ones who will use the public transportation [the most].

“In Kuala Lumpur, we have KTM, LRT, MRT and monorail. But if you keep on selling lands near them for top prices, [developers] cannot build affordable homes. It’s great to build transportation hubs. But we also must be certain that the right target market stays near to these transportation hubs,” he said.

Meanwhile, Rehda once again called on the government to review its property cooling measures to boost property sales.

FD Iskandar added that based on feedback from Rehda members, loan rejections continue to pose a problem to potential buyers.

Source: TheEdgeProperty.com.my

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UPCOMING: Tanjung Bungah / BSG Property

proposed-development-tanjung-bungah-bsg

Yet another proposed mixed development by BSG Property at Tanjung Bungah. Strategically located along Jalan Lembah Permai, adjacent to 2 Permai landed housing scheme by the same developer. It is only a mere minutes drive to Tunku Abdul Rahman (TAR) University College.

This development will feature a mix of condominium serviced apartment and shop offices:

Parcel A:

  • 1 block of 49-storey building with two residential towers (585 units)
  • 3-storey shop offices (34 units)

Parcel B:

  • 49-storey building with a mix of condominium (Tower B1) and serviced apartments (Tower B2).
  • 3-storey shop offices (34 units)

Parcel C:

  • 2-storey drive-thru restaurant

Parcel D:

  • 3-storey private clubhouse

This project is still pending for approval. More details to be available upon official launch.

Project Name : (to be cofirmed)
Location : Tanjung Bungah
Property Type : Mixed development
Built-up Size: (to be confirmed)
Total Units:: 58
Tenure : Freehold
Developer : BSG Property (BSG Property)

Register your interest here

(This information will be used to keep you updated on the project and future development.)
*By submitting this Form, you hereby agree to our PDPA Consent Clause.

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Property Marketing Report 2016 indicates property prices remain steady

Property News/ 19 April 2017 No comments

jpph-reportsHouse prices have remained steady despite a slowdown in property sales and a huge overhang of unsold units.

According to the Valuation & Property Services Department’s (JPPH) Property Market Report 2016, prices of residential property continued to grow, albeit moderately despite the current market glut.

“The Malaysian House Price Index (MHPI) continued its moderating trend. As at the fourth quarter of 2016, the MHPI stood at 243.3 points, up by 5.5% on an annual basis.

“The responsible lending measures by the central bank have shown a positive outcome in ensuring sustainable price growth in years to come.”

On quarterly movements, the report, which was launched here yesterday had shown a contraction of 0.7% in the fourth quarter of 2016.

It added that the slow market absorption of the primary market led to the increase in the residential overhang.

“There were 14,792 overhang units worth RM8.56bil, up by 43.8% in volume and 70.7% in value, against 2015. About 42% (6,052) of these overhang units were in the price range of RM500,000 and above.

“By state, Johor saw an increasing overhang market share of 24.8%, which mainly was made up of two- to three-storey terraced houses priced at RM500,000 and above (43.2%).”

It said unsold units under construction and not constructed had also succumbed to an increase of 29.3% and 44.7% to 64,077 units and 11,622 units, respectively.

“Selangor, Johor and Penang held more than half of these unsold under construction units, which were predominantly made up of double-storey terrace and apartments/condominiums priced at RM500,000 and above.

“As for the unsold units not constructed, Kuala Lumpur (27.2%) and Penang (25.1%) held the most, which were mainly apartment/condominium units.”

According to JPPH, the Malaysian property market would endure another challenging year in 2017 as the enduring global political uncertainty and low domestic economic growth will continue to have an impact on the sector.

However, it said the performance of the local property market will continue to be sustained with the implementation of various property-related incentives and accommodative monetary policy.

At the launch of the Property Market Report yesterday, JPPH director-general Rahah Ismail said developers would need to come up with the right product and pricing to withstand the property market slowdown.

“The main segment would be the affordable housing segment. That is what is most in demand and the developer has to respond to that need,” she said.

According to JPPH, affordable houses continued to be in demand last year, with more than 65% of the residential transactions within RM300,000 and below.

Deputy Finance Minister I Datuk Wira Othman Aziz did not provide a timeline of when he expected the local property sector to improve, saying only that the market is cyclical and should recover over time.

“It’ll take a while, and will depend on the global performance.”

According to the Property Market Report 2016, the local property sector recorded a 11.5% decline in volume and a 3% drop in value last year compared with 2015.

“The residential sub-sector dominated the overall market, with a 63.4% contribution in volume and 45.1% in value.”

There were 203,064 transactions worth RM65.57bil last year compared with 235,967 transactions worth RM73.47bil in 2015. The performance of all states recorded declines in market activity except for Kelantan.

New launches in the primary market dropped 9.8% to 52,713 units last year, with sales performance hitting a low of 31.4% compared with 42.1% in 2015.

“By property type, condominiums/apartments formed the bulk (37% share), followed by two to three-storey terraced houses (36.2%), which were mostly priced in the range of RM500,000 to RM1mil,” said JPPH’s report.

It said all states saw substantial declines in their new launches last year except for Johor, Penang, Melaka, Terengganu and Sabah.

“For Kuala Lumpur, nearly all its new launches comprised condominiums/apartments, whilst Selangor saw a fair share of two to three-storey terraces and condominiums/apartments. Both states saw sales performance below 40%.”

The report said construction activities remained on a low tone, which reduced by 15.1% to 121,326 units.

“All major states except Kuala Lumpur recorded lower commencements. Completions were up by 9.3% to 78,216 units, whilst new planned supply units saw an 11.3% increase to 120,089 units.

“As at end-2016, there were 4.95 million existing residential units with nearly 830,000 in the incoming supply and 600,000 in the planned supply categories.”

The report also said the residential rental market in Kuala Lumpur portrayed mixed movements.

“Residential units that are within the vicinity of the LRT and MRT routes as well as higher learning institutions experienced rental gains, whilst those in older neighbourhoods saw downward rentals.

“Similar upward trends were seen in Selangor, where schemes located along the MRT routes have the advantage of fetching higher rentals.”

In the office and retail sector, vacancy continued to increase, with Kuala Lumpur and Selangor recording 2.74 million sq m of vacant office space, an increase of 16% compared with 2015.

Vacant retail space also increased to 2.7 million sq m, which was an increase of 11.9% against 2015.

Source: TheStar.com.my

 

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The Ship Campus (Peninsula College)

Batu Kawan/ 17 April 2017 19 comments /中文版

the-ship-campus

The Ship Campus (Peninsula College) is an upcoming university campus in Batu Kawan, combining an eco-friendly campus with a dynamic blend of technology and innovation to enable professional learning.

The 5-acre campus is strategically located at the southern part of Batu Kawan and it is part of PKT’s “One Auto Hub” project. It designed like a ship and able to accommodate about 5,000 students. The campus is expected to be completed by December 2019.

This development will see the construction of a 9-storey campus and 4 blocks of 8-storey hostel for students.

Learn more about development at Batu Kawan

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Progress Update (June 2019)

Progress Update (July 2019)
THE-SHIP-PRogress

 

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