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How about lowering property prices?

Property News/ 20 September 2016 Leave a comment

affordable-housingAs controversy rages over the suggestion for developers to lend money to prospective buyers who have difficulties getting financing to purchase properties, one question remains unasked: Will lower property prices help resolve the buyers’ financing problem?

The logic is that by reducing prices, prospective buyers will be eligible to get a margin of financing that is sufficient to buy the developers’ products. For example, a prospective buyer who can only get 75% financing for a property priced at RM600,000 may not be able to afford it, but lowering the price to RM500,000 would see him seal the deal as the financing would now cover 90% of the revised price.

It could be the right thing to do, according to the Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents and Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia (PEPS).

“There is a mismatch between house prices and what people can afford,” PEPS president Foo Gee Jen tells The Edge over the phone. “The government has to look into this matter.”

Several property industry professionals The Edge spoke to concur.

While the intention — ostensibly to help more people own homes — is good, some quarters believe the proposal by Minister of Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Tan Sri Noh Omar earlier this month would only address the symptom rather than the cause.

“Over the years, wages have crept up slowly but property prices have risen tremendously, especially in the five years up to 2013,” says Mani Usilappan, former director-general of the Valuation and Property Services Department in the Ministry of Finance. “Will this lending [idea] help ease the burden? I don’t know, but I don’t think so.”

Wage growth aside, from the economic perspective, the slowdown is an indication that the demand curve for properties has shifted: Malaysians will only pay lower prices, compared with three years ago, for similar homes.

This is the scenario facing the local property market after the boom in the years before, which was fuelled by the ease of financing.

For the buyers, they may wait until the price drops to a level they can afford. After all, it is a buyer’s market now.

The developers, however, can either delay their launches until property prices go up or adjust prices downwards to boost sales.

Tighter margins

Cutting prices at the expense of profit margin is probably the last resort for the developers, particularly those who had bought land at the height of the property boom.

Several developers contacted by The Edge have dismissed the idea of lowering prices, saying that margins are already thin these days and prices are not so easily adjusted.

“Nobody will do that as margins today are not as high as before,” says a public-listed property developer. “Developers would rather launch fewer projects than cut their selling prices.”

More than half of the 157 developers surveyed by the Real Estate and Housing Developers’ Association Malaysia (Rehda) say they are not planning to launch any project in the second half of the year.

Another developer says for the smaller players, the price range that the market wants is not profitable. For those without holding power, they have no choice but to revise their designs for smaller units — thus, a lower price tag — to accommodate, the developer adds.

However, in some cases, there is a limit to how low prices can be adjusted, says another developer. Some local authorities fix the price range for developments when issuing approvals and lowering prices below that would require the Housing Ministry’s permission, adds the developer. “Without permission, the developer would be breaching the law. That’s why the minister’s idea could work … for marginal buyers, we can help bridge the difference when prices are at the lower limit.”

One developer says homes priced around RM500,000 are still affordable, so developers should be smart enough to do the right thing. “We won’t set prices that we don’t think can sell.”

The onus, however, cannot be on the developers alone, says PEPS’ Foo.

He adds that many developers are also trying to cope with problems such as rising land prices and compliance cost. “It is a struggle for a lot of developers. Sometimes, they even complain about having to foot the bill for utility infrastructure.”

Preventing fire

The emerging picture is that loan application rejections and insufficient access to end-financing — the main reason for lacklustre property sales for the past 3½ years, according to biannual surveys conducted by Rehda — are not the core issues plaguing the property market today. Would it be, then, that the market is overheated?

Industry observers say having developers extend loans to marginal homebuyers will not help much. “If these (loans by developers) are secured, then they are effectively acting as secondary mortgage providers. It becomes mezzanine financing,” says one corporate source. “It adds risk to the market, in the sense that the developers’ capital bases are much smaller than the banks’. As the name implies, you won’t be doing mezzanine financing if it does not carry a higher risk.”

In fact, such easy credit policies — which had raised Bank Negara Malaysia’s concern years ago and prompted the central bank to take pre-emptive measures — may exacerbate the situation at the moment by heating up the market further.

Such a scenario would be nightmarish, just like the subprime mortgage crisis in the US and the property crash that hit Japan in the late 1980s. Three decades later, Japan has yet to recover from that debacle. It would be wise for Malaysia not to flirt with the same risk.

Source: TheEdgeProperty.com.my

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  1. duffy
    September 20th, 2016 at 12:02 | #1

    “How about lowering property prices?”. No way! The bosses of these developers still want to live excessively, drive big cars, expensive watches, mistresses, private jets and yachts, you name it, all the sins of american capitalism!

  2. boon
    September 20th, 2016 at 13:17 | #2

    @duffy

    haha, you are right. Someone has to pay for all that luxuries right? Must be those waterfish who bought properties blindly in the last few years! And now what’s happening? Developer boss sitting comfortably in their villas, hatching the next evil plan on how to suck MORE blood out of those innocent men who are working their ass off now to pay their monthly mortgage. :)))

  3. Prop
    September 20th, 2016 at 18:23 | #3

    Agree to lower property price!

  4. Seeseelooklook
    September 20th, 2016 at 22:49 | #4

    Lowering property price..joking izzit..developers will definitely laugh at this article and say hell No

  5. water fish
    September 21st, 2016 at 00:04 | #5

    Haha cute or brainless article, like student cant gt A in exam then lower the point in order to let them gt A.

  6. PGG
    September 21st, 2016 at 15:04 | #6

    Throw in free kitchen, free furniture, extra car park, more rebate, more discount can work also. Not need to lower price 1 … haha..

    The food close to expiry date already, throw away or sell cheap up to them la.. cannot keep for too long 1.. haha.

  7. jacky
    September 21st, 2016 at 16:37 | #7

    @PGG

    Don’t fall for the freebi tricks, it’s all an evil plan to “goreng” up property prices. They give 30k worth of freebies, but jack up price 60k. You call that freebie? Haha….dont be a sucker!

  8. PGG
    September 21st, 2016 at 16:42 | #8

    @jacky

    aiya… you really think buyers nowadays are stupid 1 meh? Use 60k to buy 30k worth of freeies? haha…

  9. Kta
    September 21st, 2016 at 19:30 | #9

    This is now a game of who blinks first. Developers are delaying their launches in the hopes that ppl will eventually buy at their price.

    But the fact that developers are making such a hoo haa over the loan rejection rates shows that they are starting to feel the pressure. You can’t run a business selling nothing and just sitting on landbanks. The CEO, directors salaries all have to continued to be paid. Land taxes still have to be paid. Corporate loans still have to be serviced.

    Wages are not growing that fast. Our household debt to GDP is already almost reaching 90%. If developers continue to insist to sell properties above 500k, the result will still be the same, there will not be enough buyers that can afford that price. So how long can they delay their launches? Can they delay until wages finally catch up to the asking price they are offering?

  10. Freshwater Bay
    September 21st, 2016 at 22:20 | #10

    How many of you here will sell your house for anything lower then market value? So? Nothing to see here. Another poor article.

  11. tonguejob
    September 22nd, 2016 at 07:31 | #11

    @Freshwater Bay

    For secondary market, there are more and more sellers willing to sell below what they paid 2-3 years ago when they purchased from developers, especially those on DIBS. Finance cost is a burden to those who don’t have solid holding power, it’s evident prices have come down at least 15% if not more.

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