Opportunities for property investors

THESE are troubled times, and the global real estate sector has borne the brunt of the sub-prime fallout.

But now the property world is turning its attention to Asia as investors are hoping that 2009 will be the year to begin picking up undervalued assets ahead of economies in the region emerging from the global financial crisis, say the organisers of Cityscape Asia.

The annual real estate exhibition and conference – which is being held in Singapore from today until Thursday – comes amid talk of ‘green shoots’ of recovery for the Singapore and global economies.

Cityscape Asia focuses on all aspects of real estate development.

The real estate investment market in the Asia-Pacific region and the rest of the world saw a further contraction of market volume in the first quarter of 2009 against the backdrop of the global financial turmoil and the sustained problem of a credit crunch. However, analysts are beginning to see opportunities as the world and Asia rides out the crisis.

‘Established firms, family enterprises and individuals with cash reserves, limited debt and an appetite for risk are expected to be among the first to begin searching the Asian market for bargains in the coming months,’ said Graham Wood, group exhibition director of Cityscape.

This year’s Cityscape Asia will examine topics relevant to the downturn such as surviving the global financial crisis, the future for real estate funds, and markets to invest in for long-term growth and returns.

But long-standing topics such as Asian real estate investment trusts (Reits), green investments and the retail scene in Asia will also be explored.

More than 4,000 top deal-makers from leading developers, banks, institutional investors and investment authorities, as well as senior officers from the foremost private equity funds and investment advisory firms will gather in Singapore over these three days to discuss key issues and investment opportunities.

This year, more networking functions and face-to-face interaction have been factored in to ensure that delegates have ample opportunity to conduct real business at Cityscape Asia. Participants could well walk away from the conference with signed deals.

Cityscape Asia is an extension of the successful Cityscape Dubai exhibition, which has grown to include Abu Dhabi, India, Saudi Arabia, Russia, the United States and Latin America.

The Singapore conference will focus on Asia. It will discuss and debate the recovery, opportunities, and the strategies adopted by leading real estate investment and development firms across Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Hong Kong, Indonesia, China and India.

In its recent inaugural Asia-Pacific investment market overview report, Colliers International said that opportunities remain in the region for investors. ‘Although the regional real estate investment market in Q1 2009 was relatively quiet and despite the fact that the market will continue to be challenged by the economic environment for the rest of 2009, we believe there are still potential investment opportunities in the region in the coming quarters,’ said Piers Brunner, Colliers’ chief operating officer for Asia.

Real estate investment yields in the Asia- Pacific region have gone up further by 25-75 basis points in the first quarter of the year as investors held back from entering the real estate market, Colliers said. This should make investing more attractive now compared to a few quarters ago.

One market that will be much debated at this year’s Cityscape Asia is China. ‘In current times, the brightest light glows in China with the economy seeing a huge inventory adjustment,’ said DTZ in April.

In the first quarter of 2009, mainland China’s residential property sector staged a recovery of sorts, with transactions in some cities rebounding to levels not seen in years. However, the recovery did not spill over to the commercial sector as office markets in the major cities remained sluggish with fewer transactions amid declining rents and prices. A recovery in China could do much to help property markets in the rest of the region, analysts said.

Cityscape Asia also incorporates a host of ‘mini events’ designed to create business opportunities, such as developer project showcases, interactive discussion forums and investor roundtables.

Developers and other stakeholders from Europe and the US will be at Cityscape Asia looking for Asian investors. In its May bulletin, Citi Private Bank said that it expects to see a new global consumerism marked by a thrifty West and an affluent East, which should see investment flow from the East to the West.

Just one example – Philippe Chaix, director of La Defense, the prime office district of Paris, will be in Singapore during the conference to discuss the future of business property in the French capital, specifically, what it means for Asian investors.

London is also expected to get its share of attention. Asian interest in London properties is growing on the back of a devaluation in the pound, market watchers say. For example, the value of the British pound has fallen about 30 per cent against the Singapore dollar since December 2007. With London property prices down by about 15 per cent from their peak, Singaporean investors could reap savings of about 45 per cent off prices if they choose to invest in London.

Source : Business Times – May 2009

China property recovery not expected till H2

Prices need to fall further before buyers are attracted, says Goldman Sachs

China’s real estate developers do not expect the property market to recover until at least the second half of this year, as prices need to fall further before attracting more buyers, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

‘A sustainable property market is out of sight,’ Goldman Sachs analysts Thomas Deng and Kinger Lau write in a report, which was based on observations from company visits in southern China and published yesterday.

Home prices in China fell 0.9 per cent in January, the second consecutive monthly decline and the longest losing streak since the government started issuing the data in August 2005. Property prices more than quadrupled in the five years through 2007 as urban incomes rose.

Goldman Sachs said that a recent increase in property transactions is not evidence of the market bottoming out. The analysts visited China Vanke Co, the nation’s largest publicly traded developer, Shenzhen Investment Ltd and Gemdale Corp.

Sale volumes in the southern city of Shenzhen, bordering Hong Kong, more than doubled to 787,800 square metres in December from 358,300 sq m in November and 338,000 sq m in October, according to a report by property agency DTZ earlier this month. House prices in the city dropped 16 per cent in January from a year earlier.

Source : Business Times -  Feb 2009

Seeing gold in California housing bust

 

California’s tortured real estate market has brought heartbreak and ruin, but some investors, speculators and first-time home buyers are also dreaming big and finding opportunities – a silver lining in the Golden State’s epic housing crash.

For many young couples, plummeting prices and near record-low interest rates make it possible to own a home in California for the first time.

Investors and real estate speculators, meanwhile, will be able to snap up foreclosed properties on the cheap to sell during the next boom in California’s boom-and-bust real estate cycle, a boom they believe is inevitable and possibly not far off.

‘This is the buying opportunity of our lifetime,’ said Bruce Norris, who heads an investment group that expects to purchase some 100 homes this year in Southern California’s Inland Empire region.

California – which would be the world’s eighth largest economy if it were a country – saw a near-doubling in home sales in the fourth quarter, a pace surpassed only by Nevada’s 133.7 per cent growth.

But experts warn that it’s a dangerous game to play when nobody is really sure how low home prices will go or when they will rebound as the recession lingers, jobs dry up and residents pour out of the state in search of better prospects.

Mr Norris concentrates on the Inland Empire of Southern California, made up mostly of Riverside and San Bernardino counties, one of the fastest-growing areas of the country during the housing boom, driven partly by immigrant families who couldn’t afford pricier coastal cities.

It’s now one of the hardest-hit. In the past 18 months, the median home price in Riverside and San Bernardino, pummelled by the sub-prime meltdown and now recording some of the highest foreclosure rates in the state, has plummeted 55 per cent.

Norris Investment Group looks for homes built between 1980 and 1990, typically under 2,000 square feet.

Older houses come with too many maintenance ’surprises’, Mr Norris says, and larger places can be tough to sell or rent in hard times.

Last month the group paid US$55,000 for a foreclosed home that was worth US$360,000 at the top of the market. Mr Norris expects to spend US$30,000 on repairs and rent it for US$1,200 a month until the market turns around.

The group also hopes to minimise risk by owning the homes free and clear, thus accruing little debt.

‘You cannot have this (low) level of pricing be permanent because it costs too much to build a home here,’ Mr Norris said. ‘That’s how you know you’re making a logical decision when everything is falling around you. When you can buy a finished product someone will want to live in for US$55,000, that just has to make somebody pretty wealthy someday.’

Experts agree that California home prices will ultimately rebound but caution that real estate investing in this economy – the worst contraction since 1982 – should not be undertaken by amateurs or the faint of heart.

‘You have to have a pretty strong feeling about where this is all going,’ Stuart Gabriel, director of the Ziman Center for Real Estate at the University of California, Los Angeles, told Reuters. ‘This cycle is so different from prior cycles that it’s very difficult to extrapolate.’

‘Most would argue that California is not going into the sea,’ he said. ‘On the other hand it’s not totally out of the question that this particular period of weakness could extend for a while, and that means multiple years.’

California’s roller-coaster real estate cycles can be traced to the 1970s, when home prices tripled, ignited in part by foreign investment and the end of the gold standard following decades of explosive population growth.

Home prices plunged in the early 1980s, turned around and doubled within 10 years, slumped in the mid-1990s and then blasted off again at the end of the decade. The sub-prime meltdown and recession pushed them back off the cliff.

‘It’s a great time to buy for people who are willing to risk a little more and be optimistic when everybody else is doom and gloom,’ said Daren Blomquist, marketing and communications manager for RealtyTrac, an online foreclosure data service. But he warned: ‘They will probably have to wait it out, possibly for several years.’

Chris Twoomey and his wife Jennifer illustrate the risk underlying the perceived opportunities. They moved to California from the Midwest in 2004 to pursue acting careers and had just begun to think the dream of home ownership was out of reach when the crash came and they saw their chance.

The couple pounced in January, right after Jennifer, 39, learned she was pregnant with their first child, making an offer on a small, bank-owned home in suburban Los Angeles.

But the day after the Twoomeys’ offer was accepted, Chris was called into the cafeteria at his job in a cosmetics company warehouse and laid off.

‘Sometimes in our dark moments we sit around and say to ourselves, ‘Look, forget the acting, forget everything, this is the time to bail’ (from California). We can be doing this someplace else that’s still warm but doesn’t cost as much,’ Chris told Reuters in an interview.

‘But we’re sticking it out,’ he said. ‘It’s perverse, but something inside of us does want to stay here. It’s sort of a belief that because it is Southern California and because it is the kind of place where everybody wants to be, it will come back eventually.’

Source : Business Times – Feb 2009