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Archive for December, 2006

Shanghai Property – Foreigners must show entry records to buy home

PROPERTY transaction centres in Shanghai now require foreigners to show immigration records when buying homes to prove that they have lived on the Chinese mainland for more than a year, the Oriental Morning Post reported today.

China unveiled a string of new policies in July to restrict overseas property investment on concerns of that an influx of foreign capital would aggravate speculation in the domestic housing market.

Under the new policies, foreigners can’t buy homes or apartments on the mainland until they’ve been here at least a year. Those who meet the residency rules must purchase property only for their own use and cannot lease it to others.

Shanghai property transaction centers can make up own rules on trading on the basis of these policies, according to Shanghai Municipal Housing, Land and Resource Administration Bureau.

Four Shanghai districts, Jing’an, Xuhui, Baoshan and Pudong New Area, have banned foreigners and overseas Chinese from buying second homes within their jurisdictions since October.

Among other measures, overseas institutions and individuals that want to purchase property for purposes other than their own use must set up a company in China, according to a joint circular issued by six government agencies.

Source: Shanghai Daily

Challenges ahead for Abu Dhabi property in 2007

Abu Dhabi Property Abu Dhabi Real Estate

The most recent Gulf State to join the wave of property ownership reform, Abu Dhabi is both uniquely well advantaged and determined to move ahead in 2007. There will be the first sales of off-plan apartments to foreigners on 99-year renewable leases, and the mobilization of huge construction sites.

But this is also going to be a year of considerable challenges for the sector which is somewhat late to market. The main danger is that market conditions will change. That might mean a softening of oil prices, or a downturn in the neighboring Dubai market where Abu Dhabi investors have been very active.

However, Abu Dhabi is the wealthiest city in the world per capita, with both 10 per cent of the world’s oil in the ground and an estimated $500 billion investment fund, and if deep pockets are required to overcome short-term market changes then this emirate is uniquely advantaged. Even in the worst possible circumstances Abu Dhabi will not run out of money.

Very wealthy city
This is unusual in the world of property development where high leverage, big risks and big gains for the astute or lucky are the name of the game. Abu Dhabi is more like a very wealthy person who decides to build themselves a new house; market conditions are irrelevant, it is the new house that counts.

It is this environment that makes Abu Dhabi attractive to global property funds who prize security of asset values above the opportunity to make a fast buck.

Yet if the Dubai off-plan property bubble implodes in 2007 this will present Abu Dhabi real estate companies with a challenge, as buyers would certainly take fright. Their response would likely be to keep on building in the knowledge that by the time high-rise developments were completed the sales would materialize, or else the developers would have to treat their units as rental property.

Innovation necessary
At the same time, Abu Dhabi developers are adopting innovative methods to find the contractors and building materials required to mobilize huge construction sites in the face of the competing demand from the boom in the other emirates.

Expect to see more contractor joint ventures like the one announced by Aldar Properties as this may be the only way to secure the necessary construction capacity.

All over the Middle East the oil boom is putting immense pressure on the existing supply of human resources, and recruiting such talent abroad and training people to work under local conditions takes valuable time.

This factor and the inflation in building material costs and shortages of supply are likely to plague the industry even more in 2007 than in 2006 as construction programs hit peak levels. What it means in practical terms is that delays to projects will be an increasing factor in the marketplace.

But for Abu Dhabi property 2007 will be an exciting year as the vision starts to become a reality and much more off-plan property becomes available.

Source: AME Info

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Holiday hotspots are no property investment mecca

One of the consequences of the general bull market in all asset classes of the past few years is that when the price of something falls, nobody seems to worry much. If something goes up, the market assumes it will keep rising. But if it is going down, there is no assumption it will keep going down. Instead we call it a “healthy correction” or, more often, a “buying opportunity”.

A classic example of this at the moment is US housing. New-build house prices in America fell 10 per cent last month and even existing home prices fell 3.5 per cent. This marks not only the biggest year-on-year decline in nearly 40 years, but also the first time that prices across the nation have fallen three months in a row.

At the same time, the market abounds with anecdotal evidence of people taking horrible hits of 20 per cent to 30 per cent off their asking prices in order to sell and of developers throwing in free swimming pools and 4x4s on top of the discounts they are already being forced to offer.

There are still some optimists out there. USA Today ran a long feature last week explaining that, while things look bad, if you “stage” your house properly — making it look “generic, almost bland” — you’ll have no problem selling. But to most casual observers the market looks like it is in meltdown.

Still that’s not the way the ever-enthusiastic British property buyer sees it: over the past week I’ve had several letters from people asking me if I think it’s time to start seriously shopping for a dream holiday home in Florida “now that prices have come down so much”.

My answer — and I can’t see how anyone could sensibly disagree — is that it is not. The US property market is fundamentally overvalued and America’s mortgage payers are overstretched. Even if, as the optimists claim, the market is already bottoming out, there is no reason to think prices will start rising soon.

Add to that the fast-declining dollar (now at a 14-year low against the pound) and why would you want to own a house in the US? Buy now and you could find yourself nursing double-digit losses from the currency effects alone.

The only possible positive is put by Stuart Law of the property company Assetz (who, to be fair, is not actually suggesting that anyone buy a house in America now). The rental market might benefit from a house-price collapse, he said, and if the dollar really tumbles, “international tourism will soar, providing great stability and demand for rentals”. I’d call that clutching at straws.

The tourism argument is used all over the place as a justification for buying property. We should buy flats in Bansko, Bulgaria, because it is soon to be flooded with skiing tourists; in Montenegro because it is about to become a premier summer holiday resort for people other than Russian gangsters; in Shetland because a recent television programme means nature lovers will be flocking to view otters in the rain next summer; in France because the demand for gîtes is infinite; and in Dubai because it’s a mecca of sun, sea and sand that will draw in increasing numbers of free-spending tourists.

There are two problems with this. First, while it doesn’t always seem like it, there has to be a limited number of tourists: even the most dedicated skier can’t lodge in a badly built breeze-block studio in Bansko and a leaseback chalet at Courchevel in France at the same time.

Second, every time you hear the “exciting new tourist destination” argument you can be sure there is an opportunistic building bubble on. Take Dubai. The city has become nothing but a huge building site. Hundreds of residential super towers are being built and it is estimated that over 50,000 properties will be completed next year and another 60,000 the year after.

If the population grows at 7 per cent, says the Egyptian investment bank Prime Group, that means there will be 33,000 spare units in 2008. To fill those up with tourists, at least 1.7m people will have to take one-week holidays to Dubai. Is it really that nice? I doubt it. Analysts at Standard Chartered say they expect Dubai property prices to fall 20 per cent – 30 per cent in the next two or three years.

I am not against property investment in principle, I just can’t see many places where it makes sense right now. I am still tempted by the German market and its relatively high yields (I’m going to Berlin to have a look) and am eyeing the Indian market.

There is little doubt that we are now seeing growth driven by India’s healthy credit market and that the fast-growing middle class is going to need a lot of new housing, but the fact that property prices have more than doubled in the big cities in the past two years makes me nervous.

Buying individual properties in India is probably too risky but, given the speed of economic growth, I am thinking about putting a small amount into one of the Indian property funds listed on AIM: Ishaan Real Estate seems as good a bet as any.

Article by Merryn Somerset Webb

Merryn Somerset Webb is a former stockbroker and now editor of Money Week. Her views are personal and investors should always week professional advice

Source: Times Online Invest

World’s first rotating tower launched

A Saudi prince has already snapped up the tower’s penthouse.

Whatever next for the Arabian city that has an artificial ski slope covered in snow even when the temperature hits 50C? Not to mention the world’s tallest building, some 700 metres (2,300 ft) high, rising above palm-shaped artificial archipelagos in the warm waters of the Persian Gulf. Oh, and a growth rate of 16% and a population where foreigners in need of “luxury” homes outnumber locals.

Well, what about the world’s first rotating skyscraper?

Commissioned by the Dubai Property Ring, a firm of UK-based developers, the 30-storey apartment block will use solar energy to power 20 electric motors that will rotate the tower through 360 degrees over the course of a week.”This will be a fair building,” says Nick Cooper, the British engineer working with MG Bennet and Associates of Rotherham, which will build the mechanism. “Everybody will have the same views for the same amount of time.”

Mr Cooper is not referring to “fair” as in “funfair” – though the building is, it has to be said, the spectacular proposed centrepiece of the giant City of Arabia amusement park, complete with animatronic dinosaurs, which is due to open in 2009.

Time Residences will comprise 200 apartments. Its 80,000-tonne bulk will rest on a series of more or less friction-free polymer bearings. “It moves very slowly,” says Mr Cooper. “It is not a theme park ride.”

Will it work? Cooper has previously designed the drilling machine that bored for England and France beneath the Channel, allowing Eurostar trains to race between London and Paris. He has also designed a giant rotating rock-crushing machines for use in mines. Getting a 30-storey building to turn slowly should be a doddle. And, Cooper claims, the power required to make it spin should be no more than is needed to boil 21 electric kettles.

Rotating parts of buildings is nothing new: London’s Post Office tower, featuring one of the world’s first rotating restaurants (with a very British catering service ,provided by Butlins), opened in 1966. But, this side of an observatory, getting a whole building to turn around its axis is something else – a case of a “white hot” sixties technological dream realised in a blazing hot emirate half a century on.

The £41m building is designed by British architects at Glenn Howells Associates, the company currently converting the Birmingham Rotunda into a block of 230 flats, and the Dubai city developers Palmer and Turner.

It will be capped with a crescent-shaped Moon Lounge, which will feature a theatre and an observatory. From here, future residents may just be able to catch glimpses of the further 23 rotating towers the Dubai Property Ring plans to build in cities around the world – one for every time zone. The idea is enough to make anyone dizzy.

Source: Guardian Unlimited

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