Chitchat Jiuhu Has Over 30,000 Unsold Residential Units In 2019! Lelong Lelong!

JohnTan

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PETALING JAYA: Malaysia is entering 2019 with unsold completed residential units rising to 30,115 units as at Sept 30, 2018, an increase of 48.35% from the 20,304 units a year ago.

According to the Valuation and Property Services Department’s (JPPH) latest figures released on Saturday, the total value was RM19.54bil, a 56.44% rise from RM12.49bil a year ago. Should serviced apartments and small offices home offices (SoHos) be included, the overhang value rose to 40,916 units, valued at RM27.38bil.

JPPH defines an overhang as completed unsold units nine months after launching, and after the issuance of the certificate of fitness by local authorities. This signify a dwelling is fit for occupation.The unsold units are across the board from RM50,000 or less to more than RM1mil. The concentration begins even from the RM200,000-RM250,000 segment with about 3,500 unsold while the bulk of the overhang are priced RM500,000 and above, with more than 12,000 units.

The government and the Real Estate Housing Developers Association are planning to launch a national home ownership campaign in January to resolve this blemish on the property sector. Individual developers are currently putting last minute tweaks to their campaigns.

Among those looking forward to unveil their bags of goodies are the Eco World group, Sunway and Mah Sing, just to name a few.

The overhang has been rising in terms of units and ringgit value for a few years now, with the exception of 2015 when the number of overhang units decreased to 8,804 units, valued at RM3.64bil. However, the numbers took off again a year later, with unsold units valued at RM8.27bil in the third quarter of 2016.

The situation then and now is further complicated with the completion of serviced apartments and SoHos which are built on commercial land, but which are also used for residential purposes.

Johor has the largest number of unsold completed serviced apartments and SoHo units at 7,714. It rose 191% from the 2,647 units recorded a year ago. The overhang in serviced apartments is valued at RM6.16bil compared with its residential overhang of RM4.44bil. This means the total overall value of its unsold serviced apartments are 1.5 times that of residential housing.

This brings Johor’s total overhang to about RM10.6bil, or more than a third of the national RM27.38bil figure, excluding other forms of unsold commercial properties like offices and retail in the state. Going by JPPH reports, Johor has the highest number of completed unsold units in the country, with 6,053, a 55% increase from the 3,901 units a year ago.

A source from the JPPH said the country’s overhang scenario has somewhat changed with thousands of unsold serviced apartments and SoHos, a feature of urban centre living.

To circumvent high property prices, developers shifted their focus by building shoebox-sized units built in urban centres on commercial land which has a higher value than residential land.

Local authorities also convert land to commercial status in order to get higher land premiums from developers. Owners of these units also pay high taxes to the local authorities.

Developers “cut” the units smaller to bring the overall price down to give an illusion of affordability.

The JPPH source said: “Buyers bought these units because they were priced at around RM500,000 but they did not know that they have to pay higher serviced charges, utility bills and other taxes because of their commercial status.

“When they get the bills, they are shocked with the high charges,” the source said. That is one of the reasons why buyers may be staying away from serviced apartments, he said.

It is also difficult to bring up a family in such homes because of the small size of these units. A minimum size of 1,200 sq ft with three bedrooms would be more ideal, he said.

Among the states that have a serious overhang are Johor, Selangor, Penang and surprisingly, Kedah. Known as the rice bowl of Malaysia with its paddy-farming community, Kedah with an estimated population of about 2 million, has an overhang of 3,450 units, reducing marginally by 2.38% from a year ago. Selangor’s residential overhang rose to 4,524, up 25.81% while Penang, up 43.59% to 3,261 units.

He said JPPH depends on data fed to them by developers. Developers holding back information will not give a true and fair view of the situation. According to JPPH’s latest report, Kuala Lumpur has no unsold completed serviced apartments/SoHos.

https://www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2018/12/24/higher-overhang/
 
Tha is easy to understand as tgese units were built for sinkies.
Then najib increase tge minimum purchase price a foreigner can buy homes from RM500k to RM1 mil in 2014. That why these developers are stuck as these soartments are above RM500k. Yoo expensive for locals. And foreigners cannot buy.
 
These JiuHu developers should lobby their gahbrament to reduce the threshold for foreigners from rm1 million to rm500k. Then Sinkies can "help" to solve their problem of property overhang.
 
These JiuHu developers should lobby their gahbrament to reduce the threshold for foreigners from rm1 million to rm500k. Then Sinkies can "help" to solve their problem of property overhang.
I doubt if they are capable even of doing such simple task. Before 2014, hongkies were buying tens of apartments in KL. Dunno why.
I know for a fact developers neglected local market and target foreigners and even launch sone of tge projects overseas. That RM1mil minimum move by najib destroyed the economy.
 
the chinks not taking them up?
 
If only Mudland had a governmental agency like HDB ....Mudland should learn from SINKapore.
 
More birds like ginny descending upon Jaybee chirping cheap cheap. :rolleyes:
 
A red dot nearby actually have the same problem-but solve it by allowing millions of foreigners to 'invade' the country to the detriment of their own people.
If Malaysia were to allow millions of foreigners to come in freely, grant them PR/citizenships like toilet paper, give them scholarships over locals, reserve university places for them ,give them jobs over locals, there will be a property boom .
So its all about politics, not economics.
The popularly elected government of Malaysia cannot even ratify the ICERD-talk about letting in millions of foreigners freely.
Bumi interest comes first and I see property speculation as mainly a Chinese problem
 
Tha is easy to understand as tgese units were built for sinkies.
Then najib increase tge minimum purchase price a foreigner can buy homes from RM500k to RM1 mil in 2014. That why these developers are stuck as these soartments are above RM500k. Yoo expensive for locals. And foreigners cannot buy.
Wat about mudlands encouraging Foreigners to stay mudland? My 2nd home scheme? Is it a failure?

 
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