Showing posts with label housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label housing. Show all posts

Friday, February 18, 2011

Confab examines new housing policies

by Xuan Huong

A new apartment building in Phu My Hung Area in HCM City. New housing policies on residential real-estate transactions were introduced to housing companies at a conference yesterday. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

A new apartment building in Phu My Hung Area in HCM City. New housing policies on residential real-estate transactions were introduced to housing companies at a conference yesterday. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

HCM CITY — More than 200 representatives from property companies learned about new housing policies during a meeting held yesterday in HCM City with the Viet Nam Real Estate Association and the Ministry of Construction.

The ministry explained that Decree 90, which took effect four years ago, was replaced with Decree 71.

The new decree contains detailed regulations covering different sectors in the local property market, and guides the implementation of the Law on Housing, according to Nguyen Trong Ninh, deputy director of the Housing and Real Estate Market Management Department.

In addition, Circular No 16 issued by the Ministry of Construction provides detailed guidelines for the implementation of Decree 71 regarding residential real estate transactions. The circular came into effect October 16.

Decree 71 contains regulations on the selection of developers, the appraisal and approval process of housing, commercial housing, individual housing, social housing projects and housing projects for public employees.

It also describes ways that project developers can raise capital for their projects.

Unlike the previous decree that contained vague language, the new decree allows developers to raise capital from banks, credit institutions, investment funds, corporate bonds, secondary investors and other organisations or individuals.

Under Decree 71, housing developers will be permitted to sell in advance a maximum of 20 per cent of the total number of apartments in a property project before finishing the foundation of the building.

The remaining sales must be traded via property exchange floors when the projects' foundations are completed.

The decree also outlines regulations and preferential policies for investors who develop social housing projects.

The aim is to encourage them to develop more housing projects and meet the housing demand of low-income earners.

In addition, Decree 71 has detailed guidance concerning housing transactions of Vietnamese residing abroad and of foreigners leasing houses in Viet Nam.

Regulations in previous decrees on housing policies that conflict with the new decree are no longer valid, according to Ninh.

Housing proposals submitted before August 8, the effective date of Decree 71, to provincial governments will be considered in several ways, he explained.

If the project has fewer than 2,500 apartments and is being built with State funds, the provincial People's Committee will make a decision based on Decree 90.

If it is being built with non-State funds, the local authority can issue an investment approval document to developers without asking them to submit a statement again.

If the project proposal has more than 2,500 apartments but does not mention investment sources, the provincial authority must send a statement to the Government for approval before it is turned over to the provincial government for final approval. — VNS

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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

China's public housing push takes edge off clampdown

CHINAECO

With one arm, China is pouring cold water on property speculators. With the other, it is tossing a life buoy to the real estate sector via increased spending on affordable housing.

It is a tricky balancing act, and the stakes are high.

The government must rein in housing prices before a bubble forms, while ensuring that investment in property, a cornerstone of the economy, remains robust.

The early verdict is that Beijing might just pull it off, having made the construction of public housing a priority for officials throughout the country at a crucial juncture in the Chinese political cycle.

"The affordable housing scheme can partly compensate for a slowdown in market-based real estate investment this year. The top leadership has repeatedly demonstrated very strong political will on this issue," said Yu Jun, a property analyst with CITIC Securities, China's largest listed brokerage.

China tried to push public housing before, but investment was halting and controversy erupted when some of the homes ended up in the hands of relatively wealthy people.

Meanwhile, property prices have continued their seemingly inexorable climb beyond the scope of affordability for most Chinese, fuelling public anger that the government is now trying to assuage with its most ambitious programme ever for cheap housing.

The government plans to build 5.8 million housing units for poorer citizens this year, which analysts estimate will involve spending of up to 400 billion yuan ($59 billion). That compares with total investment in real estate of 2.39 trillion yuan in the first seven months of the year.

It may not sound like all that much is going into public housing, but it should provide a real boost to the economy.

Total floor space under construction could rise 10 percent this year and 6 percent next year, even if private investment flatlines, Morgan Stanley strategist Jerry Lou estimated.

"There is a common concern in the market about the extent to which social housing can compensate for a slowdown in the commodity housing market. Our analysis shows that social housing is a good growth compensator," he wrote in a recent note.

Popping the bubble

Earlier this year, property prices were soaring across China. Some top-tier markets -- notably, the southern island of Hainan -- were in a state of frenzied buying, and others looked frothy.

Worried that a bubble could grow out of control, the government raised down-payment and mortgage rates and curbed lending to developers.

In recent months, as the Chinese economy began to slow and global markets dipped, some observers predicted that Beijing would back down and relax its tightening campaign.

But top leaders have held fast to their line.

This was crystallized two weeks ago when Vice Premier Li Keqiang, heir apparent to Premier Wen Jiabao, used a visit to a series of public housing projects in Beijing to say that the crackdown on property speculation would continue.

The government was stepping into the breach, he said.

"The affordable housing scheme is an important step to improve people's lives and also an important measure to maintain stable and relatively fast economic growth," Li said.

In the past, promises to build more affordable housing amounted to little. Not enough was built, and much of what was built went to families who did not need subsidized homes. Analysts expect better follow-through this time.

"My optimistic estimate is that the government will implement half of its plan this year," said Bai Hongwei, a property analyst with China International Capital Corp.

That alone could account for about 1.24 percentage points of GDP growth in 2010, he said. Economists polled by Reuters expect the Chinese economy to expand by 10 percent this year, up from 9.1 percent last year.

Local leaders have traditionally chased higher growth at all costs, with assessments of their performance based largely on economic results. In May, Beijing instructed officials across the country to sign letters of responsibility, stressing that construction of affordable housing would form a key part of their appraisals that weigh in deciding promotions.

With the government set for a big reshuffle from late 2012, officials will not want to disappoint.

The societal need for cheaper housing is clear.

There are only enough affordable homes in China now for about 6 percent of the urban population. The country needs to build 50 million more units to increase the coverage to 30 percent, and that could take another 30 years, Bai from CICC said.

"The affordable housing market has huge potential and we are optimistic about it as a driver of economic growth," he said.

Bringing developers on board

The government has plenty of money to build homes. What it lacks is expertise in building attractive apartments. For that, it is trying to bring in real estate developers, calling on them to oversee construction and management.

"The overall interest (of developers) is not very high," said Xu Ke, a project manager with Vanke in Beijing.

Xu looks after an affordable housing development with 1,575 flats that was built in 2007, one of the first in the capital.

Vanke had hoped for a profit margin of 5-10 percent, but it cut that to 3-5 percent after sales slowed when Beijing started to screen buyers more carefully, to ensure that only deserving people were getting homes.

Despite the shortfall, Vanke, China's biggest listed developer, is still committed to the scheme.

"The government is directing 50 percent of residential land supply to the affordable housing sector. As a mainstream developer, we must take part," Xu said.

Liu Yajuan, a housewife in her 50s, was one of the lucky few, awarded a permit to buy a unit at the Vanke project at 6,200 yuan (about $915) per square meter, less than a third of the going rate in the neighborhood.

"My son has got a new home and so can get married at last," she said after touring the apartment for the first time.

"I'm satisfied with everything, except that there is no balcony," she said.

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Thursday, September 2, 2010

Vinaconex launches cheap housing project

HA NOI — Vinaconex Xuan Mai Concrete and Construction Joint Stock Company last week began construction of low-income apartments in Ha Noi's Ha Dong District.

Covering an area of more than 24,000sq.m, the VND950 billion (US$50 million) project will include five 19-storey apartment blocks, a ground floor and commercial centres in the Kien Hung residential area, 11km west of the capital.

Director of Vinaconex Xuan Mai Dang Hoang Huy said the project would add 1,512 apartments to the market by the first quarter of 2012. The price for the 65 to 70sq.m apartments will be VND8 million ($420) per square metre.

Vice chairman of the municipal People's Committee Phi Thai Binh said this was the largest low-cost housing project so far in the capital in terms of scale and the number of apartments.

The capital is striving to build 15,000 apartments with an average area of 70 square metres and total investment of VND7-9 trillion ($368-474 million) by 2015.

Binh said the city had already carried out several social housing projects for workers, students and low-income earners in Viet Hung, Sai Dong, Dong Anh, Ha Dong, Hoang Mai districts.

Construction of several low-cost housing projects in An Khanh residential area and Me Linh district would begin by the end of this year. — VNS

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