Showing posts with label million square. Show all posts
Showing posts with label million square. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

Developers focus on lower-cost housing

Developers focus on lower-cost housing

Property developers remain optimistic and are focusing on the medium –
and low-cost housing segments though demand has yet to recover from a
prolonged slump.


Hugo Slade, deputy director of market research company Vietnam Cushman
& Wakefield, said so far this year, 46 development projects with
8,550 apartments costing an average of 15.5 million VND per square metre
came into the market.


Developers continued to launch
their products despite low demand caused by high interest rates and
tortuous loan procedures for buying houses, he added.


According to the director of a property company who wished to remain
unnamed, since the market has been dull for two years, most developers
have run out of money.


Among those are Happy Plaza in Binh
Chanh District which consists of 600 apartments priced at 12.5
million-13.5 million VND per square metre and with an average size of
60sq.m.


Thu Duc Housing Development Joint Stock Co is
confident that the medium-priced apartment segment will continue to do
well for at least the next 10 years and has begun the Truong Tho
apartment project at an average price of 15.5 million VND per square
metre.


It has sold all 120 units in the first phase and kicked off sale for the second phase on September 24.


Van Phat Hung Joint Stock Co plans to initially offer 110 apartments in
its La Casa tower in District 7. It is building a total of 2,000 units
there.


Foreign property developers have begun to show
interest in the medium-priced segment unlike earlier when they were
completely focused on the luxury segment.


An executive at
Singapore-owned CapitaLand Co said the company will start building
apartments costing less than 20 million VND per square metre.


He did not mention a time frame but said it was to diversify the firm's offerings in the Vietnamese market.


Small apartments priced at 400 million VND - 800 million VND are the
most in demand, property brokers said, adding 80 percent of successful
housing transactions are in the medium – and low-cost segment./.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Developers focus on lower-cost housing

Apartment blocks in Tan Phu District, HCM City. Property developers remain optimistic about the medium- and low-cost housing segments. — VNA/VNS Photo Manh Linh

Apartment blocks in Tan Phu District, HCM City. Property developers remain optimistic about the medium- and low-cost housing segments. — VNA/VNS Photo Manh Linh

HCM CITY — Property developers remain optimistic and are focusing on the medium – and low-cost housing segments though demand has yet to recover from a prolonged slump.

Hugo Slade, deputy director of market research company Viet Nam Cushman & Wakefield, said so far this year, 46 development projects with 8,550 apartments costing an average of VND15.5 million per square metre came into the market.

Developers continued to launch their products despite low demand caused by high interest rates and tortuous loan procedures for buying houses, he added.

According to the director of a property company who wished to remain unnamed, since the market has been dull for two years, most developers have run out of money.

Among those are Happy Plaza in Binh Chanh District which consists of 600 apartments priced at VND12.5 million-13.5 million per square metre and with an average size of 60sq.m.

Thu Duc Housing Development Joint Stock Co is confident that the medium-priced apartment segment will continue to do well for at least the next 10 years and has begun the Truong Tho apartment project at an average price of VND15.5 million per square metre.

It has sold all 120 units in the first phase and kicked off sale for the second phase on September 24.

Van Phat Hung Joint Stock Co plans to initially offer 110 apartments in its La Casa tower in District 7. It is building a total of 2,000 units there.

Foreign property developers have begun to show interest in the medium-priced segment unlike earlier when they were completely focused on the luxury segment.

An executive at Singapore-owned CapitaLand Co said the company will start building apartments costing less than VND20 million per square metre.

He did not mention a time frame but said it was to diversify the firm's offerings in the Vietnamese market.

Small apartments priced at VND400 million-VND800 million are the most in demand, property brokers said, adding 80 per cent of successful housing transactions are in the medium – and low-cost segment. —VNS

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Market challenges but chances for affordable condos

A motorbike passes by the condo project Thuduc House Apartment in HCMC’s Thu Duc District. The developer has been encouraged by a good run of sales there - Photo: Dinh Dung
The times have changed in the property market from two years ago when buyers would rush to buy up what ever was available at new housing projects.

“The market is changing, and developers have no choice but tailor their products to suit the market demand,” Do Thi Loan, general secretary of the HCMC Real Estate Association (HoREA) said.

Another change over the past few years is that prospective buyers want to see the finished product now before they invest their money, instead of just seeing the plans.

Like the office market where oversupply has forced landlords to offer incentives to woo tenants, the condo market is witnessing a strong increase in supply, making sales hard.

Hugo Slade, associate director of Cushman & Wakefield Vietnam, told a seminar that the significant increase in supply had given homebuyers more options.

The commercial real estate consultancy company’s studies showed  total supply for the first eight months of this year was around 11,200 units, of which the affordable apartment segment accounted for 76% of the total supply. Districts 2 and 7 had the most new units with nearly 2,000 and 1,900 units respectively.

Some 46 condo projects totaling some 8,500 units were launched in the last eight months, with prices ranging from US$780 to US$810 per square meter. The company, however, reported that the market demand remained low in all grades. The uptake rate of the grade A segment was 14%, grade B segment was 17% and grade C was around 20%.

Slade attributes low take-up rates to prices that don’t match what homebuyers can afford and fewer chances for speculation. In addition, unrealistic loan criteria for end-users were another discouraging element.

The newly issued Decree 71/2010/NDCP designed to curb speculation; gold price increase and the exchange rate fluctuation between dollar and dong were also depressing factors for individual investors and speculators.

Challenges but chances

With outlooks tinged with difficulties in financial support because of stricter loan procedures, high interest rates and the current wait-to-see sentiment, the property market is expected to flounder through the abundant supply in the years to come. According to research by Savills Vietnam, there are some 28,500 apartments still in planning that will complete before 2012.

Many developers still have a positive outlook, saying that although the market has experienced difficulties for years, it would soon pick up and return to its cycle of development given the country’s positive trend of recovery.

Nguyen Vu Bao Hoang, deputy director of Thu Duc Housing Development Corporation, or Thuduc House, said the young population and fast urban development is creating a huge housing demand. Developers, who choose a segment in the residential market and design their product tailored to suit it, would be most likely to prosper.

Like other developers, Hoang is confident in the market development, saying the improvements to infrastructure and road systems shortening distances and travel time from fringe districts to the center of the city are opening doors for affordable and mid-end condo projects, which are often developed far from the central business districts. Therefore, many project developers, who have condo projects with prices below VND20 million per square meter, are going ahead with projects despite a flat market.

For example, Thuduc House had positive feedback when it launched 120 apartments at Thuduc House project, one of five condo projects targeting middle-income earners. All the apartments sold with prices starting from VND15.5 million per square meter within a short time, so the corporation is pressing ahead to launch the second phase this week.

In another project, Van Phat Hung Corporation plans to test the market with some 110 apartments priced from US$1,000 (VND19.5 million) per square meter. The corporation is developing its La Casa condo project on Hoang Quoc Viet and Dao Tri streets, some eight kilometers from the heart of HCMC. When in place in the next five years, the project will provide some 2,000 apartments.

Some other affordable projects southwest of the city are underway and will be ready soon. They include Terra Rosa, Dai Thanh, Tan Tao 1, Carina and Happy Plaza which offer some 600 apartments.

Slade said a more price sensitive residential development trend is taking shape and will continue for the next two years.

He predicts that in the short term, oversupply would put downward pressure on pricing. Reduced travel time would compensate for outer district projects, and suburban residential development would continue to be the trend as a result of high land values.

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Monday, August 30, 2010

Highrise building ban casts pall over apartment market

HA NOI — Sales of older high-rise apartments remain sluggish in Ha Noi, with buyers shopping carefully to avoid possible losses in the face of an outstanding Government decision issued in 2007 to require all older apartment blocks in the capital city to be rebuilt.

Since then, the prices of older apartment units in four districts , including Hai Ba Trung, Dong Da, Ba Dinh and Cau Giay, have increased sharply, to an average of VND20-40 million (US$1,050-2,100) per square metre, according to Northern Green Land Real Estate and Services Company.

Older units on Nguyen Cong Tru Street, one of the city's hottest addresses, were averaging as high as VND60 million ($3,160) per square metre.

However, prices receded in the face of a Government decision last December to ban high-rise construction, a move which aimed to protect architectural values and social and technical infrastructure in a part of the city that is home to many historically and culturally significant buildings.

The ban temporarily halted 223 ongoing high-rise construction projects in the four central districts of Hoan Kiem, Hai Ba Trung, Ba Dinh and Dong Da.

While the ban was lifted in July this year, construction continues to be barred in the Ba Dinh political centre, Old Quarter and Ho Guom Lake, Old Citadel and Army areas.

And the lasting effect of the ban has been a chilling effect on the market for older units, with many real estate brokerages suffering the consquences.

BDS Real Estate Co director Le Xuan Truong was still advising clients and investors to be very careful when considering this market.

It would be difficult to see this market reviving since it was under a constant threat of new Government regulation, agreed Hoa Phat Land Co general director Pham Trung Ha. The city would continue to control closely older units while tightly regulating new construction, he said.

Once new construction commenced to replace more of the older buildings, more delays would occur as current owners and new builders negotiated compensation, Ha added.

"If the projects are located in licensed areas and the investors have pledged to implement the projects as scheduled, these projects could still be highly profitable market," said Ha. — VNS

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