LeveragedBuyout
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Not good news from the perspective of attracting MNCs. Those commercial rent rates are ridiculous.
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http://online.wsj.com/articles/myanmar-property-has-room-to-rise-says-yomas-pun-1414654111
Myanmar Property Has Room to Rise, Says Pun
Yoma’s Serge Pun Says Property Supply Over Next Five Years Won’t Meet Demand
ENLARGE
Serge Pun, chairman of Yoma Strategic Holdings. BLOOMBERG NEWS
By SHIBANI MAHTANI And JAKE MAXWELL WATTS
Oct. 30, 2014 3:28 a.m. ET
Real estate in Yangon, where office rental prices are already the highest in Southeast Asia, will become even more expensive regardless of political movements in the country, says Myanmar businessman Serge Pun.
“It’s very hard to come to the conclusion that there is a bubble,” Mr. Pun said in an interview Wednesday on the sidelines of the Forbes Global CEO Conference in Singapore. “The amount of supply that is going to come on stream in the next five years based on all the pipeline projects is far insufficient from what the basic demand is,” he said.
According to real-estate research firm Colliers International, Yangon has the highest average monthly rent for prime office space in the Southeast Asian region with an average rent of US$87 per square meter in the first quarter of this year, 21% higher than in Singapore, which claims second place.
The firm predicts that this rental figure will rise by more than 25% in the next two years. Only four buildings in Yangon are considered to have quality offices, Colliers adds, with buildings of international standard “nonexistent” in the city, thus inflating prices there and keeping demand for higher-quality office spaces high when new developments come online in the next few years.
Most Yangon buildings look dated, with slow lifts and few upgrades to facilities in decades. For the same price, companies can buy office space in Singapore’s premium Marina Bay Sands district overlooking the central business district and bay.
Mr. Pun’s Yoma Strategic Holdings Ltd. , which reaps 90% of its revenue from real estate, said Wednesday net profit had more than doubled to US$16.5 million in the fiscal second quarter, year-over-year, largely due to growth driven by its Star City project, a 10-million square foot condominium project in Yangon complete with golf courses and waterfront restaurants. The company, which is one of Myanmar’s largest conglomerates, saw its share price rise 6.4% in Singapore on the news Wednesday, although they had fallen back by 1.5% Thursday afternoon.
“The results appear very good,” said Roy Chen, an analyst covering Yoma Strategic at CIMB Research in Singapore. “But if you check into the financials and the other statements then there are some significant one-off gains,” he said, such as foreign-exchange gains and reclassification of assets. Mr. Chen said that demand for Yoma’s assets in Star City and other developments appears strong.
“I do not see any risk” in the market, said Mr. Pun, who argues that proposed legislation to allow former Myanmar citizens to buy property and the development of a local banking sector will likely drive demand in the future, despite a regulatory environment that is still riddled with red tape. At present, only Myanmar citizens can own land, although foreigners can rent property.
Stringent laws on land ownership are a hurdle for foreign firms looking to enter Myanmar’s property market, a problem that affects even the biggest local developers—including Mr. Pun.
For example, little progress has been made on Yoma’s signature Landmark project, a 10-acre, US$350 million development including the historic former Burma Railways headquarters in downtown Yangon, because of bureaucratic delays in extending Yoma’s lease of the land there.
While upbeat on Myanmar real estate in general, Mr. Pun said it is unrealistic to assume that the market will perform well indefinitely. “Bubble territory could happen very quickly, very easily if we’re not careful,” he warned. Mr. Pun said he has experienced crashes before, but said ordinary Burmese might find a downturn hard to comprehend. “Try telling that to a Burmese who has never seen real-estate prices come down for 25 years,” he said.
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http://online.wsj.com/articles/myanmar-property-has-room-to-rise-says-yomas-pun-1414654111
Myanmar Property Has Room to Rise, Says Pun
Yoma’s Serge Pun Says Property Supply Over Next Five Years Won’t Meet Demand
Serge Pun, chairman of Yoma Strategic Holdings. BLOOMBERG NEWS
By SHIBANI MAHTANI And JAKE MAXWELL WATTS
Oct. 30, 2014 3:28 a.m. ET
Real estate in Yangon, where office rental prices are already the highest in Southeast Asia, will become even more expensive regardless of political movements in the country, says Myanmar businessman Serge Pun.
“It’s very hard to come to the conclusion that there is a bubble,” Mr. Pun said in an interview Wednesday on the sidelines of the Forbes Global CEO Conference in Singapore. “The amount of supply that is going to come on stream in the next five years based on all the pipeline projects is far insufficient from what the basic demand is,” he said.
According to real-estate research firm Colliers International, Yangon has the highest average monthly rent for prime office space in the Southeast Asian region with an average rent of US$87 per square meter in the first quarter of this year, 21% higher than in Singapore, which claims second place.
The firm predicts that this rental figure will rise by more than 25% in the next two years. Only four buildings in Yangon are considered to have quality offices, Colliers adds, with buildings of international standard “nonexistent” in the city, thus inflating prices there and keeping demand for higher-quality office spaces high when new developments come online in the next few years.
Most Yangon buildings look dated, with slow lifts and few upgrades to facilities in decades. For the same price, companies can buy office space in Singapore’s premium Marina Bay Sands district overlooking the central business district and bay.
Mr. Pun’s Yoma Strategic Holdings Ltd. , which reaps 90% of its revenue from real estate, said Wednesday net profit had more than doubled to US$16.5 million in the fiscal second quarter, year-over-year, largely due to growth driven by its Star City project, a 10-million square foot condominium project in Yangon complete with golf courses and waterfront restaurants. The company, which is one of Myanmar’s largest conglomerates, saw its share price rise 6.4% in Singapore on the news Wednesday, although they had fallen back by 1.5% Thursday afternoon.
“The results appear very good,” said Roy Chen, an analyst covering Yoma Strategic at CIMB Research in Singapore. “But if you check into the financials and the other statements then there are some significant one-off gains,” he said, such as foreign-exchange gains and reclassification of assets. Mr. Chen said that demand for Yoma’s assets in Star City and other developments appears strong.
“I do not see any risk” in the market, said Mr. Pun, who argues that proposed legislation to allow former Myanmar citizens to buy property and the development of a local banking sector will likely drive demand in the future, despite a regulatory environment that is still riddled with red tape. At present, only Myanmar citizens can own land, although foreigners can rent property.
Stringent laws on land ownership are a hurdle for foreign firms looking to enter Myanmar’s property market, a problem that affects even the biggest local developers—including Mr. Pun.
For example, little progress has been made on Yoma’s signature Landmark project, a 10-acre, US$350 million development including the historic former Burma Railways headquarters in downtown Yangon, because of bureaucratic delays in extending Yoma’s lease of the land there.
While upbeat on Myanmar real estate in general, Mr. Pun said it is unrealistic to assume that the market will perform well indefinitely. “Bubble territory could happen very quickly, very easily if we’re not careful,” he warned. Mr. Pun said he has experienced crashes before, but said ordinary Burmese might find a downturn hard to comprehend. “Try telling that to a Burmese who has never seen real-estate prices come down for 25 years,” he said.
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