Kl property market to continue falling
The property market in Kuala Lumpur could depreciate as much as 10 to
15 per cent going forward, while the prices of high-end condominiums in the
Kuala Lumpur City Centre (KLCC) area may fall up to 30 per cent in the next two
to three months, said Property Consultant Rahim
& Co...
The rest of the property market in Malaysia was expected to remain stable, it
said.
"The drop in prices will be more drastic in the KLCC area due to higher price
escalation that (it had enjoyed) from 2005 to 2008," said Datuk Abdul Rahim
Rahman, Executive Chairman of Rahim & Co.
"We are beginning to feel the impact on property in KLCC that depends on
foreign buyers."
He said there had been indications that the asking price for high-end
condominiums in the KLCC area had fallen by 30 per cent.
The foreign buyers that had supported property sales in KLCC "are now beginning
to reduce and Malaysian buyers are adopting a wait and see attitude," he said.
"Sellers have started to offer lower prices (and the prices) have dropped 10 to15
per cent in the KLCC area," Abdul Rahim told reporters during the one-day
seminar aimed at updating participants on property trends and issues in
Malaysia.
However, it was unlikely that the domestic real estate market would drop as
much as 45 per cent as had happened in Hong Kong, London and Singapore, he
said, adding that real estate prices in those cities were expected to further
depreciate by 50 per cent or 60 per cent in the next few months.
Abdul Rahim said Malaysian office spaces still enjoyed 90 per cent occupancy
rates and rental prices had not dropped as there was no oversupply and many of
the leasing contracts were not expiring.
"We know that it is going to be an additional eight million sq ft of office
space in 2011 and 2012, and we expect because of this, there will be downtrend
in rental rates even without this economic crisis," Abdul Rahim said.
Source: www.malaysiapropertynews.com