Lunes, Oktubre 7, 2013
Big corporations like Singapore’s ease of business
Mumbai property tops global cities on price; Singapore wins on value
The World Bank has ranked it as the easiest place to do business for seven straight years.
The city offers businesses the best property-rental value compared with the size of its economy.
Big corporations love Singapore.
Standard Chartered has the global headquarters of its private bank and its biggest trading floor in Asia in the country, which has also become a commodities hub as Asia’s biggest oil-trading market for BHP Billiton, ExxonMobil and Chevron.
“The value of real estate is higher where more corporate revenue can be generated,” said Yolande Barnes, the director of Savills world research. “It is worth paying more to accommodate an executive team in Singapore with its high GDP than in the low GDP Mumbai.”
The survey showed that Sydney, Moscow and New York City were next after Singapore in terms of business value.
In April, Singapore overtook Japan as Asia’s biggest foreign-exchange centre for the first time, according to data from the city-state’s central bank.
The market in Singapore is booming, and Savills said the property investment sales market had recorded US$13.4 billion (Dh49.21bn) worth of deals in the third quarter of 2013, which accounts for the highest quarterly transaction value in the past five years.
Singapore’s property costs, at $1 million per year, are sixth highest of the 10 cities, the Savills rankings showed. Prices were calculated for residential and office spaces for 14 employees plus households.
The highest total costs were $1.63m per year in Hong Kong and the cheapest $444,000 in Mumbai, based on Savills criteria.
However, the Singaporean government’s programme of providing residential housing for its citizens means that the property market could be destined for a sizeable correction of up to 20 per cent by 2015.
“We believe the risk of a residential property market correction in the next two years is rising, as expected higher interest rates look set to coincide with a large increase in housing supply over 2014-15,” Tricia Song, an analyst at Barclays, wrote in a report last month.
Barclays believes that prices will remain flat this year, before falling 5 per cent in next year and a further 5 to 15 per cent in 2015.
Sales were hit in June after the government unveiled new rules governing how financial institutions grant property loans to individuals.
Prices have soared more than 60 per cent since mid-2009, with the increase prompted by low interest rates.
CapitaLand and City Developments, Singapore’s two biggest publicly traded developers, have said in the past two months they expect “headwinds” in the property market because of the government curbs, Bloomberg reported.
Record home prices amid low interest rates raised concerns of a housing bubble and prompted the government to widen a campaign, in place for more than four years, to curb speculation in Asia’s second-most expensive housing market, Knight Frank and Citi Private Bank said in a report.
There have been nine rounds of market-cooling measures since 2009, most recently targeted at the public housing market, which accommodates 80 per cent of the state’s citizens.
The measures announced in August included shortening the maximum loan tenure to 25 years from 30 years, and reducing the mortgage ratio limit against the borrower’s salary to 30 per cent from 35 per cent previously.
The government has made a policy of expanding the supply of housing on offer as it seeks to increase the population. A huge supply of both private and public housing is expected to come on-stream next year.
http://www.thenational.ae/big-corporations-like-singapores-ease-of-business
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