Sunday, November 25, 2012

Retirement Developers Urged: Go Upscale



November 24, 2012, 11:51am
The foreign chambers-led Retirement and Healthcare Coalition (RHC) advised Philippine developers to start graduating towards the development of full-fledge retirement villages.
The RHC, led by the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines (ECCP), said that property developers should look beyond mere “sleeping quarters” as other countries in the region have already went ahead with their own infrastructure build-up to get a bigger share in the ballooning silver market.
RHC executive director Marc Daubenbuechel said developers in the country should not just sit back and take foreign retirees for granted because by 2030, 25 percent of the world’s population will be comprised of the silver market.
“The increasing numbers of retirees that are looking for homes outside their own countries are increasing each year.  The Philippines must be able to cater to their needs for retirement communities that fit their lifestyle,” Daubenbuechel said.
Daubenbuechel lamented that property developers are currently contented in offering “sleeping quarters” that do not have vital components that pertain to leisure, entertainment, health, and wellness of foreign retirees.
To further promote and assist in the development of the country as a prime retirement destination, the RHC has been holding a series of seminars and forums with key players in the industry including the upcoming “Senior Residences in Asia: The Fundamentals” slated November 27 in Makati City.
“There should be a deeper understanding of how the players in the local industry should move forward,” Daubenbuechel said.
In partnership with the Philippine Retirement Authority and endorsed by the Australian-New Zealand Chamber of Commerce, the forum will discuss return on investments, various business models, and the key concepts within the retirement industry.
Among the resource persons confirmed include CB Richard Ellis chief executive officer Frederick Santos, Hotel Resort Development Corp - Managing Director Jean Luc Kebers, and Palafox Associates president Felino “Jun” Palafox Jr.
Aside from the ECCP, the RHC also counts the American, Japanese, and Korean chambers of commerce as its members.


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.
                  

P560M realty tax projected



1
-AA+A
Saturday, November 24, 2012
THIRTY years ago, there were no major developments in Barangays Lahug and Talamban, save for the Cebu Plaza Hotel in Nivel Hills.
But this year alone, 13 new commercial establishments are about to rise in Talamban, based on the applications for building permits submitted to the Office of the Building Official (OBO).
Barangays Apas and Lahug, which also share the Asiatown IT Park, have 24 commercial developments between them.
Cebu City Assessor Eustaquio Cesa estimates that the real properties in Cebu City for this year will gain for the City P560 million in real property taxes next year, an increase of 45 percent year-on-year.
The increase in the estimated real property tax will come mainly from the new buildings cropping up at the IT Park.
Moving
From 1982 to 2012, one of the most visible signs of change in Cebu City is its skyline.
Mayor Michael Rama, the longest serving elected official without interruption for 20 years, remembered that in the 1970s to early 1980s, development was mostly in the downtown area.
Records from the OBO, which the Office of the City Administrator made available for Sun.Star Cebu, affirm the mayor’s statement.
In 1982 alone, applications for commercial building permits were centered on Colon St., M.J. Cuenco, and C. Padilla.
A few other developments were on F. Ramos, Mabolo and Don Gil Garcia.
But in 2012, aside from Barangays Apas, Lahug and Talamban, developments are mostly in what was considered the uptown area in the 1990s.
There have also been major developments in Barangays Kamputhaw, Guadalupe, Capitol Site and Kasambagan. Other developments are in Cebu Business Park and Barangay Luz area.
SRP action
Cebu Business Park started with one mall in 1994 but today, construction is ongoing for various residential condominiums and high-rise office buildings.
Change is also visible at the South Road Properties (SRP), which was developed in 1995 with an international loan. The first two developers of the projects are SM Prime Holdings Inc. and Filinvest Land Inc. (FLI).
Both developers intend to build a commercial and residential condominium in the area. Between them, 11 applications for commercial building permits were filed this year.
In 1982, the SRP was a body of water.
Increasingly, commercial developments are catching up to residential projects, which still account for a majority of new buildings in the city.
In 1982, there were 483 applications for building permits. Of this number, 390 were for residential buildings, while 61 were for commercial establishments. The rest were institutional, industrial and “other construction.”
About 80 percent of the structural development in Cebu City then was residential.
Booming
Between 1996 and 2005, when 15,619 building permits were applied for, 66 percent were for residential, while 23 percent were already for commercial developments.
In 2012, of the 892 business permits issued, 251 or 28 percent are for commercial developments. These include Marco Polo Residences, FLI’s residential condominiums, one of SM’s buildings for its Seaside City, office buildings at IT Park and many others.
Even the mountain barangay of Bacayan is a beneficiary of the city’s development; it is where Aboitiz Land’s Pristina North is located.
Last year, Sun.Star Cebu did a story that quoted the National Economic Development Authority as saying the construction industry is booming in Central Visayas.
Between 2011 and 2015, 30 medium- and high-rise buildings are expected to be built in Cebu City alone. The Seaside City is considered the biggest construction project and is pegged to be a P20-billion integrated development.
The highest building is projected to be Horizons 101 Towers 1 and 2 along Gen. Maxilom Ave., by Taft Properties. The first tower will have 55 floors while the second will have 46.
Back to Colon
Five of the 30 buildings are said to have over 30 floors—Horizon’s two towers, the 30-story GT Tower on Fuente Osmeña, 33-storey Ultima Residences Tower 4 and the 30-story Calyx Residences at the Cebu Business Park.
The growth is attributed to the strong demand for business process outsourcing (BPO) and tourism-related facilities and services in Cebu City.
But even if property developments have shifted from the downtown area to uptown and then to the Cebu Business Park and IT Park, Rama and some Cebuano business owners worked together for the Downtown Revitalization Program.
This December, the program will feature night markets on the stretch of Colon St., which the City will close to vehicular traffic.
The aim is to bring the people back to Colon, where businesses continue to survive, far from the shadows of the city’s emerging high-rises.


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.
                                                            

The Courtyards Banawa - CEBU PRIME INVESTMENT

The Courtyards Banawa - CEBU PRIME INVESTMENT


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

New real estate firm to spend P450M for project




2
-AA+A
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
A NEW player in the real estate industry is going to spend P450 million for the first phase of its two-tower mid-rise building in Banawa.
The amount will also finance development of amenities including swimming pools, a sky garden, a day care center, and a fitness and family entertainment center, according to Sharon Ann Ong, Worldwide Central Properties Inc. (WCPI) vice president for marketing and sales.
WCPI is the real estate arm and a sister company of Worldwide Steel Group and Worldwide Hope Depot, founded just this year.
WCPI president Kent Ong said the real estate company is meant to complement the family’s existing businesses. The family has been in the construction industry for 36 years.
“The mission now is to build communities,” Kent said in a press conference yesterday.
“We are taking these further, not just in providing construction materials but also building homes for families.”
Sharon said the company’s entry into real estate was spurred by Cebu’s booming economy, driven by the continued growth in the business processing industry and the strong inflows of overseas remittances.
“We believe growth in the industry will continue in the coming years, given the good and stable economic environment we have,” she said.
Their flagship project, named Sundance Residences, sits on a 3,200-square meter property in Banawa. It is a 12-storey medium-rise building whose first tower will initially have 208 units. The Phase one of the construction is scheduled in the second quarter in 2013. Completion and delivery of units is scheduled in 2015.
Sharon said the residential building will cater to the middle to upper-mid market, specifically start-up families living near Capitol, Guadalupe and Banawa.
She said that in Cebu, Guadalupe is one of the most populated areas with six percent or 50,000 of Cebu’s population living there. “We felt that it was high time to have a medium-rise building in that area given also the huge housing backlog,” Sharon said.
Sundance Residences will have studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom units. Unit prices start at P1.8 million.
Optimistic about the continued growth in the real estate industry, Kent announced that the company is also exploring opportunities in building a horizontal housing development in a two-hectare property in Mactan.
He said the project, which is still on the planning stage, will have 300 units and will be constructed in phases by the second half of 2013.
WCPI has tapped tarchitect Antonio Trillanes Jr. to head the design team and Kenneth Cobonpue to handle the interior design for Sundance Residences.
When in Cebu City please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Skyline, facades mirror changes in taste, means




1
-AA+A
Saturday, November 24, 2012
WOOD gave way to steel. One-story buildings soared to become high-rise towers. And plain old architecture is transforming into green architecture.
Changes in building trends have kept pace with the growth of Cebu City’s real estate industry in the past three decades.
Engr. Willy Tiu Go, owner of the WTG Construction and Development Corp., has witnessed the structural changes in the city since 1982.
Go, who started his construction company in that decade, said buildings constructed 30 years ago were mostly single-storey, “straightforward” projects.
“They were very simple. Patag ra. Di pa gyud uso ang medium-rise or high-rise sa una (They were mostly one level; medium-rise or high-rise buildings were not the trend then),” he said.
The use of construction materials has evolved, along with building design.
In the 1980s, complex shapes as well as intricate and detailed carvings—almost Baroque, in some cases—were favored.
Now, however, Go said most of the buildings are high-rise structures over 15 levels high, which have significantly changed the city’s skyline.
Although cement continues to be used, most buildings’ façades are now coated with cladding or sheets for a sharper look, he said.
Because of the effects of climate change, engineering trends now give more emphasis on green infrastructure, which means designing buildings that will adapt to weather changes.
“Solar panels are now being used and buildings are naturally ventilated,” he said.
Similar observations were offered by the City Government’s Department of Engineering and Public Works (DEPW).
Engr. June Nadine Sison, who heads the DEPW’s construction division, said designs and trends in the construction of buildings in the city have “significantly” changed in the last three decades.
Sison said the present engineering trends have made buildings more attractive and able to help mitigate the effects of climate change.
“Before, we were only contented with a plain cement and paint finish, but now we have different claddings like glass, among others. We have also used pre-fabricated wall systems. Before, we used wood in building but now we don’t to prevent the cutting of trees,” she said.
“People now prefer high-rise buildings” because the cost of land keeps them from acquiring more space, she said.
With the help of technology and better equipment, Sison said the construction of buildings has grown faster.
High-rise buildings take just over a year to build, while in the 1980s it took two to three years to build more modest structures.
Both Go and Sison believe that as technology advances, more systems will be developed in the construction industry to make buildings more innovative and eco-friendly.

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

SEA RESIDENCES - Diokno Blvd., Mall of Asia Complex, Pasay City, Manila

SEA RESIDENCES - Diokno Blvd., Mall of Asia Complex, Pasay City, Manila


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.
                                                                                                                                                           

http://gregmelep.com/?view=details&catitemid=3


http://gregmelep.com/?view=details&catitemid=3


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

‘Local BPOs helping firms in U.S. Europe survive their crises’




AMERICANS and Europeans owe us and owe us big, according to C.B. Richard Ellis Philippines  Inc. (CBREPI).

Hundreds of Filipino workers burning the midnight oil and their youth, especially in business-process outsourcing (BPO) companies, have propped up business in the United States and European Union, CBREPI said in a statement.

“The Philippines is becoming the lifeboat for many US and European companies that need to outsource in order for their businesses to survive and actually preserve jobs back in the US and Europe,” it added.
The Philippine office of the Los Angeles-based CBRE Group Inc. also said that it sees “a return to and rapid expansion of” US and European multi-national companies (MNCs) in the Philippines, which is fast becoming the “BPO banking hub of Asia.”

CBRE Chairman Rick Santos was quoted in the statement as having said that such is “evident from global banks that are now relocating in the country for back-office support.”
“We are a multinational player without leaving our shores. Manila is now a strategic location for [MNCs and] banks as it supports and runs the world’s businesses out of the Philippines.”


The company said the BPO sector has created 4.5 million square feet of new office takeup a year.
It also helped that the pace of infrastructure projects continued, with CBRE citing “improved access to the Clark Freeport Zone via the rehabilitated Nlex [Northern Luzon Expressway] and its link to the C-5 road.”
“These resulted in renewed interest to set up business in Clark such as logistics, manufacturing, hotels, housing and condominium as well as built-to-purpose BPO buildings.”

However, while the BPO sector largely spurs increased real demand across all market segments in the residential front, CBRE says “demand for the high-end market will be sustained in 2013.”
“Developers will focus more on mid-income residential market segment within the P45,000 [$1,093.10 at $1=P41.1675] to P80,000 [$1,943.30] square meter range reflecting the demand created from the growing population of families and young professionals and supported by the record-low interest rates.”

Santos said that low interest rates, ranging from 5 percent to 11 percent for short- or long-term payment schemes, “has opened the opportunity for more Filipinos to become owners rather than renters.”
Aside from BPOs, CBRE also noted that other economic growth drivers remain: dollar remittances from overseas Filipino workers and the tourism industry.

Santos also said it also helped that “US-Philippines relations [are] back on track.”

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Prohomes affiliates with Johndorf


Monday, November 19, 2012

ESTABLISHED in 2004, Prohomes Development, Inc. has grown to become one of the leading affordable housing developers in Cebu. The company now has eight projects: Genesis Homes, St. Bernadette Homes, Corinthian’s Subdivision, St. Dominic’s Place, Earnestine Homes, St. Anne’s Lane, Fleur de Ville Subdivision and Hanniyah Homes.
Prohomes is now affiliated with Johndorf Ventures Corp. with the acquisition by the Lim family of all the stocks of Prohomes’ minority stockholders. Taking full control of the company is its newly-elected president and CEO Richard Lim and a strong core management team.
“Johndorf and Prohomes will together evolve and become a strong driving force in the industry,” the company said in a press statement.
Johndrof Venture’s more than 20 years of experience in providing a multiple portfolio of developments-condominiums, townhouses, houses and lots-will provide the company heritage and credibility, the statement said.
“Johndorf will help steer the vision of Prohomes to grow in the affordable housing segment as it will continue to focus on the house and lot category by ensuring high quality products through strict standards of workmanship and customer satisfaction through enhanced customer service,” the company said.
Its latest project, Hanniyah Homes, will make available 2,000 townhouse units to the market. (PR)


When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Published in the Sun.Star Cebu newspaper on November 20, 2012.

Batting for urban renewal





‘I AM Cynthia Villar, and I say no to reclamation,” she thundered before a “People’s Summit on the Impacts of Reclamation” at the University of the Philippines last month and there is no denying this is the advocacy that will reverberate all over the archipelago in the coming months.

Villar is serving notice that urban renewal should be the new mantra—not the reclamation that threatens the flooding of thousands of homes. And here, she walks the talk. For on October 12 she took the witness stand before the courts as she tried to marshal the argument that reclamation should not be allowed in a stretch of Manila Bay as the cost and benefit do not tally. She has already won a writ of kalikasan against the project and now wants a temporary environmental protection order (Tepo) that would stop it completely.

Standing tall on her conviction that a planned 635-hectare reclamation project on Manila Bay could economically affect residents of Las Piñas, Parañaque and parts of Cavite, Villar spewed out the cold logic of the numbers. The reclamation would “flood” the economic well-being of the residents of these three cities, as the project would “impede the natural river flow in Las Piñas.”

She said Las Piñas, which has 4,000 hectares, or 40 million square meters, would not benefit from the planned reclamation that could add another 500 hectares, or 5 million square meters. The additional hectarage does not at all result in increased economic benefits and would even worsen the economic picture for the residents. The damage to flooding “massively outweighs any benefits from the additional land,” said Villar.

Doing the math, Villar said that assuming the cost of the land in Las Piñas is P5,000 per square meter, and the flooding caused by the reclamation would decrease property values by 10 percent, the P200-billion value of the land would go down by P20 billion, which far outweighs the P14 billion worth of reclaimed land. That is how skewed the cost-benefit ratio is, much like the fact that the reclamation proponent, All Tech Contractors Inc., is doing the huge project on a P50-million capital.

And what about the recurring damage? Villar vows: “We will stand firm in our stance against this reclamation, since the Constitution itself guarantees our right to a healthy environment.” What she proposes instead is urban renewal, where old buildings are rebuilt, whole blocks redesigned without any disruption to the ecological balance.

The Las Piñas-Parañaque-Cavite ecosystem is threatened by the reclamation project, as it would not only affect the flow of the Las Piñas River but even destroy the remaining 175-hectare mangrove forest and habitat that is home to bird species unique to the country. Citing an independent hydrologist, Tricore Solutions Inc., Villar is pushing for the Tepo since an “Ondoy”-like flooding would sink villages in the three affected areas by 0.15 meters and as much as 5.12 meters, equivalent to a two-story building.

Aside from this, a livelihood project that Villar conceptualized and which now employs thousands of poor folk along the banks of the Las Piñas River would be affected. What the residents do is collect the waste and water hyacinths along the river system and turn them into works of art that the Villar Foundation then markets and distributes.

Villar’s project, that of educating the Las Piñas residents to weave bags and their dreams to make their lives better, has actually caught fire in a nook along the river system in Pateros, the only remaining municipality in Metro Manila. In this town known for balut and alpombra sandals, a resident on M.R. Flores Street in Santo Rosario Kanluran wants to transplant the Villar livelihood advocacy.

This advocacy for ecological balance and aligned with it, that of providing livelihood opportunities, proves that Mrs. Villar is her own man, so to speak; in walking her talk, she is also doing an extraordinary task of weaving a new paradigm in urban renewal while providing a better future for less-fortunate folk not only in her native Las Piñas but also in 102 government reclamation projects being planned.

That is what makes this former Las Piñas congresswoman a different breed of leader.

When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Is There Really a REAL ESTATE BUBBLE?



Is there a really a real estate bubble developing in the country? Real estate professionals are worried about the bubble, especially now that the country is experiencing real estate boom.
During the “Is a Bubble in the Philippine Real Estate Sector Developing?” seminar last October 23, Mr. David Leechiu and Dr. Winston Padojinog discussed the bubble issue directly.
The data presented by Dr. Padojinog, which included excess liquidity, the presence of price premiums, and excess supply suggests that a bubble is indeed forming in the higher-end residential market segment.  Meanwhile Mr. Leechiu’s discussion of the office market appears to support a stable view of that segment.
And while no evidence was presented during the seminar, there was consensus among the speakers that the retail sector was likewise stable, given a preponderance of anecdotal evidence.
The speakers emphasized that their projections are based on what multilateral agencies are expecting, which factors in a weak US recovery, a European fiscal crisis, a volatile Middle East and a China losing steam.  Unforeseen events can easily accelerate the local real estate bubble’s expansion and cause it to burst causing debilitating economic damage.
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Steps must be taken to mitigate such an event.  Dr. Padojinog states that the “key is to release the pressure and deflate the bubble” and that this should involve “diversifying the lending portfolio of banks by improving the investment prospects of other sectors.”  He also recommended repositioning residential projects to cater to underserved segments as well as monitor “shadow banking,” which are informal financing activities in the real estate sector.
According to Dr. Padojinog, who already declared many times that there is really a real estate bubble in theupper and middle income housing markets, the four factors to determine the presence of real estate bubbles are highly liquid financial system, loosening of banks’ lending standards, prevailing market value not supportive of fundamental value of asset, and supply exceeds housing demand.
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Are the high end projects the source of developing real estate bubble? (Photo source: www.bestblogmanila.com)
Using the data from Banko Sentral ng Pilipinas, it showed substantial excess savings over investments. This translates to a lot of money held by households and enterprises floating around and not being invested.  This excess liquidity needs an outlet and the expected vehicles are the equity market and real estate.  Then this excess liquidity is going to real estate because real estate seems to be appreciating and is less volatile as a store of value.
This excess liquidity is going to the high end residential projects because most owners of excess liquidity are top income groups. This is not good since buyers are not end users but investor/speculators and too much supply of leasable space will put a downward pressure on lease income and therefore income values (ultimately market value).
Dr. Padojinog discussed the loosening of Banking Standards and supply exceeding market demand.
He doesn’t see any loosening of bank lending standards and on the market demand, there is a 3 million unit housing backlog for low cost, economic and socialized housing while on the middle cost and high end housing market, there is a surplus of 475,000 units.
Because of this, the main danger now for real estate bubble bursting comes from the middle and higher end housing market segments.
Dr. Padojinog advises developers to give priority the underserved markets such as low cost housing.
Unspoken was the issue that lower end housing projects generate lower yields and that developers always believe their higher end projects will be/are different from others’ projects and therefore will not suffer low take-up rates.
At some point the banks must step in and limit lending to higher end real estate projects or at least increase the lending rates for such.  The BSP, on the other hand, cannot increase interest rates to discourage real estate investments because other industries will be affected negatively.
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Mr. David Leechiu (Photo source: www.asia-ceo.org)
Mr. Leechiu of Jones Lang La Salle, on the other hand, discussed the demand for office buildings in the Philippines. According to him, the growth of Business Process Outsourcing industry will continue to grow until 2015.
At present, the country’s local office market is one of the largest in Asia, accounting to a total of 7.9 million square meters of effective demand. But, it is the 2nd or 3rd cheapest with P1,000 per square meter rental.
Assuming 2011 conditions, almost all new demand is generated by BPOs. Based on 2011 data, the demand for office spaces is approximately 360,000 square meters per annum.  This is easily met and surpassed by incoming demand, which is expected to exceed the running average until 2015.  Pipeline supply can meet this demand.
If the economy takes off due to sound macroeconomic fundamentals, the running average for annual demand will be about 400,000 square meters.  This will just about balance pipeline supply and expected demand surpluses.
What drives JLLS confidence is the amount of pre-building commitments that continue to be place by its clients.  The BPO sector will definitely continue to grow until 2015.
Growth will be coming from demand for Bonifacio Global City, GBC, office space because more firms are relocating to Bonifacio Global City, GBC, with many of them want new space or upgrade from Makati.  What makes GBC  superior  to Makati CBD because of infrastructure and planning. Currently, GBC capital values are about 30% higher than in Makati.  Most JLLS transactions in GBC range from PhP500 million to PhP2 billion while the few in Makati in 2011 fetched less than PhP500 million.  JLLS itself transacts an average of PhP1 billion per year in GBC.
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Data showing the chart of office space rate. (Data from Mr. Victor Asuncion)
Quezon City, the country’s largest city, is the next big thing. It has a lot of space and has easy access to the workforce. The infrastructure is also sufficient and can be easily improved.
The next big market in the medium term is Quezon City, or QC.  QC has a lot of space and has easy access to skilled labor.
FTI, in which the Ayala Corporation won the bidding from the government, will also be an attractive proposition because of location.
In the case of a new round of financial crisis triggered by problems in the Eurozone, Middle East, or Asia, there will be a 12-month to 18-month lag in demand deflation in office space.  That means that the earliest negative repercussions can be felt in 2014 if a crisis develops right now.
In the case of the economy lifting off due to government fiscal and political reforms, brick and mortar business demand will start picking up in 2013.  Many multinational companies are already scouting the Philippines for likely offices and plant locations.  Speculative demand will translate to effective demand when reforms continue and no new major external or internal crises develop.
The Philippines has been growing at least by 4% on average despite major internal and external crises for the past three decades.  JLLS believes that most political and economic risks have already been factored out by investors.
JLLS expects a credit upgrade soon and this will be accompanied by a surge in traditional brick and mortar business investments by foreigners and locals.  The JLLS projection of 400,000 square meters per annum as expected demand might be too conservative in such a case.
Moving forward, labor is a major bottleneck.  Scalable skilled labor can only be found in Metro Manila and Cebu.   Other Philippine cities will be hard-pressed to grow office space, even Davao and Baguio will be difficult to grow because of the education quotient.
The Cebu market is about 10% of the NCR market.  Investors are required a physical (disaster) back-up site where they allocate 10% to 20% of their capacity and they choose Cebu because of the scalable labor pool and infrastructure.  To underscore Cebu’s secondary quality, JLLS offers Cebu office space at PhP150 to PhP250 per square meter and as yet there are no takers.
Baguio is no longer an option due to lack of reliable airport facility while Davao has been discounted due to lack of scalable labor.
To summarize, JLLS believes office space demand is stable and there is no threat of it collapsing under a bubble scenario.
With these developments, is there really a real estate bubble developing in the country?
When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs.
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.

With sources from: MR. ROQUE SORIOSO, JR. & http://cuervopropertyadvisory.wordpress.com/2012/10/31/is-there-really-a-real-estate-bubble/

Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Way Forward For Housing



By CHARLIE A. V. GORAYEB

True to its theme, “Global Filipino: Key to Conserving Growth Through Sustainable and Strategic Real Estate Development and Practices”, the 21st Annual CREBA National Convention held last October was one of the ways the organization hopes to fulfill its role in linking sustainable approaches to keep the industry’s impressive growth path.
Government promulgated R.A. 7279 or the Urban Development and Housing Act of 1992 (UDHA) primarily to encourage strong private sector support in the implementation of mass housing projects. This was to be done through the granting of incentives such as simplification of documentation and financing, one-stop-shop, and tax exemptions for engaging in socialized housing.
CREBA recognizes the need to strengthen UDHA, particularly on strategies to strengthen the local government units’ capacity in the delivery of housing services. There is a need to promote greater public-private partnership in the development of sustainable communities.
CREBA likewise recognizes the need for the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC) to adopt a more pro-active stance and ensure that these incentives are availed by the private developers. That will be encouraged through the formulation of common guidelines in the implementation of Section 20 of the law and the granting of tax holidays for mass housing projects to address the huge backlog.
CREBA strongly supports the priority Housing Bills that are now pending in Congress, notably the creation of Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the proposed bill that would require housing developers to comply with Section 18 of UDHA. Those initiatives will surely promote efficiency which will lead to the increase of in-housing stock.
Hence, we urge HUDCC to call upon concerned government agencies to strictly comply with the specific provisions of UDHA and direct BIR to accept the Socialized Housing Certification issued by the HLURB. This will be made as the only requirement for the issuance of Certificate Authorizing Registration (CAR)/Tax Clearance (TCL) to the Registry of Deeds for housing developers.
We also urge HUDCC to complete the evaluation of the proposal to adjust the loan ceilings for socialized housing in light of recent developments and align this with the housing program of the Aquino administration.  We also urge to consider Socialized Housing Condominiums as alternative compliance to Section 18 of UDHA.
In addition, we urge the adoption of multi-tiered socialized housing price ceiling of up to P240,000 for the informal sector, up to P400,000 for the formal sector, and up to P850,000 for the medium-rise buildings or condominium units, provided they are located in urban areas.
Corollary to this, the increase of the price ceiling for low-cost housing from the current P3 million to P3.5 million for those who want to avail of income tax holidays of the BOI will be a welcome move. This will contribute to increase in housing units.
Government must finally adopt common guidelines and simplify procedures in the issuance of housing permits and licenses to avoid duplication of functions between HLURB and the local government units.
On real estate service practice, we urge the legislature to introduce amendments to the Real Estate Service Act (RESA) to address the number of sales agents to be hired by licensed brokers.
For its part, CREBA continues to strongly support and lobby for the immediate passage of the Bill that would create the Department of Housing to respond to the challenges of urbanization.
Just how well we can achieve our objectives shall be the measure of our collective will, and so I enjoin all our members and partners to rise to the occasion.
When in Cebu City, please visit http://www.gregmelep.com for your real estate and retirement needs. 
Avail of the opportunity to own a condominium unit in Cebu City together with your own parking space at the low amount of only P12,000.00+ and House and Lot @ P 7,306.81/month only. Hurry while supply of units still last. Just call the Tel. Nos. shown herein: (053)555-84-64/09164422611/09173373687.