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Friday, September 9, 2011
British Massacre - Batang Kali Victims win UK court scrutiny
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Kin of Batang Kali massacre victims win UK court scrutiny
KUALA LUMPUR: Family members of 24 unarmed Malaysian ethnic Chinese workers, allegedly shot dead by British troops in a massacre more than six decades ago, won a significant court battle in Britain that will give hope that the incident will be formally investigated, their lawyers said Thursday.
The British High court ruled on Aug 31 in favour of the family members for a review of a decision by the British government to refuse to investigate the massacre, in which the unarmed rubber plantation workers in Batang Kali, a remote town in Selangor state, were killed after being accused as terrorists trying to escape during the Malayan Emergency.
The court granted the judicial review as it deemed the case "raises arguable issues of importance", reported China's news agency Xinhua.
The lawyers said a full hearing would begin in early 2012.
"After decades of seeking redress for the Batang Kali massacre victims, we can now, finally, see the light of justice at the end of the tunnel," said lawyer Quek Ngee Meng, representing a victim's family.
"We do not expect the British government to reverse its stance, but it should immediately and unconditionally release all documents relating to the massacre and the aborted attempt to investigate in the past so the court that hears this case, and the public, have a complete picture," he told reporters at a press conference attended by six surviving kin of the victims, lawmakers and dozens of activists and representatives of ethnic Chinese groups. - Bernama
Malaysian Batang Kali massacre kin wins UK court scrutiny
KUALA LUMPUR, September 8 (Xinhua) -- Family members of the 24 unarmed Malaysian ethnic Chinese workers allegedly shot dead by the British troops in a massacre more than six decades ago won a significant court battle in britain that would give hope the massacre would be formally investigated, their lawyers said on Thursday.
The British High court ruled on August 31 in favour of the family members for a review to a decision by the British government refusing to investigate the massacre, where the unarmed rubber plantation workers in Batang Kali, a remote town in Malaysia's Selangor state were killed after being accused as terrorists trying to escape during the Malayan Emergency.
The court granted the judicial review as it deemed the case " raises arguable issues of importance." The lawyers said a full hearing would begin in Spring 2012.
It will examine whether the British Secretaries of State for Defense and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Secretaries of State) acted lawfully when they refused to hold a public inquiry into both the killings and their coverup, and to make any form of reparation to the victims' families.
"After decades of seeking redress for the Batang Kali massacre 's victims we can now, finally, see the light of justice at the end of the tunnel," lawyer representing the victim's family, Quek Ngee Meng said.
"We do not expect the British government to reverse its stance, but it should immediately and unconditionally release all documents relating to the massacre and the aborted attempt to investigate in the past so the court that hears this case, and the public, have a complete picture," he told reporters at a press conference attended by six surviving kin of the victims, lawmakers and dozens of activists and representatives of ethnic Chinese groups.
The 24 ethnic Chinese were shot dead by the British Scots Guards in 1948, when the then-Malaya was under British colonial rule.
They were accused of being sympathizers of the communists and said to be trying to escape during the Malayan Emergency -- a guerilla war fought between the Commonwealth armed forces and the Malayan communist group.
The victims' lawyers said the British government refused to correct the records even as evidence suggested all 24 victims were innocent.
After numerous appeals to both the British and the Malaysian governments for a probe into the massacre were turned down, citing lack of evidence, family members of the victims took the case to the British court.
"For the first time after six decades, I feel a sense of closure," said Loh Ah Choy, whose uncle was killed before his eyes when he was nine.
"He was my only uncle and he deserves justice," the 70-year-old told Xinhua.
Relatives of Batang Kali massacre victims nearer to seeking justice
By MARTIN CARVALHO mart3@thestar.com.my
KUALA LUMPUR: After almost 18 years of tough challenges and extreme obstacles, relatives of the Batang Kali massacre are finally making headway in seeking justice over the killing of 24 villagers by British soldiers in 1948.MCA Public Complaints Bureau chairman Datuk Michael Chong said the United Kingdom Legal Service Commission had granted the families financial aid to pursue their case. An appeal for aid was rejected in November.
“I am very happy. We nearly gave up as cold water was poured on us several times over the years,” he told The Star here yesterday.
“Finally, families of the victims are able to see some light to help them seek justice.”
Chong, who played a crucial role in initiating the call for a judicial review in 1993 over the Malayan Emergency massacre, said the aid came as great relief to the families.
The four claimants, Wooi Kum Thai, Loh Ah Choi, Lim Kok and Chong Hyok Keyu, faced RM480,000 in legal fees (not including RM525,000 in future cost) when their request for legal aid was turned down.
However, the commission’s Special Cost Control Review Panel allowed their appeal on April 15 and with this, the four can proceed with their case at the British courts.
Action Committee Condemning the Batang Kali Massacre coordinator Quek Ngee Meng said the panel granted the appeal as it was of the view that the claimants had a 50% to 60% chance of succeeding in their case, which is of wider public significance.
“They can now, with more certainty, resort to legal avenues to the fullest so that the truth behind the massacre can be uncovered and that the historical wrong corrected,” Quek said in a press statement issued here.
On Dec 12, 1948, in a military operation against the communist insurgents, a group of British soldiers allegedly shot dead the 24 villagers in a rubber estate near Batang Kali before setting their village on fire.
In March last year, families of the victims and several non-governmental organisations formed the action committee.
The committee submitted a petition to the British High Commission calling for an official apology, compensation for the victims’ families, and financial contribution towards the educational and cultural development of the Ulu Yam community.
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British Massacre - Batang Kali Survivors and kin seek inquiry and damages
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Will There Be Any Jobs in the Future At All?
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Douglas Rushkoff has an interesting piece at CNN.com asking whether the economy of the future will be set up in such a way that jobs as we know it make any sense at all.
The question we have to begin to ask ourselves is not how do we employ all the people who are rendered obsolete by technology, but how can we organize a society around something other than employment? Might the spirit of enterprise we currently associate with “career” be shifted to something entirely more collaborative, purposeful, and even meaningful?
Instead, we are attempting to use the logic of a scarce marketplace to negotiate things that are actually in abundance.
In considering what an economy has to look like, Rushkoff tries to imagine past capitalism and communism into a different way of looking at economics going forward – which sort of ends up looking like the economy of the United Federation of Planets, where everyone’s basic needs are provided for but you have to do creative work to obtain status and other things you might want.
Ultimately, I’m not convinced that Rushkoff’s solution works – it suffers a little too much from what I think of as “information class myopia”, in which writers about technology, who spend most of their days involved with gadgets and electronic media while creating intellectual property for a living confuse their own experiences with universal ones. These pieces rear their heads every now and again when people ask questions like, “Why do we need a post office? I always text!” while proclaiming ubiquitous, frequently used technologies like the phone and email dead simply because they don’t use them that often as texting, Twitter, etc. Rushkoff doesn’t usually suffer from this syndrome, but I think his concept in this column does.
That said, I think Douglas Rushkoff is a pretty brilliant guy, and while I may not agree with where he’s going in this column, I do think he’s absolutely right to think about the future of our economic systems. I think he’s absolutely right to point out that now might be a good time to completely reconsider what we value in terms of work, employment, and career, and that we need to figure out what the technological and social changes of the past few decades mean for those concepts.
It’s important to remember that the economic systems that we live with today won’t last forever. As technology changes and innovation continues, so too will the very nature of what the economy is will evolve. Paradigm shifts like the rise of the corporation in the late Middle Ages, paper money, free labor and central banking, among many others, all came about as a response to particular political, social and technological pressures, needs, and problems. And as times change and different technologies and social needs come to the fore, economic institutions and rules will change accordingly – sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly. Sometimes at the behest of government and sometimes whether government likes it or not.
It’s not far-fetched to imagine that the nature of employment and entrepreneurship may well be very different a century from now than it is today. Indeed, they may not even be recognizable a century from now. That’s because economic institutions and ideas aren’t natural laws – they’re practical tools that are always evolving.
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Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Yahoo fires chief executive Carol Bartz
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Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz has told staff in an email she was fired over the phone by the chairman of the board
Dominic Rushe in New York
Carol Bartz, Yahoo's chief executive, was fired late on Tuesday ending a rocky tenure in which she tried and failed to revitalise the online giant.
In a statement the company announced Bartz had been "removed" from her post and would be replaced by chief financial officer Timothy Morse "effective immediately" on an interim basis as the firm began the search for a new, permanent CEO.
In an e-mail sent to employees from her iPad and titled "Goodbye," Bartz wrote: "I am very sad to tell you that I've just been fired over the phone by Yahoo's chairman of the board." She wrote, "It has been my pleasure to work with all of you and I wish you only the best going forward."
The combative chief executive had been under pressure to turnaround Yahoo from the day she was appointed. Yahoo remains one of the biggest destinations on the internet but has lost gound with advertisers and audience to Google, Facebook and services like Twitter.
According to research firm eMarketer Facebook is set to overtake Yahoo this year to collect the biggest slice of online display advertising dollars in the US.
Bartz joined Yahoo in January 2009, replacing co-founder Jerry Yang who had returned to the helm of the company in an ill-fated bid to turn its fortunes around. When Bartz joined the firm its shares were trading for around $12. After news of her departure broke, the shares jumped more than 6% in after-hours trade to $13.72, from a close of $12.91 on the Nasdaq. In January 2000, near the end of the dot-com bubble, Yahoo's shares traded at more than $125 a piece.
Bartz had also fallen out of favour with Wall Street investors, unhappy with her turnaround strategy and her handling of the firm's strained relatonship with China's Alibaba Group, in which it holds a 40% stake.
In June Yahoo chairman Roy Bostock gave his public support to Bartz at the company's annual general meeting. "This board is very supportive of Carol and this management team," Bostock said in his opening remarks. "We are confident that Yahoo is headed in the right direction."
Bartz, had previously been chairman of software firm Autodesk. She arrived with a reputation as a tough talker and reinforced it early in her tenure by telling Michael Arrington, founder of the influential Techcrunch website to "f*** off" during a staged interview at an industry event.
Her management style came under fire after the company's apparent mishandling of its relationship with Alibaba. In May when it was revealed that Alibaba had handed Alipay - one of Alibaba's crown jewels - to a company controlled by Alibaba founder Jack Ma, apparently without Yahoo's knowledge. Alibaba said Yahoo was fully aware of the transaction and the two sides openly bickered about the deal.
Yahoo is conducting a strategic review of the company's options, including possible divestment of its Asian holdings. It cautioned that no decisions had yet been made.
Bostock said: "On behalf of the entire Board, I want to thank Carol for her service to Yahoo! during a critical time of transition in the Company's history, and against a very challenging macro-economic backdrop. I would also like to express the Board's appreciation to Tim and thank him for accepting this important role. We have great confidence in his abilities and in those of the other executives who have been named to the Executive Leadership Council."
The company also said its directors named five other senior Yahoo executives to an executive leadership council that is intended to help Morse, a former chief financial officer at Altera, a semiconductor makers, and at General Electric Plastics, manage the company.
In a statement the company announced Bartz had been "removed" from her post and would be replaced by chief financial officer Timothy Morse "effective immediately" on an interim basis as the firm began the search for a new, permanent CEO.
In an e-mail sent to employees from her iPad and titled "Goodbye," Bartz wrote: "I am very sad to tell you that I've just been fired over the phone by Yahoo's chairman of the board." She wrote, "It has been my pleasure to work with all of you and I wish you only the best going forward."
The combative chief executive had been under pressure to turnaround Yahoo from the day she was appointed. Yahoo remains one of the biggest destinations on the internet but has lost gound with advertisers and audience to Google, Facebook and services like Twitter.
According to research firm eMarketer Facebook is set to overtake Yahoo this year to collect the biggest slice of online display advertising dollars in the US.
Bartz joined Yahoo in January 2009, replacing co-founder Jerry Yang who had returned to the helm of the company in an ill-fated bid to turn its fortunes around. When Bartz joined the firm its shares were trading for around $12. After news of her departure broke, the shares jumped more than 6% in after-hours trade to $13.72, from a close of $12.91 on the Nasdaq. In January 2000, near the end of the dot-com bubble, Yahoo's shares traded at more than $125 a piece.
Bartz had also fallen out of favour with Wall Street investors, unhappy with her turnaround strategy and her handling of the firm's strained relatonship with China's Alibaba Group, in which it holds a 40% stake.
In June Yahoo chairman Roy Bostock gave his public support to Bartz at the company's annual general meeting. "This board is very supportive of Carol and this management team," Bostock said in his opening remarks. "We are confident that Yahoo is headed in the right direction."
Bartz, had previously been chairman of software firm Autodesk. She arrived with a reputation as a tough talker and reinforced it early in her tenure by telling Michael Arrington, founder of the influential Techcrunch website to "f*** off" during a staged interview at an industry event.
Her management style came under fire after the company's apparent mishandling of its relationship with Alibaba. In May when it was revealed that Alibaba had handed Alipay - one of Alibaba's crown jewels - to a company controlled by Alibaba founder Jack Ma, apparently without Yahoo's knowledge. Alibaba said Yahoo was fully aware of the transaction and the two sides openly bickered about the deal.
Yahoo is conducting a strategic review of the company's options, including possible divestment of its Asian holdings. It cautioned that no decisions had yet been made.
Bostock said: "On behalf of the entire Board, I want to thank Carol for her service to Yahoo! during a critical time of transition in the Company's history, and against a very challenging macro-economic backdrop. I would also like to express the Board's appreciation to Tim and thank him for accepting this important role. We have great confidence in his abilities and in those of the other executives who have been named to the Executive Leadership Council."
The company also said its directors named five other senior Yahoo executives to an executive leadership council that is intended to help Morse, a former chief financial officer at Altera, a semiconductor makers, and at General Electric Plastics, manage the company.
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Yahoo boss Carol Bartz is fired by US internet company
Yahoo's chief executive Carol Bartz has been fired by the internet company after two-and-a-half years in the top job.
Tim Morse, Yahoo's chief financial officer, will take over from Ms Bartz.
Yahoo has been struggling to increase its market share as it faces increased competition from rivals such as Google and Facebook.
Yahoo shares jumped more than 6% in after-hours trading after news of the firing broke, indicating they would trade higher when Wall Street opens for business on Wednesday. Yahoo's stock price was up at $13.72, an increase of 81 cents.
Mr Morse will serve as interim chief executive and the board of directors will look for a new CEO, the company said.
No turnaround
Ms Bartz was hired to run Yahoo in early 2009, taking over from co-founder Jerry Yang.
She made significant changes to the management team and cut jobs to save on costs. She also shifted the focus of the traditionally search-oriented firm towards more personalized content.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
Carol Bartz Former CEO, YahooI am very sad to tell you that I've just been fired over the phone by Yahoo's chairman of the board”
However, Larry Magid, a technology analyst at C-net, said the company has not seen enough of a turn-around under Ms Bartz's leadership.
Critics also claim that Yahoo has failed to make significant strides in two of the most lucrative segments of the market; search and social networking.
"Facebook is way ahead, and now even Google is way ahead of Yahoo in social networking," C-net's Mr Magid added.
"In terms of the potential for long-term revenue it's just not there. They've got some great sites, great information resources, news, stocks, sports, but that's not what bringing in the money."
Phone firing
The news first broke on the Wall Street Journal's All Things D website, which quoted an email from Ms Bartz to Yahoo staff. The email has since been reported by other news agencies including Bloomberg and Reuters.
"I am very sad to tell you that I've just been fired over the phone by Yahoo's chairman of the board," Ms Bartz said in the email to staff.
"It has been my pleasure to work with all of you and I wish you only the best going forward."
As news of the sacking spread across the internet, Yahoo released its own press statement in which it confirmed it was undergoing a "leadership reorganisation" and that Ms Bartz would be leaving the company.
Roy Bostock, chairman of Yahoo's board, said in the statement: "On behalf of the entire board, I want to thank Carol for her service to Yahoo during a critical time of transition in the company's history, and against a very challenging macro-economic backdrop."
He added that he saw "enormous growth opportunities" for the firm.
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Monday, September 5, 2011
Europe puts its head in sand over growth crisis
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LONDON | Mon Sep 5, 2011 By Alan Wheatley, Global Economics Correspondent
Concern is mounting over a deterioration in Europe's long-term growth prospects that, unaddressed, will make it even harder to tackle the banking and debt problems underlying the current life-or-death struggle over the euro.
The financial crisis that has been rocking the global economy since 2008 has permanently reduced trend growth across the industrial world. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris reckons the potential output of its 34 member countries has dropped by about 2.5 percent.
"A lot of countries are going to take a permanent hit to their trend rate of growth. This is not an ordinary recession and so we're not going to see countries bouncing back to pre-crisis rates of growth," said Philip Whyte, a senior research fellow at the Center for European Reform, a London think-tank.
As firms have gone bust, capacity has been lost for good. With demand subdued, profitable companies are not replacing old plants.
And as high unemployment persists, skills atrophy. This weakens productivity and shuts people out of the job market for longer and longer periods -- a danger stressed by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke at the U.S. central bank's Jackson Hole symposium last month.
Apart from sapping animal spirits and forcing governments to raise taxes or cut spending, diminished growth closes off one route for lowering the high sovereign debt to gross domestic product ratios that have locked Greece, Ireland and Portugal out of the bond markets and are unnerving investors in Italian and Spanish debt.
Against this background, and with the scope for fiscal and monetary stimulus all but exhausted, politicians might be expected to grasp the nettle and push through reforms to improve the supply side of the economy -- policies such as making it easier to hire and fire, promoting greater competition and investing more in training.
Far from it. Pier Carlo Padoan, the OECD's chief economist, says he is less optimistic about the prospects for deep-seated change than he was at the start of the year.
"I see that measures are being announced. I would like to see them being implemented," Padoan said.
With policy ammunition running desperately short, he said it was time for governments to overcome their squeamishness about confronting vested interests opposed to change. "This is a luxury that many countries cannot afford any more. The situation does not allow it."
SOUTHERN DISCOMFORT
The vicious circle of rising debt and falling growth is made worse by the fact that those countries drowning in debt on the periphery of the euro zone are also the ones that have dragged their feet on freeing up their product and labor markets or modernizing their education systems.
"They're going through some truly horrible times. I'm very worried about the whole southern European fringe, not just on an 18-month to 2-year view but looking out a decade or longer," said Whyte with the Center for European Reform.
Germany, by contrast, derided a decade ago as the sick man of Europe, is being held up as a model, at least when it comes to jobs.
"The remarkable resilience of the German labor market in the last few years, where wage moderation and flexible time accounting shielded the economy from excessive job destruction, illustrates admirably the promise of well-structured reforms," Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank, said approvingly in Jackson Hole.
How much are countries missing out by not pressing the reform button?
Padoan says Europe's trend growth has fallen in recent years to an average of just 1.5 percent a year, but he says some members of the 17-nation euro zone could almost double that rate with a supply-side jolt.
Italy needs to liberalize its service sector, open up professions to new entrants and improve energy efficiency, Padoan said. Greece needs to do all that and overhaul its labor market and competition policy at the same time.
POOR ADVERT FOR FREE MARKETS
Germany, too, could grow faster still if it liberalized services, which would trigger increased investment.
These policy prescriptions are well worn. Leaders of the European Union enshrined them and a host of other reform goals in the 2000 Lisbon Agenda, which they promptly ignored. The pledges have since been repackaged as the Europe 2020 Strategy, but Whyte says the havoc wrought by the near-collapse of the international financial system will make politicians more wary than ever of the social disruption that reforms entail.
"The Great Financial Crisis hasn't been a great advert for free-market capitalism," said Whyte. His research outfit publishes a booklet this week exploring how Europe could take off by embracing innovation. But in this area, too, Whyte fears the political climate means policy is likely to be increasingly hijacked by incumbent firms hostile to competition from start-ups.
Europe is not doomed to go down Japan's path of economic stagnation. Its potential growth rate is low but stronger than Japan's -- estimated by the Bank of Japan at just 0.5 percent a year because of a fast-shrinking working-age population.
But the specter of a renewed recession is a reminder for governments that, even if they can spirit away the euro zone's currency and debt woes, they have still to find the elixir for growth.
"I'm not saying politicians will implement reform, but they should," Padoan said. "Some politicians resist reform because they are captive to interest groups. Well, the price for those governments in terms of sustainable growth will be very high."
(Reporting by Alan Wheatley; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)
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Property loans to keep lead; Malaysia's property mart unaffected by forays abroad
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Property loans to keep lead
BY DALJIT DHESI daljit@thestar.com.my
PETALING JAYA: Analysts expect property loans to maintain their position as a key growth driver of credit expansion with some estimating them to grow between 10% and 12% this year due to the low interest rate environment and ample liquidity in the banking system.
While holding to this view, some feel the external environment, like the slowing US economy coupled with the sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone, could dampen demand for properties.
For the first seven months of this year, property loans remained the key growth driver, accounting for 40.6% of the banking system's overall credit expansion, followed by working capital loans at 23.6%. Residential property loans currently accounted for about 27% of the system's total loans.
RAM Ratings head of financial institution ratings Promod Dass toldStarBiz that the credit environment to date had continued to be accommodative for borrowers with ample liquidity in the banking system and a stable economic environment. Coupled with attractive promotional packages offered by some developers, he said residential property loans had already shown a healthy 7.1% growth in the seven months to July (or 12.1% annualised), which was more or less at a similar pace compared with the overall total banking system's year to date loan growth of 7.5%.
“We believe that the full year loan growth for residential property loans will be in the 10%-12% range although we are closely observing the sovereign problems still brewing in Europe as well as concerns on the US economy and the consequent impact on Malaysia's economic growth stamina, which could affect consumer sentiment in property purchases,” he reckoned.
Dass said that while there was a slowdown in loan applications for residential mortgages in the few months after the implementation of the 70% loan-to-value cap on the third and subsequent house financing, the momentum had picked up again since March.
The move to curb the third and subsequent home financing was introduced by Bank Negara on Nov 2 last year to quell speculation on residential properties.
Alliance Bank Malaysia Bhd consumer banking head Ronnie Lim said he was bullish on property loans. He noted that in Malaysia, housing loans currently accounted for 50% (or RM255bil) of total household debt (RM510bil) and would continue to be one of the key growth drivers of retail credit expansion this year and in the near future.
“One of the main growth areas for properties is Klang Valley, which accounts for close to 60% to 65% of all property transactions. In addition, the population growth in Klang Valley is expected to reach 10 million by 2020 and the demand for residential property is expected to be fuelled by residents of Klang Valley whose average age is 34 years old.
“Coupled with the shortage of land in Klang Valley, demand will always out-strip supply. The economic growth and the low unemployment rate in the country is another catalyst for housing loan growth. The recentEconomic Transformation Programme (ETP) announcement will further accelerate demand for residential properties as more affordable properties are being developed,'' he said.
Lim said prices of properties in Malaysia were still one of the lowest in the region when compared with countries like Thailand, Hong Kong and Singapore. The industry's total housing loan outstanding stood at RM255bil as of July 2011 compared with RM234bil in December 2010, he noted, adding that this represented a 14% annualised growth.
Given the positive environment and the above factors, Lim said the bank was confident the current growth rate could be maintained despite the recent global market unrest.
An MIDF Research banking analyst said property loans would hold up as a key growth driver of credit expansion this year as the persistent demand for property loans would be driven by low lending rates as well as the sustainable growth of the property market.
Local property mart unaffected by forays abroad
THE increase in foreign property investment by Malaysian housebuyers will not have much impact on the local property market, according to those in the local building industry.
“Those houses won’t be their primary home. The primary home is still here where people are used to the local environment and local condition,” says Real Estate and Housing Developers’ Association Malaysia president Datuk Seri Michael Yam.
He adds that people who invest overseas are those with spare cash who wish to diversity their portfolio of investment. They also buy for a specific reason.
“There is the emotional objective which is to be with their children studying overseas,” he observes.
He advises those buying for short-term investment or speculation to be cautious.
“Unless the capital appreciation is great, you may run into currency risks. Both objectives have to work positively in order for the property invested to be well-worth it,” Yam explains.
On the local property front, he acknowledges that prices have shot up in the last two or three years but says one of the reasons is due to a “catching-up exercise”.
“There was adverse risk from the global financial crisis earlier, so many developers chose to defer their launches. During this time, the prices of construction materials have gone up,” he elaborates.
Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents & Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia (PEPS) president Choy Yue Kwong says properties in major cities are still beyond the reach of average income earners.
“Those who earn a combined household income of RM20,000 a month (or less) are not likely to be able to afford a central London property where a 700 sq ft apartment could cost about £600,000 (RM2.8mil). Of course, the affordability is likely higher outside of central London,” he adds.
On US properties, he says that while one can find an affordable bungalow, the location “could be in the middle of nowhere”.
On the escalating prices of local properties, he says people have started diversifying their investments and put their eggs in different baskets.
“While it is true that property management overseas are very professional, buyers need to pay a price for their professionalism. In Malaysia, enforcement is not strict. We have laws against default in service charge or tenancy payments but these are not strictly enforced.”
National Housebuyers Association (HBA) honorary secretary-general Chang Kim Loong says in countries like Australia, a buyer only needs to pay 10% of the property price upon signing the sale and purchase agreement and settle the remaining 90% upon completion of the project and issuance of the Certificate of Fitness.
“The 10% is paid to a solicitors’ fidelity fund that is guaranteed by the government. It is therefore in the developer’s interest to quickly complete the project,” he points out.
“Another attraction is the guaranteed returns to be deducted outright from the purchase price. With ready tenants, the property’s yearly lease can be deducted from the purchase cost, so buyers need not pay in full."
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“Those houses won’t be their primary home. The primary home is still here where people are used to the local environment and local condition,” says Real Estate and Housing Developers’ Association Malaysia president Datuk Seri Michael Yam.
He adds that people who invest overseas are those with spare cash who wish to diversity their portfolio of investment. They also buy for a specific reason.
“There is the emotional objective which is to be with their children studying overseas,” he observes.
He advises those buying for short-term investment or speculation to be cautious.
“Unless the capital appreciation is great, you may run into currency risks. Both objectives have to work positively in order for the property invested to be well-worth it,” Yam explains.
On the local property front, he acknowledges that prices have shot up in the last two or three years but says one of the reasons is due to a “catching-up exercise”.
“There was adverse risk from the global financial crisis earlier, so many developers chose to defer their launches. During this time, the prices of construction materials have gone up,” he elaborates.
Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents & Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia (PEPS) president Choy Yue Kwong says properties in major cities are still beyond the reach of average income earners.
“Those who earn a combined household income of RM20,000 a month (or less) are not likely to be able to afford a central London property where a 700 sq ft apartment could cost about £600,000 (RM2.8mil). Of course, the affordability is likely higher outside of central London,” he adds.
On US properties, he says that while one can find an affordable bungalow, the location “could be in the middle of nowhere”.
On the escalating prices of local properties, he says people have started diversifying their investments and put their eggs in different baskets.
“While it is true that property management overseas are very professional, buyers need to pay a price for their professionalism. In Malaysia, enforcement is not strict. We have laws against default in service charge or tenancy payments but these are not strictly enforced.”
National Housebuyers Association (HBA) honorary secretary-general Chang Kim Loong says in countries like Australia, a buyer only needs to pay 10% of the property price upon signing the sale and purchase agreement and settle the remaining 90% upon completion of the project and issuance of the Certificate of Fitness.
“The 10% is paid to a solicitors’ fidelity fund that is guaranteed by the government. It is therefore in the developer’s interest to quickly complete the project,” he points out.
“Another attraction is the guaranteed returns to be deducted outright from the purchase price. With ready tenants, the property’s yearly lease can be deducted from the purchase cost, so buyers need not pay in full."
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CEO at Home
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How would you like to be CEO at home?
Monday Starters by SOO EWE JIN
A FRIEND, Syed Mohammed Idid, posted on his Facebook last week, “Cleaning house, doing laundry, clearing old stuff with kids … and you thought a CEO’s job was tough. Try becoming a home-maker!”
I could not resist making a comment on his wall, “I was a home-maker for some years which is why on the job, when I get to meet CEOs, I often smile when they say their work is tough.”
In my two stints as full-time househusband that stretched a total of six years, I gained much insight into the home environment that most of us simply take for granted.
At home, the working hours are 24/7, no question about that, especially when you have two young boys (and plenty of their friends, I must add) who clamour for your attention.
I had to be driver, tuition teacher, cook, swimming instructor, football coach, kite-flying maestro, story-teller, and a whole lot of other things besides. Neighbours also conveniently assumed that I could run errands, pay their bills, and fix up things as well. Which I was most happy to oblige, pro bono.
But, as I have mentioned in previous columns, my time away from career has been the most meaningful and treasured stints which money simply cannot buy.
My wife remarked that I must be getting quite tired of her these days, noting that we have been in a 24/7 situation with each other for nearly six months now.
My stint at home this time around is necessitated by a medical journey which is coming to an end but staying at home to rest and recuperate has made me realise that there are still so many things in the home environment that we take for granted.
Take the weather, for example. We have always subscribed to the principle of living simply, and an air-conditioner would be considered a luxury.
But 25 years after we set up home together, we finally caved in and installed an air-conditioner a few months back.
“Now you know what it is like to stay at home under such hot conditions,” the “home minister” remarked. I concede that most of us who work in air-conditioned comfort will never experience the stifling heat at home.
Image via Wikipedia
It’s funny, but I am sure the weather was a little kinder in those years I was at home.
The other thing I upgraded during this period was my Internet speed. It was excruciatingly slow when compared to what I had in the office so I doubled it.
But beyond such matters, staying at home is not particularly advantageous in terms of benefits that we take as a matter of course when we are in the workforce.
For example, when my wife decided to improve her education status and do her masters, I had to take care of all the bills and yet was not able to make a claim on my tax returns. The taxman said only she could make the claim. But how could she do so, if she does not have an income?
I am sure many home-makers, especially the women who gave up their careers to jaga anak-anak, would appreciate being able to make claims for books, short-term courses, and even holidays, because they truly deserve it. And we are not even talking about medical expenses here.
Think about it. If they were at work, they would qualify for allowances and paid leave but once they are at home, these are taken away from them.
In my opinion, many of these issues will not be understood by the mainly-male policymakers that predominate both the public sector and Corporate Malaysia. Unless they become home-makers first.
I would like to suggest that all male CEOs take a six-month leave of absence and be CEOs of the home. I am confident that this will lead to many interesting special allowances in the next Budget speech and guaranteed to ensure that all home-makers will vote a certain way.
● Deputy executive editor Soo Ewe Jin has been on a long journey and is thankful that he can now see the light at the end of the tunnel. He looks forward to a normal office routine soon.
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Investing in properties beyond our shores
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Stories by LIM CHIA YING chiaying@thestar.com.my
In the past, only wealthy Malaysians could afford to buy homes in London, New York and other world leading cities. Today, an increasing number of higher and middle income earners are buying properties abroad.COMPANY director P.E. Chua bought his first foreign property four years ago, paying A$350,000 (RM1.1mil) for a house in Melbourne, Australia.
“My daughter was seven years old then and I was worried about the 6% annual inflation cost in Australian education. So I thought it would be a good idea to invest in a landed property there instead of another property in KL,” says the 44-year-old.
Chua, who has rented out the Melbourne house, says he has the option of either letting his daughter stay there once she starts her tertiary studies, which could be another six or seven years, or dispose of the property to offset her education costs.
Chua is among a growing number of local investors snapping up properties abroad, finding the prices almost at par with or even lower than those in Kuala Lumpur and Penang where prices have skyrocketed in prime locations.
Apart from Australia, Britain and the United States have also become real estate hotspots for Malaysian investors hoping to spread their property portfolio.
Real estate firms with international partners have been aggressively promoting new housing projects overseas, placing prominent advertisements in local newspapers. Every other weekend, a property showcase or seminar is taking place in the Klang Valley and the crowd that turns up is an indication of the interest shown by local investors to diversify beyond our shores.
Another investor, K. Devaraj (not his real name), says he bought a 600sf studio apartment in central London two years ago for £400,000 (RM1.9mil). He considers the investment worthwhile as the price has since gone up.
“My son needed a place to stay while studying and I bought the place partially for investment,” he says. “I have no regrets as my son may just stay on even after his studies. So, it is likely I will keep the apartment for the long term.”
Like Devaraj, many Malaysian buyers are taking advantage of the current economic situation to pick up some good buys. The interest shown by individual investors is not surprising considering that our Employees Provident Fund has picked up premium British properties worth a total £634mil (RM3.1bil).
On Friday, Star Business reported that Lembaga Tabung Haji and Permodalan Nasional Bhd are also looking for premium properties for their yield, with London as their first choice, followed by Australian cities.
Henry Butcher Malaysia director Lim Eng Chong says that as local prices get higher for Malaysian buyers, overseas properties are deemed not so pricey any more.
“Apartments in London, for instance, can be quite affordable; in 2009, a unit may just cost £115,000 (RM721,041). The finishing is just as good, if not better than local properties,” he says.
“I think Malaysians have always had a disposable income but it is only in recent times that they have become more savvy.”
Jalin Realty International Pte Ltd chief executive officer Ian Chen concurs, noting that while Malaysians have invested overseas for some time, it is only in recent years that the pace has picked up.
“It makes financial sense for parents to buy a place where their children can stay while studying instead of renting a place. Some already have friends and relatives living in the foreign city, and they ask: why not invest in a unit too,” says Chen.
Established over 30 years ago, Jalin ventured into marketing overseas properties five years ago. Its core market is Australia, where it is partnering conglomerates like Lend Lease, Australand, Frasers Property and other boutique developers to market their properties.
In the United States, the credit crunch since 2008 has led to property prices plunging. With lower prices and a weakening dollar, the US property market has become attractive to foreign investors, among them Malaysians, according to international property investment firm Robert Douglas.
In some places, says its head of sales and marketing (Asia) K. Daniel, prices are so low that one can even pick up a three-bedroom house from RM150,000. A good suburb location would cost RM200,000 onwards compared to RM700,000 back in 2007.
“For that property price, you can get back a monthly rental of between RM900 and RM1,000. Most of our clients are from middle to high income Malaysians, well-educated, aware of the global economic situation, the currency market, have a good investment portfolio and are ready to diversify,” he says.
Henry Butcher Malaysia’s international real estate general manager and business development general manager Jazmine Goh points out that potential customers would usually have done some research themselves or have friends or relatives check out the site.
For first-time investors, she adds, there are rental management experts to assist in managing the property.
Chua admits to being cautious before buying any property. In his case, he relies on Jalin Realty to oversee his Australian investments as he cannot be there physically to handle them.
“Everything has worked out smoothly so far, with the rent banked into my account every month. There is also protection (insurance) against default by the tenant or damage caused and I feel I can better trust the property managers there than here,” Chua shares.
“Owners like us want peace of mind when it comes to rental returns.”
His advice for first-time buyers is that they need to know their objective and reason for investing overseas. Such investments could be made in preparation for their children’s future education or if they plan to retire or migrate, he says.
But Chua cautions against buying to speculate.
“There’s the currency (fluctuations) and other calculated risks to take into consideration and tax rates to be wary of. Buyers should also have holding power to allow enough time for a property to mature. And most importantly, get a trustworthy agent,” he says.
“It can be worth it on a medium to long-term basis, but I would advise against a short-term commitment as property disposal overseas is not that straightforward.”
Chua regards overseas investments like his as affordable so long as it’s dollar-for-dollar and one does not convert.
Another investor, who wishes to be known only as Vincent, says it can be a hassle renting out a house in Malaysia.
“Good tenants are hard to find and you have to personally deal with problematic tenants who give you a headache,” says Vincent, who owns several properties in Australia.
“With overseas properties, you have property managers to handle the lease and there’s protection for owners. Also, I don’t think rental returns here are that good anyway, even in upmarket locales.”
Chen says a huge advantage about property buying in Australia is the reliability of property management there. Property owners need only engage property managers who will help to look for tenants and manage the rental collection and renewal of tenancy agreements.
“There’s also a landlord protection insurance that protects the landlord in the event of loss of rental (delinquency in rental repayment), property damage or theft by the tenant,” he adds.
“Owners can thus invest with peace of mind knowing that the property is protected and in good hands.”
M’sians buying up properties abroad thanks to lower exchange rates
By LIM CHIA YING sunday@thestar.com.my
PETALING JAYA: More Malaysians are snapping up properties overseas as they take advantage of the lower exchange rate in countries like Britain and the United States to spread their investments or shop for holiday homes.A check with several major agents marketing international properties here showed that the number of Malaysian buyers has been climbing steadily over the last three years, peaking in the first half of this year.
With property prices in the Klang Valley and major cities and towns here soaring, those with cash to spare are turning their attention to properties in countries affected by the global economic crisis where prices have dropped.
Among the more popular investment spots are London and its surrounding districts as well as university towns in the US where there is a market for rentals.
Australia, despite its high exchange rate, is also popular due to the good investment returns and stable property market.
Henry Butcher Malaysia director Lim Eng Chong said Malaysian investors were getting more savvy and the buying trend was now heading towards a more global outlook.
“Malaysians and Singaporeans are now the biggest overseas market after the mainland Chinese for prime properties in London,” he noted.
Between January and August this year, the company sold over 100 properties in London, mostly new apartment units to Malaysian buyers. The properties were priced from 200,000 (RM965,382) to 2mil (RM9.65mil) each.
In 2009, about 100 properties were sold while some 150 were sold last year.
“Previously, there was interest but London was out of reach for many Malaysians. Then came the collapse of Lehman Brothers three years ago. The pound became cheaper, spurring more Malaysians to invest there. Many investors would already have enough (properties) on their plates locally, so they are now diversifying,” he explained.
Jalin Realty International Pte Ltd chief executive officer Ian Chen said about 50% of his clients buy homes for their children studying overseas while another 50% buy for investment or to keep as vacation homes.
“We are seeing many young Malaysian professionals investing in Australia, mainly to diversify their investment and to achieve early financial freedom. Australian properties provide much stability and consistenty in capital growth, with about 10% annual compounding growth,” Chen added.
He said sales had shot up 100% since the company ventured into the overseas market five years ago. Most of the properties sold ranged from AUD500,000 (RM1.57mil) to AUD800,000 (RM2.5mil).
International property investment firm Robert Douglas head of sales and marketing (Asia) K. Daniel said US properties in Michigan, Florida and Las Vegas were now popular, as they yielded high returns. Michigan and Florida were attractive because of their high student population which provided a ready market for rental properties.
“Malaysians usually buy to let (for rental returns). But if they wish to stay, there are no restrictions as long as they have the necessary visa, ” Daniel pointed out.
Malaysians who want to invest are advised to consider all aspects
By LIM CHIA YING sunday@thestar.com.my
PETALING JAYA: Malaysians who wish to invest in overseas properties have been advised do their homework first.This is because they could be subjected to high government levies and taxes in cities where the properties are located, said Real Estate and Housing Developers’ Association Malaysia president Datuk Seri Michael Yam.
Yam also cautioned against buying for speculation, saying buyers had to consider currency risks.
They must also be aware that under a Bank Negara ruling, any large sum of money outflow must be reported and buyers should not have any borrowings with local banks.
Yam is however not perturbed over the global buying trend, saying it would not have much significance on the local property market as the primary homes for these investors would still be in Malaysia.
“While we try to attract foreign investors to invest here, we should not stop and discourage Malaysians from investing overseas,” he added.
Association of Valuers, Property Managers, Estate Agents and Property Consultants in the Private Sector Malaysia president Choy Yue Kwong said properties in Britain, especially London, were now popular because of the relatively “low” pound.
“As long as the exchange rate is in our favour, Malaysians will continue to buy (properties overseas),” he added.
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