Thursday, 2 May 2019

HOPEFULLY WE WILL SEE SOME PROPERTY DEVELOPERS GO BANKRUPT WITH THE PROPERTY GLUT

In my previous post - HIGH-RISE MONSTROSITIES, MORE QUIT RENT REVENUE FOR SELANGOR?  I criticised the Petaling Jaya City Council (MBPJ) and the Pakatan state government of Selangor of 11 years now for allowing rampant building of high-rise monstrosities which could lead result in massive traffic congestion.


Furthermore, the additional number of residents occupying these condos and landed properties could well lead to an overload of our water and electricity supply networks.

Well the good news is that many of these new properties will be unlikely to be sold due to weak demand, whilst property developers are facing financial difficulties and a few bankruptcies amongst them will serve them right.

Following below is an article by Thean Lee Cheng, a former colleague at The Star and a former Section 14, Petaling Jaya resident. 

Payment woes for contractors

Monday, 22 Apr 2019

by thean lee cheng

PETALING JAYA: The weak property market in recent years has resulted in a competitive tendering environment for building construction jobs, with some contractors willing to cut prices in their efforts to secure new jobs, said Master Builders Association Malaysia (MBAM) president Foo Chek Lee.

"It is a very competitive tendering environment now. For some tenders, we see more than 100 contractors bidding and it impacts all levels of contractors.

"Even big contractors are feeling the pinch and are tendering for jobs in lower-volume brackets just to tide over the challenging business environment," Foo said in an email response to comments from building construction sources that contractors are willing to accept a small loss in order to secure job contracts.

Last month, engineering and construction company Zelan Bhd filed a statement with Bursa Malaysia initiating arbitration proceedings against NRY Architects for RM305.4mil and other contract breaches for the construction of buildings of International Islamic University Malaysia in Kuantan.

A second Zelan statement to Bursa claimed RM3.34mil in outstanding payment for construction works from BBCC Development Sdn Bhd.

BBCC Development is the project owner of the multi-billion-ringgit Bukit Bintang City Centre, a joint venture between Eco World Development Group Bhd , UDA Holdings Bhd and the Employees Provident Fund.

Eco World disputed the claim.


An industry source said one construction company does not sour the entire sector, but three other sources said building contractors are feeling the strain of the weak property market.A source said he personally knows of one which closed down a few years ago when the property market began to weaken in 2014.

Another source said contractors would have to continue to play the game because of equipment purchased during the good times.

This second industry source said: "Previously, they could make more money and now they have to cut down their profits. They have their overheads and margins. They cannot retract too much because when the job comes back, there are not enough workers. We don't know where the economy is going."

MBAM's Foo said the key is "to tender the price fairly". Foo is also executive director of construction and civil engineers Mitrajaya Holdings Bhd .

"If a contractor prices too low, he may have problems delivering the project at the end of the day," Foo said.


The weak property market has resulted in an oversupply of residential units which lack demand on two counts – they are located in places which lack demand because the surroundings lack facilities and infrastructure, or they are priced out of reach of the ordinary folk.

The weak demand has resulted in developers putting the launch of new units on hold, or delaying their launches, impacting the building construction industry.


The construction industry is generally divided between building construction and infrastructure. The infrastructure boys, according to industry sources, seem to be faring better.Foo said most contractors would have experienced delays and non-payment problems. He hopes contra arrangements, giving properties in exchange for payment, are not very high."Contractors should be paid for work done – and not be paid in kind – to ease their cash flow," he said.


He said that as long as there are contractual arrangements and freedom between parties, contractors will continue to face payment issues.


"These issues (late or delayed payment or contra arrangements) not only happen in the property development or the construction industry, but also in other industries.


"This is part of the 'occupational hazard' and risk of the industry if you are unlucky to have a 'slow payment' or 'non-payment' client," he said.


Foo said MBAM has heard about such incidents "for quite some time".


"Sometimes, due to the prevailing market situation, contractors may have no choice but to accept payment in the form of properties and hopefully be able to dispose of them later and recover some of their money/payments. Sometimes, it might be due to contractual disputes," he said.He said this situation of delays or payment in kind has come about due to cash-flow problems and other contractual-related reasons.


https://www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2019/04/22/payment-woes-for-contractors/


This next article in The Star by Thean Lee Cheng reveals the weaknesses of the neo-liberal policy towards public housing inherited from the previous Barisan Nasional government and continued by the Pakatan Harapan government.

 

PR1MA public housing may be dissolve

Thursday, 2 May 2019

11:59 AM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR: Perbadanan PR1MA Malaysia may be dissolved pending due diligence and a turnaround plan, its chairman Tan Sri Eddy Chen said.

He said on Thursday: "We found it very challenging because of the business model is numbers driven. It was given a big number to build and very little land to work on".

PR1MA was established under the PR1MA Act 2012 to plan, develop, construct and maintain high-quality housing with lifestyle concepts for middle-income households in key urban centres.

Its objective was that the housing units would be priced between RM100,000 to RM400,000.

The housing units were to be built in key strategic urban areas nationwide, PR1MA was open to all Malaysians with a monthly household income between RM2,500 to RM15,000.


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