Thursday, July 21, 2016

Stella Wong- Singapore

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Highly recommended! Recently purchased a property in Sydney and sourced David for my loan. Very happy with the service provided and the loan package was very good.

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Wednesday, July 6, 2016

UOB suspends London property loans after Brexit

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SINGAPORE: United Overseas Bank (UOB), Singapore’s third-largest lender, has suspended its loans programme for London properties in the wake of uncertainties caused by Britain’s vote to leave the European Union.

UOB would be among the first banks in Singapore to turn cautious on such lending, even though it is not a large amount, as Brexit spooked global markets and pushed the pound to multi-year lows.

“We will temporarily stop receiving foreign property loan applications for London properties,” a UOB spokeswoman said in an email.

“As the aftermath of the UK referendum is still unfolding and given the uncertainties, we need to ensure our customers are cautious with their London property investments.”

Singapore’s biggest lender, DBS Group Holdings, said it continued to provide financing for property purchases in London but was advising its customers to be cautious.

“For customers interested in buying properties in London, we would advise them to assess the situation carefully before committing to their purchases as there could be potential foreign exchange and sovereign risks,” Ms Tok Geok Peng, executive director of secured lending, consumer banking group (Singapore) at DBS Bank, said in an email.

The Singapore dollar has gained about 10 per cent against the British pound since the referendum.

“There have been London properties available for the last few months before the Brexit. The question is whether these properties can still continue to receive buyers in the short-term,” said Ms Alice Tan, head of consultancy and research at Knight Frank Singapore.

Property consultants say data on the number of properties purchased by Singaporeans in the United Kingdom is not tracked that closely. Banks do not disclose lending data for UK property purchases.

UOB said it was monitoring the market environment closely and would review it regularly to determine when it could resume its property loan offering.

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Australia at second spot in transparent real estate market index

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The ease of doing business in Australia, with its stable and transparent regulatory and legal system, strong ethical governance and high professional standards, has led to a significant rise in foreign capital inflows for the residential and commercial sectors, according to JLL.

The world’s 10 most transparent markets account for 75 per cent of global direct investment into commercial real estate and are home to nearly half the world’s 2000 largest public companies. Australia has moved up one notch to second place.

The United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and the United States hold the top positions, while the low transparency and opaque categories are dominated by parts of Africa, Asia and South and Central America, which are deemed “development” economies.

The desire for countries that offer good business conduct was borne out by the recent revelations of the Panama Papers, which, property agents and investors say, have led to mounting pressure for greater real estate transparency.

Global uncertainty caused by the recent Brexit​ vote is also drawing cash out of Britain to other parts of the world, in the short term, including Australia, despite the uncertainty caused by the recent federal election, where no party has yet claimed victory.

In a report from JLL, it says this had “put the fight against corruption decisively on the international political agenda”.

In its latest JLL Transparency Index, compiled every two years, foreign investors accounted for a record 42 per cent of investment into the Australian commercial property market in 2015, or about $31 billion. This percentage is about double the 10-year annual average.

The global index measures transparency by looking at factors including market data availability, governance, transaction processes, property rights and the regulatory and legal environment across 109 countries.

JLL head of Australasian research Dr David Rees said that as capital allocations to real estate grew, investors were  demanding further improvements in transparency. He said Australia maintained its position as the “gateway into Asia Pacific and the fast growing south-east Asian economies”, which is attractive for non-Asian investors.

“Technology is allowing a more forensic assessment of real estate market patterns, allowing for greater analysis of transparency levels across markets while the rapid growth of cross-border investment means that investors place a big premium on accurate and timely information,” he said.

As capital allocations to real estate grow, investors are demanding further improvements in transparency, even among the world’s most regulated real estate markets.

“Transparency is very high in Australia for a numbers of reasons.  In comparison with many markets in the region, Australia also has a strong legal framework to define and protect property rights and an open and established bidding process,” Dr Rees said.

 

 

 

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