Vietnam’s
luxury home market remains frozen
Though the overall realty
market in Vietnam
may be showing some cracks, the market for oceanfront mansions and palatial
condos shows no signs of thawing, dampening concerns of wildly escalating prices
in the near future.
Vietnam
has been easing restrictions on foreign ownership of real estate as part of
an effort to attract higher levels of investment and stimulate the realty
market, which has been ailing ever since it froze four years ago.
Following years of easy credit and
lax oversight, the market crashed in 2011 leaving the banking sector saddled
with bad debt and unable to provide the credit domestic businesses throughout
the nation need to grow and prosper.
Opening up the market and expanding
the criteria for people to buy and own houses in the Southeast Asian nation
has the aim of creating more favourable conditions to draw foreign investment
and partially alleviate problems associated with the bad debt saga.
Under Vietnam’s constitution, all land
belongs to the state. However, land-lease certificates, good for a maximum of
50 years, will be granted to qualifying foreigners when the new law becomes
effective this July.
It is expected the government will
issue a decree in May, also effective July 1, which will provide for an
extension of foreign ownership for an additional 50 years in specific limited
circumstances.
The changes related to foreign
ownership in conjunction with the nation’s globalization and market oriented
economic reforms have led one market analyst to predict a real estate
revolution is underway as it relates to the luxury market.
At a recent real estate conference,
Nguyen Nam Son, managing director of Vietnam Capital Partners
enthusiastically assessed the prospects for higher property values in
oceanfront property over the five year period 2015-2020.
Son postulated that the key drivers
for the high end property values over the five year period would be the
rising disposable incomes of Vietnamese families, growth in the tourism
industry buoyed by elevated levels of foreign investment.
Over the past 10 years domestic
tourists have migrated from staying in two-star to three-star hotels in line
with a trend in the rise in disposable income and based on estimated future
increases this would result in their staying in four-star hotels, Son
postulated.
The increased hotel costs, he inferred,
would provide the fuel for investors seeking higher rates of return and
tourists seeking less expensive alternatives to channel more money into the
luxury beachfront market and in turn cause property values to heat up.
This he argued creates a window of
opportunity for investors today to make a killing in speculating in the
luxury real estate market and earn higher than average market internal rates
of return.
He also curiously went out on a limb
and attempted to rationalize that somehow the number of hypothetical
automobiles purchases over the next five years by Vietnamese citizens would
translate into increased oceanfront property values.
His theory was something along the
lines that the number of automobiles along with increased investment in roads
and highway infrastructure would result in increased holiday travel.
This would in turn push up the
demand for and value of beachfront property.
However, most of those in attendance
at the conference were sceptical of Son’s suppositions and were not accepting
them as a realistic or likely scenario for the market over the next five
years.
"There's just not that much
enthusiasm or activity in the luxury market and I am very disturbed about the
development of the real estate market in the coastal cities in particular and
Vietnam
in general," an investor in Phan Thiet city shared.
The investor said last year the
tourism industry experienced many difficulties as a result of the situation
in the East China Sea compounded by currency
exchange rate problems with the Russian rouble and the plummeting number of
inbound tourists.
The tourism decline is a global
issue and is not just isolated to Vietnam
the investor stressed— adding that she recently attended a fair in Europe at which the forecasts for tourism in 2015 were
also not bright.
She underscored the point that the
tourism industry in Vietnam
needs to achieve sustainability before we will see a seller’s market in high
end property and though domestic tourism is thriving, international tourism
is not.
Huynh Phuoc Nghia, a senior business
consultant for GIBC in turn also expressed serious reservations and doubts
about Son’s rather bold predictions for the market over the next five years.
It seems pretty certain that
investors with business interests in Vietnam
such as those from Singapore,
China and Japan are
likely to buy property and that overseas remittances funnelled into realty
from Vietnamese living abroad will increase.
However, this hardly serves as a
rational basis for believing it will create a bubble in the luxury real
estate market.
Though disposable income levels,
spending by tourists and other factors mentioned by Son may positively impact
the real estate market as well, it is highly improbable they will have the
significant impact Son suggests, Nghia said.
At a minimum Vietnam needs
a decade to perfect infrastructure changes necessary to transform the tourism
industry and for it to flourish and become sustainable.
For now, like most who attended the
conference, Nghia believes that the high end oceanfront property market will
remain frozen.
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