Transcript Document
5. A Look at
Japan
Geography
Page 94
Economy and Business
Dependent on imported
raw materials, fossil fuels
Positive trade balance
Unrestricted flow of capital
and financial transactions
Unique to Japanese
business—the Keiretsu
Pages 95-96
Japan’s National Debt
230% of its GDP
Offset by trade
surplus, foreign
currency portfolio
Increasing
consumption tax to
10% by 2015
Investor confidence
Difficult reckoning in
10–20 years?
Aging population
Shrinking workforce
Cost of debt service
Waning export
competitiveness
Page 96
2011 Disaster
Human tragedy
Lost families, homes, and livelihoods
363,000 buildings completely or partially
destroyed; damage to infrastructure
Most expensive natural disaster in history
A decade to rebuild
Opposition to nuclear power plants
Pages 96-97
Land Lease
Scarcity of land
Many small landholders , small land
parcels
Land lease system
Landowner maintains title to the land
Leaseholder receives the right to
construct and occupy a building on it
Pages 97-98
Can Foreigners Own Real Estate?
No restrictions or conditions
No government permission or approval
Free flow of capital
May establish a operate a business
But….
Mortgage financing obstacles
Pages 98-99
Secondhand Housing
Home values depreciate
Sell at deep discounts
25-year old home has no value
Most rebuilt after 25–30 years
No value in quality construction
Japanese favor new
Previous owner’s bad fortune?
Page 99
Homeownership Trends
Homeownership rate—61%
Small living spaces, condos—45 m2,
single family homes—121 m2
Land prices barometer for new home prices
1 tsubo = two standard tatami mats
(3.3 square meters , 35.5 square feet)
Page 100
Rental Property
Pro-landlord, expensive process
5-7 months rent
Key money—thank you for privilege of
renting
Direct transfer of rent payments from
the tenant’s bank account
Foreign Resident Registration Card
Pages 100-101
Real Estate Professionals
Real estate business
licensing
Sales agent licensing
Ministry for
Construction regulates
commission rates
Page 102
Office Vacancy Rates
Page 103
Top Trends
Despite weak growth, favored country
for real estate investment
Investment in senior housing
Increase of vacancies
Share houses and common living
2020 Olympics
Abenomics
Weakening Yen
Pages 103-104
Beyond the Basics
Names
Initial Contact and
Introductions
Intermediaries
Business
Relationships
Business Cards
Meetings
Demeanor
Negotiations and
Decisions
Social Etiquette
A Few Taboos
Pages 108-112
Building Relationships
Amae
Hada to hada
Nemawashi
Tatemae and honne
Page 109
6. A Look at
India
Geography
Page 116
Modern India
Economic Growth—
surpassing China?
Growing Middle Class
Homeownership—86%
Subsidies and Rising
Commodity Prices
Infrastructure issues
Spreading urbanization,
crowded cities
Pages 117-121
Monsoon Season
Torrential downpours
80% of the annual rainfall
June to August
Beneficial monsoon
season bolsters the
economy
Page 120
FDI
Top FDI Investors in India Top Sectors for FDI
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Mauritius*
Singapore
United Kingdom
Japan
Netherlands
United States
Cyprus*
Germany
France
Switzerland
18%–Services
10%–Construction
Development:
Townships, Housing,
Built-Up Infrastructure
7%–Telecommunications
6%–Computer hardware
and software
Pages122-123
India Diaspora
Your Next Client?
United States: 2.2 million
Canada: 1 million
U.K.: 1.5 million
S. Africa: 1.2 million
Malaysia: 2 million
Singapore: 590 thousand
Saudi Arabia: 1.7 million
UAE: 1.7 million
Page 123
NRIs and PIOs
Non-Resident Indian
(NRI)
Person of Indian
Origin (PIO)
Overseas Citizen of
India (OCI)
Prime source of
investment in real
estate
Government
encourages ties and
long term
investment
NRI Colonies--fullamenity
communities
Pages 124-125
Why is This Important?
Diaspora pulls
Indians abroad
Career opportunities
Family ties
Immigration
Real estate business
potential
Pages 124-125
Bank Accounts
Determines flow of funds for real estate transactions
Non-Resident Ordinary
Rupee Account (NRO)
Annual repatriation
limit of US$1million
RBI approval for
repatriation
Non-Resident External
Account (NRE)
Foreign Currency NonResident Account
(FCNR)
NRIs only
NRIs only
Funds must be from
abroad
Foreign currency
from abroad
Government
approval required to
withdraw funds for
real estate purchase
Page 125
Buying Real Estate in India
Indian property law
Maintain real property ownership by
resident citizens
Quell speculation
Limit ownership to Indian citizens,
those with family ties
No ownership of agricultural land,
plantation property, or a farm house
Page 126
Crore and Lakh
1 Crore
= 10 Million
1 Lakh =
100,000
Page 126
Transaction Costs
Stamp Tax
Registration Fee
Capital gains tax
Real estate agent fees
Registration
Property tax
Page 127
Foreign Ownership?
Foreign Residents of
Non-Indian Origin
May purchase a
residence
Prior-year’s stay of 182
days required plus
proof of intent to reside
in India indefinitely
Non-Residents of NonIndian Origin
No purchase allowed
May rent a residential
property
Maximum 5-year lease
Page 128
Commercial Real Estate
Foreign corporations need Reserve Bank of
India approval to buy or sell real property
Trend toward outlying business park
development
Residential development funded with
foreign capital requires 25 acres of land
Commercial properties minimum 50,000m2
Page 128
Rental Property
Rent-control laws skew rental markets
Apply to leases of 12 months or more
11-month leases common
Serviced apartments provide short
term housing for staff of foreign
companies
Page 129
Real Estate Professionals
States regulate real estate practice
No licensing
Informal channels-homemakers, friends and
relatives, kiosk owners, and janitors
National Association of
Realtors–India
striving for professionalism
nationwide MLS
Pages 129-130
Top Trends
Tremendous growth due to
urbanization, increasing income, and FDI
Benami Transaction Bill
REITs and Commercial Real Estate
Affordable Housing
Senior Living
Pages 130-131
Beyond the Basics
Introductions
Women in Business
Business Cards
Conversation Starters
Meetings
Demeanor
Contracts and Negotiations
A Few Taboos
Social Etiquette
Pages 135-141
7. A Look at
Philippines
Geography
Page 144
Philippine Diaspora
12 million Overseas Filipinos (OF), Overseas
Filipino Workers (OFW)
Workers’ remittances $20.1 billion, 13% of GDP
2nd largest Asian-American group in U.S.
California, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey, New
York, Washington, D.C., Texas, and Florida
Median household income of $78,000
Pages 145-146
Philippine Economy
Exports to: China, United States,
Singapore, and Japan
Agricultural
Industrial
Mining
Infrastructure impedes development
outside metro areas
Tourism potential
Pages 146-147
Business Process Outsourcing
Overtaking India
English-speaking workers
Service attitudes
Low wages & office rents
Makati City, Manila, Quezon
City, Cebu City
Driving office space,
residential, retail development
Pages 148-149
Trends
Cloud & Virtual
Workforce
Business Process
Management (BPM)
and Knowledge Process
Outsourcing (KPO)
Disaster Planning and
Business Continuity
Pages 148-149
BERDE
Building for Ecologically Responsive
Design Excellence
Philippine Green Building Council
Local green building rating system
Patterned after LEED
Page 149
Foreign Ownership of Real Estate
Cannot own land
Condos okay if no more than 40% foreign
occupancy
Single-family home okay but not the land
Foreign natural heirs of a Filipino citizen
may inherit, cannot sell to foreigner
Corporations less than 40% foreign
ownership may acquire land
Pages 149-150
Homeownership
Influx of expatriates and retirees
keeps market active
government encourages return of
expatriates, those with family ties
Citizenship Retention and
Reacquisition Act
Special Resident Retiree’s Visa
Page 150
Rental Property
Luxury condos
2–3 month’s rent deposit
Rent paid in advance,
post-dated checks
Standard rental
2 month’s rent deposit
“Customs of the place“
Page 151
Real Estate Professionals
National licensing
Challenge to develop
the real estate
management skills
Chamber of Real Estate
and Builders Association
Page 152
Top Trends
Real estate market growing and prices
are rising
Manila Top Real Estate Market
ASEAN Integration
Page 152
Beyond the Basics
Names
Initial Contact and
Introductions
Business Cards
Negotiations and Decisions
Demeanor
Social Etiquette
Pages 156-159
8. Country Profiles
A Look at Australia
Geography
22.5 million, 6 states
Economy
Continuous growth;
strong stable system
Beyond the Basics
Diverse and
multicultural society
Informal in business
and social life
Foreign Ownership
Some restrictions for
second-hand housing
Agents licensed by
state/territory
Pages 163-167
A Look at Hong Kong
Geography
7.1 million, Basic Law
Economy
Expensive real
estate, stamp duty
Beyond the Basics
Behavior and
protocol similar to
China, but more
relaxed
Foreign Ownership
Can buy, rent, invest
Foreign exchange
restrictions for
mainland Chinese
Licensed agents
Pages 169-173
A Look at Indonesia
Geography
253.6 million, Diverse
Economy
Many obstacles
Foreign Ownership
Cannot own land,
businesses, or houses
but can purchase
strata title
No license required
for agents
Beyond the Basics
Respect and
relationships
important
Strive for harmony
and saving face
Pages 175-181
A Look at South Korea
Geography
Seoul is 10.4 million
Economy
12th largest
Chaebols
Foreign Ownership
Few restrictions
Agents must be
licensed
Expensive to rent
Beyond the Basics
Strict hierarchy,
respect for seniority
and elders, and
group harmony
Pages 183-188
A Look at Malaysia
Geography
30.1 million
Economy
Exporter of oil and gas
Government subsidies
Foreign Ownership
Few restrictions, but
minimum value req.
MM2H
Agents must be
licensed
Beyond the Basics
Bumiputra
Modest, selfdeprecating, and
face-saving behavior
admired
Pages 189-198
A Look at New Zealand
Geography
4 million, kiwis
Economy
Agricultural exports
Globally competitive
Homes sold in auction
format, no MLS
Foreign Ownership
Few restrictions
Licensed agents
(national)
Beyond the Basics
Egalitarian
Concise,
straightforward
approach to business
Pages 199-203
A Look at Singapore
Geography
5.6 million, mix of
Chinese, Malay, Indian
Economy
#1 ease of doing
business
Foreign Ownership
Approval required in
some cases
Stamp duties
License required
Beyond the Basics
Indirect
communication and
saving face valued,
yet keen negotiators
Pages 205-209
A Look at Taiwan
Geography
Taipei is 2.7 million
Economy
Healthy trade surplus
and foreign reserves
Foreign Ownership
May purchase or lease
if Taiwanese are
allowed to in
foreigner’s country
License required
Beyond the Basics
Traditional Chinese
culture
Family important
Group harmony
Pages 211-214
A Look at Thailand
Geography
Bangkok is 8.2 million
Economy
Tested by recession,
flooding, and political
unrest, but resilient
Foreign Ownership
Cannot own land, only
condos and apts
Practitioners, business
not regulated
Beyond the Basics
95% Buddhist, sets
tone for hierarchical
relationships
Wai (greeting)
Body language key
Pages 215-219
A Look at Vietnam
Geography
93.4 million
Economy
State-owned
enterprises dominate
Foreign Ownership
2015 law allows
foreigners to buy
houses with valid visa
Licensed property
trading floors/agents
Beyond the Basics
Value duty, loyalty,
honor, respect for
age and authority,
and family devotion
Pages 211-225
Summary: What Did We Learn?
Identify the social, political, and geographical
characteristics of Asia/Pacific countries.
Develop market intelligence by researching factors
that shape Asia/Pacific real estate markets and
assessing business opportunities.
Adapt business and social behavior to conform to
customs and cultural norms.
Develop strategies for making productive network
contacts and marketing your real estate services to
clients and customers from Asia/Pacific countries.
Page 225