Fear of price increase and the push to buy (someday, not today)
What do we do when we know that our savings will never catch up with the property prices which are already highest in the world
What do we do when we know that our savings will never catch up with the property prices which are already highest in the world
According to Bank Negara Malaysia, the average median property price versus household income ratio for Malaysia is at 5.2; severely unaffordable. In Hong Kong, it’s
I have started to HIDE some people’s comments about politics. It’s a little tiring to read all of them. My personal thought is that most
Malaysians have been buying properties in countries like the UK or Australia for years. I meant the super wealthy ones with kids studying overseas. For
According to the Census and Statistics Department of Hong Kong, the median salary for an employee is S$16,200 (RM8,114) in 2016. Please refer here for
Can home prices go up by double digit per year? If it seems unlikely, then let’s look at it from the number perspective. Briefly, a
The median prices for KL homes as at end 2016 is RM620,000. This is for units within the city centre and it is almost similar
A sobering fact indeed. The richest got richer in 2017. Their total wealth went up by A$1 trillion. (RM3.14 trillion) The full article in sbs.com.au
This is so huge that even my good friend who is not that interested with property investment sent me this morning. She said, “WOW.” Based
The day when no one could afford any property being put up for sale would be the day the property market collapses. Just imagine 100,000
A top management colleague from my Hong Kong office was sharing with a group of us that it gets harder to own a property in
Can a cooling property market be good news? I certainly think so. This is especially if the said market is China’s. It is very important