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Monday, 13 September 2010

Renovation Under Way: China Property Developers Making Longer-Term Investments

Many of the entrepreneurs that today rank as China’s richest real estate developers made their early money from selling apartments to the country’s growing middle class. Focusing on apartments and residential property made sense: residential projects generated cash quickly for then-young businesses that didn’t have much financial staying power when the government first opened up the industry more than a decade ago.
Yet as successful companies have built up their resources and even gone public, they are increasingly looking to make longer-term investments in commercial property such as office buildings and malls that can generate long-term income from rents. “A lot of big local developers have emerged in the last five years or so, and they want to build a stand-alone portfolio of office buildings and malls,” Steven McCord, associate director of research at Jones Lang LaSalle said in a meeting of the Shanghai Foreign Correspondents Club on Thursday.

The speed of that push varies across different markets in China, but the longer-term trend is clear, McCord said. Companies that once focused on residential property that have become more active in commercial investments include China Vanke, Shimao Property Holdings, CR Land and Greentown China, he says.

The change is part of an evolution of the real estate industry in China since the country launched its economic reforms three decades ago. When government opened the way for the private capital in the 1990s, young local developers didn’t have the money to make long-term investments. So in Shanghai, for instance, many of the office buildings put up in that era were built by relatively well-off overseas Chinese, especially from Hong Kong. Among them: iconic Plaza 66 along Nanjing West Road, which was developed by Hong Kong’s Chan family. Younger domestic private sector developers focused on housing projects that would generate cash flow quickly.

Over time, however, they added mixed-use residential-commercial sites that at a minimum included retail space for shops to serve the nearby residents and were able to produce long-term income from rents, rather than just one-off revenue from selling the space. Now, some are even in the process of building office towers, McCord says.

Growing single-investor ownership of buildings would be good for the stability of property markets in the country. Sole owners of whole buildings usually have the financial wherewithal to make it through market downturns, McCord says.

Shanghai’s Lujiazui office district, for instance, a decade ago had a vacancy rate of more than 40%, but it didn’t turn into a full-blown financial crisis because the owners could ride out the storm and carry the property on their books.

Growing interest in commercial property may also be good news for real estate consulting companies like Jones Lang LaSalle that help manage property. It would also benefit companies such as E-House of Shanghai, which recently set up a property management subsidiary.

 
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China’s Homegrown Success Stories

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China’s Homegrown Success Stories

A Chinese vendor smiles under a Lenovo sign at...
Lenovo can be a role model for foreign companies.

What is the best way to approach China’s many markets? How do I effectively identify and build relationships with local distributors to gain access to markets outside of China’s central hubs?

These questions resonate from the offices of the vast majority of foreign executives charged with selling consumer goods in the Greater China region. Multinational companies that have successfully imported their international brand to China’s major metropolises are struggling to understand what it will take to reach the next tier of Chinese consumers. The China Observer has previously written about this topic and has spoken with fellow China consumer insiders such as Oxford’s Karl Gerth and McKinsey’s Vinay Dixit to gain additional perspective into what approach foreign multinational companies should adopt to succeed in China’s next tier.

While there is no standardized approach, the following examples demonstrate how selected domestic firms have been able to achieve success in more remote Chinese markets.


Li Ning – Athletic Apparel

Li Ning, founded in 1990 by a former Chinese Olympic gymnast of the same name, has turned up the competition against top foreign multinationals like Nike and Adidas in higher-end markets. However, much of Li Ning’s success to date can be attributed to its operations outside of tier one cities. Tom Doctoroff explains in this article, that “Li Ning and Anta are not competing directly with Adidas and Nike, but the pie they are eating is growing larger and larger, while Adidas’ and Nike’s pie is not growing at the same rate.” Doctoroff is referring to the fact that Li Ning’s strength in China’s smaller cities is propelling it forward much faster than competitors in tier one cities which are not seeing the same rate of growth which led to their initial success in China.

Lenovo – Consumer Electronics

Lenovo is best known for its expanded international presence after it acquired IBM’s ThinkPad line of notebooks for roughly $1.75 billion in 2005. Lenovo is increasingly focusing on what it defines as China’s ‘emerging markets.’ Since early 2009, desktop sales in the emerging markets cluster has increased from 45 percent to 70 percent of Lenovo’s total desktop sales. Over the same period of time, notebook computer sales in these markets increased from 30 percent to roughly 50 percent of total notebook sales. It has been just 5 years, since Lenovo first began to focus on China’s rural markets, but the company will likely continue to move forward in this direction as China is expected to become the world’s largest PC market in the next year.

CR Snow – Food & Beverage

When outside observers hear that China is the world’s largest beer market, they often assume the top selling beer is Tsingtao. Even those of us in China find it surprising that the top beer in China is Snow beer. The case of Snow beer differs slightly from the two previously discussed here, because CR Snow is a joint venture between China Resources Enterprise Ltd and South Africa’s SABMiller. However, the key to CR Snow’s success has been its focus on lower tiered cities in China’s regionalized beer market. CR Snow implemented a Greenfield expansion program in 2006 through successive acquisitions of breweries in Dongguan, Lanzhou, Harbin, Yanjiao, Nanjing, Anhui, Lioaning and other locations.

As executives at companies like Li Ning, Lenovo, CR Snow and even Haier will tell you, the market opportunity presented by China’s next tier of consumers is too big to pass up. Yet, these markets tend to be quite regionalized with fierce local competition, and there is no set methodology to win. It will be up to each company to come up with their own distinct strategy to expand beyond China’s first and second tier to realize the opportunities presented in this next “frontier.”

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What a superpower wants


Saturday, 11 September 2010

Why bother with bigots? Koran burning, Racist Perkasa !

 Why bother with bigots?

On The Beat
By WONG CHUN WAI

For the first time ever, media organisations are asking themselves whether religious extremists deserve space and air time in their newspapers, online portals and television.

IT’S a lesson for media organisations all over the world: Does a pastor of a tiny church who threatens to burn copies of the Quran deserve the kind of coverage that has now provoked so much anger?

The unheard of pastor, who is said to make a living selling furniture online, has achieved international notoriety because he was given the soapbox by the media.

He has cleverly, if not deviously, played the media with his well-crafted statements. He has now decided to call off the burning.

But the damage has been done. Pastor Terry Jones has stoked up enough emotions, especially among radical Muslims in countries like Pakistan and Afghanistan, who have seized the opportunity to stage riots.

Now, some news organisations are saying they would not cover Jones if he decides to proceed with his original plan. Even CNN commentators have said that this rabble-rouser does not deserve media coverage.

They have described him as an idiot and a jerk and that they (the media) should simply switch off the microphones and lighting outside his church. Well said.

Jones’ hysterical plan has placed minority Christians in many countries in a precarious position. Their lives are in danger if the government in their countries remain indifferent to angry Muslims who lump any Christian in the same category as Jones.

President Barack Obama is right in saying that the plan by Jones has been a “recruitment bonanza” for al-Qaeda.

In Malaysia, we have our fair share of extremists who fan racial emotions with their hurtful words and statements.

Obviously, these egomaniacs enjoy reading about themselves in newspapers and online portals but the question is whether the media need to encourage these communal champions by giving them the platform.

Some would say that they are entitled to express their views, no matter how much we disagree with them, in the name of freedom of speech. It’s a tough call to make, some leaders admit, when it comes to question of expression.

That was precisely the initial argument forwarded by many on the position of Jones. Even the US president was totally helpless in dealing with the situation since the right to freedom of expression is clearly stipulated in the US Constitution.

The consequences of Jones’ actions were never thought of until angry reactions broke out worldwide. Only then did the Americans realise that their lives could be in danger if there was a backlash from Muslims.

In short, terrible things could happen and the thought of standing up for an idiot’s right of expression no longer seemed so noble and practical.

Suddenly, it dawned on the media that the idea of giving Jones the platform wasn’t so clever after all, no matter how good his sound bites have been, particularly in giving the annual Sept 11 anniversary coverage a fresh spin.

For sure, Jones has made good copy for the media and right-wing politicians have also been quick to jump on the bandwagon. But the point is that extremists, religious fanatics and racial bigots must never be allowed to hijack the platform.

No level-headed Christian would agree with the Florida pastor. It is good that the majority of Christian groups have spoken up clearly and strongly against him.

We must stand together to speak for what we believe in. There is no need to be apologetic even if those that we speak up against could be members of our faith or race. There is only right and wrong.

The extremists in Malaysia are the same. We need to dissociate ourselves unequivocally from those who preach hatred and trample on goodwill instead of building bridges to bring Malaysians together.

It is encouraging to hear top leaders from Umno openly saying “no” to Perkasa on the eve of Hari Raya. It is the strongest ever statement from Umno leaders in distancing themselves from the group that has caused much concern among Malaysians.

Malaysia was built on the politics of moderation and accommodation. It has kept the nation glued even during times that we seem so flawed.

But we have managed race relations reasonably well and Malaysians live amicably together, taking better care of this themselves than politicians and the self-appointed champions of our races.

Similarly, it is good to hear the majority of Christians saying that they would not condone Quran-burning pastors and churches.

And certainly, for the first time ever, media organisations are asking themselves whether religious extremists deserve space and air time in their newspapers, online portals and television.
Most of us would agree – don’t encourage them.



9/11 Koran burning: pastor exploited freedoms his countrymen are fighting to protect

As far as David Gergen, a former adviser to Ronald Reagan was concerned, Pastor Terry Jones was worse than a mere publicity seeker.

US pastor Terry Jones who planned an ''International Burn-a-Koran Day'' on September 11 has called off the protest after his plans were widely condemned.
Rev. Terry Jones at the Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville, Fla Photo: AP
 
“He’s a jerk for putting his country through this,” Mr Gergen said on television as news broke that the book-burning had been cancelled.
There will have been many agreeing in the corridors of power. The administration watched dismayed as a nobody from a tiny church in Florida threatened to further endanger the lives of US troops and indeed Americans everywhere.
In the flames of a few burning books, the pastor could have extinguished what little progress President Barack Obama had made in building bridges with the Muslim world. Though the sigh of relief in Washington at the pastor’s climb-down was almost audible, he has already caused enough damage to keep American forces and embassies on heightened alert for some time.

To enemies of the United States, it was a gift. In the age of the internet, the fact that it was a gift provided by a pastor who cannot pay his mortgage and had a congregation of only a few dozen was irrelevant. It was a controversy that could only happen in United States. There are few, if any, countries in the world with constitutional protections that allow someone to burn holy books, or the American flag for that matter.

There are few if any countries with sufficient ease of assembly to allow thousands of fire-breathing pastors to preach across the nation. Mr Jones endangered the lives of his countrymen by exploiting the freedoms they are striving to preserve on the battlefield.

It must be puzzling for the people of Iraq and Afghanistan. Perhaps in the bazaars of Kabul and Kandahar his actions may start a debate on the limits of free speech. We can only hope.

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     Don’t give face to bigots who go too far

    September 14, 2010

    I WISH to commend Datuk Seri Wong Chun Wai and The Star for the enlightening article, “ Why bother with bigots?” (Sunday Star, Sept 12) which argues that rabble rousers do not deserve media coverage.

    True Malaysians and indeed all right thinking people all over the world will support a new global mindset that will discourage the mass media from highlighting radical and inflammatory views of bigots such as non-entities like Pastor Terry Jones.

    Indeed, our mass media should not put our own racists and religious bigots on a soap box. They should not be seen to glorify bigots. The mass media should instead condemn and the public should castigate them for posing serious threats to national security and national unity.

    Such people are dangerous and governments all over the world should not condone their extremist views by remaining silent and not taking punitive action to protect the rights of the majority of the people.

    Fortunately for Malaysia, our Government’s main political party Umno has courageously, although somewhat belatedly, disassociated itself from a disruptive rightist group in our country. Similarly, it is hoped that the mass media will adopt or include in a code of ethics, a new principle of disdain and non coverage, in regard to individuals and groups that preach racism and religious bigotry.

    And, Malaysians should similarly isolate these extremists who spread hatred and disunity by boycotting the news media that sensationalise these extremist views that can destroy our well-being and national unity, security and stability.

    The Christian Church in Malaysia has taken an inspiring lead in condemning the likes of ugly American Terry Jones. It is hoped that more religious and civic groups will unite in isolating this callous behaviour of extremists even at home.

    It is hoped that all true Malaysians will reject these extremists and identify them as ugly Malaysians, who must be regarded as enemies of and detrimental to, a united 1Malaysia. And only then can Malaysia prosper and progress to benefit all its citizens.

    TAN SRI RAMON NAVARATNAM,
    Chairman,
    Asli Centre of Public Policy Studies.