Unravelling the knots of property management (Part 2)
This is Part 2 of the Q&A with speakers following TheEdgeProperty.
This is Part 2 of the Q&A with speakers following TheEdgeProperty.
KUALA LUMPUR (April 20): Malaysia's Public Sector Home Financing Board had today issued up to RM3.
KUALA LUMPUR (April 19): Paradigm Mall Johor Bahru (JB), which is set to open in November this year has secured more than 200 tenants to date.
KUALA LUMPUR (April 19): AmFIRST Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) saw its net property income (NPI) grow by 15.
SEEING the value of your property nosedive because of poor management could be an investor’s worst nightmare.
PROPERTY owners have to play their part in ensuring that their property manager does a good job and that the property is well-managed.
THE biggest difference between a local property investor and a foreign one is that the former is often present in the country while the latter is often absent.
IT is no secret that stratified high-rise buildings are likely to form the bulk of new buildings in the future, especially in the city where land for development is shrinking every day while its population continues to grow.
MANY homeowners or property investors think that once they have signed the Sales and Purchase Agreement or when a project they bought has been completed, that marks the end of their worries.
MANY people think that their well-renovated homes which are secured with window grilles are a safe sanctuary for them to live in, but they may not realise that the fancy renovations and fixed grilles can kill them under certain circumstances.