Thai PM Out: What it means for the property sector

8 May 2014

Yesterday’s removal of Thailand’s Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra
in a ruling by the country’s Constitutional Council for what is
described as “abuse of power.”

Yingluck was Thailand’s first
female Prime Minister and came to power on August 5, 2011. She is the
sister of the ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, will be
replaced by 66-year-old previous deputy prime minister Niwatthamrong
Boonsongpaisan until elections can take place.

Her ousting was widely predicted after months of political chaos, and came as no surprise to many property market experts.

Simon Landy, Executive Chairman of Colliers International Thailand, told PropertyGuru:
“The property market has already been hit by the political situation in
Thailand and I don’t think the removal of the Prime Minister, which was
widely anticipated, will have a major additional impact on sentiment.  

“The
market, like the country, is in effect waiting for a political solution
and although many factors are in place for recovery, that won’t really
happen until buyers and sellers feel more confident that the economy
will not be adversely affected by politics.”

Veteran
Bangkok-based real estate agent David Smith of Lifestyle Property
Thailand also felt there will be little short-term impact on the
property and real estate markets in the country.

He told PropertyGuru:
“I suspect overseas buyers will sit back and wait to see who is
eventually sworn in as absolute successor, and also keep one eye on the
baht value.

“With yet another change at the top, business
could well suffer a bit of a standstill for the next few weeks or
months, which could have a negative impact on the baht.

Smith
added that many of his buyers have been waiting and watching since
January, with the possibility of buying later in the year as they
believe they may very well save on currency alone.

He added:
“I do not expect to see many properties drop their prices as most owners
in Thailand are not in a position where they must sell – such is the
level of wealth and financial stability.

“What we may see is
many of them withdraw from the selling market and move to the rental
market. Indeed I have seen this quite a few times recently as buyers
realise that now is a buyers’ market, which perversely of course it is
not as sellers will not drop their prices for the reasons mentioned.”

Chonburi-based agent Cees Cuipers of Town & Country Property was slightly more pessimistic.

He told PropertyGuru:
“I think for the’ immediate’ impact we can expect a temporarily
domestic slowdown until there is more clarity of what will happen next.

“I
don’t think the international market will change much as the political
turmoil has been going on a little too long now and isn’t any headline
news anymore.

“As for the market in general on the Eastern
Seaboard, I foresee a downfall within Q4 2014, or at the latest Q2 2015.
I’d like to add that’s a positive downfall as there will still be an
interesting buyers’ market with good re-sales and a healthy secondary
market.”

The view from Singapore was largely similar.

Chop
Lin, Business Development Manager for Singapore-based real estate
agency Trillion that has sold a number of Thailand projects to Singapore
investors, told PropertyGuru: “Unless there is a drastic
change in the Thai property laws, I don’t think Yingluck’s removal from
power will have a serious effect on Thai property market.

“Thailand has undergone many political coups before, and each time the property scene has rebounded better than ever.

“No
doubt any mass protests will certainly cause inconvenience to daily
life, but it takes more than that to bring the entire market to a
screeching halt since the local Thais still account for a sizeable
portion of property buyers and investors in Thailand.

“I
think that first-time investors will certainly take a wait-and-see
approach, but seasoned investors understand that this is part and parcel
of Thailand’s political history. Property speculators will definitely
be affected, but then again speculating in properties, like any form of
investments, will always carry risks.”

A new election is slated for July 20 but it seems far from certain to go ahead.

Image
of former Thailand Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra taken on July 3,
2011, by ‘Ratchaprasong’ and used under a Creative Commons Licence.

Andrew Batt, International Group Editor of PropertyGuru Group, wrote this story. To contact him about this or other stories email andrew@propertyguru.com.sg

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