Friday, January 2, 2009

Where do Shanghai’s Property Taxes Fit into China’s Economic Jigsaw Puzzle?

While the continued upward path of the Shanghai stock market has featured regularly in the world’s media, the city’s real estate market has not received so much attention. Nevertheless, property in China’s largest city is undoubtedly part of the boom and the web of economic dilemmas facing the Chinese authorities.


The latest efforts to curb real estate speculation have resulted in the introduction of a 20% tax on second-hand property sales. One explanation given for the increase is the authorities’ desire to prevent a speculative bubble in real estate fuelled by profits from the stock market. Another, more plausible reason is that the lure of the stock market is so great that people are selling property in order to finance speculative investments. This tax hike should certainly be seen in the context of Prime Minister Wen Jiabao’s general efforts to decelerate the juggernaut of the Chinese economy.

Whether the Chinese authorities will prove able to harness the economy in general is open to question. The risks of making a definite decision on exchange rate increases seem so great that they are left with an array of tools for fine-tuning different parts of the economy. What the foreign investor in Chinese property needs to remember is that these measures tend to be piece-meal (possibly affecting one part of the country only – as with Shanghai’s tax) and they seem to come and go fairly rapidly.

The situation in Shanghai is a good illustration of this; almost exactly two years ago saw a raft of measures – a 5% sales tax on properties sold within two years of purchase, a tax raise on luxury homes, regulations to curb LTVs, restrictions on second mortgages – all designed to dampen real estate speculation in the city. There was a temporary dropping off in prices but the underlying situation remained unchanged; too much foreign exchange has been flooding into China owing to its enormous trade balance and this is leading to inflation in asset prices, real estate included.

Other recent changes (8th June) to the climate for property investors have been new regulations to curb foreign investment in property through the takeover locally owned real estate concerns and efforts to clamp down on corruption in Guangdong province involving no less than 10 different government departments.The latest economic news from China is of surging industrial production in the most recent 12-month statistics and calls by Wen Jiabao for interest rate increases.

This in turn has led to a drop in the stock market and it’s worth noting that the biggest fall was experienced by China Vanke, the nation’s largest property developer. Generally speaking it looks as if Chinese real estate correlates with equities substantially and shares the risk of the bubble bursting. The specific regulatory measures being used to control the situation are different for property but the risks are similar. Possibly the one important difference is the enormous low-cost housing shortages in the biggest cities. If the central and local governments can accelerate housing developments for the masses, there is the possibility that this might have a cooling effect on the housing market as a whole (and incidentally increase construction costs in the process).

source: http://www.overseaspropertymall.com/regions/south-east-asia-property/china-property/where-do-shanghai%E2%80%99s-property-taxes-fit-into-china%E2%80%99s-economic-jigsaw-puzzle/

Thursday, January 1, 2009

BioFuel Investment for Mozambique sugarcane biofuel plant

BioEnergy Africa Ltd., based in Tortola, one of the British Virgin Islands, has raised £8.6 million (approximately $15.2 million) in capital through the London Stock Exchange's Alternative Investment Market to fund development of a 438 million liters per year (116 MMgy) sugarcane ethanol plant in Massingir District, Gaza province, Mozambique.According to the company, ground has been cleared for the Massingir Fuel Ethanol Project and a water supply has been secured from the Massingir Dam. T

he company is in discussions with Netafim of Tel Aviv, Israel, to design, procure, and install a subsurface drip irrigation system for the project’s cane fields. At full capacity, the project will include 24,500 hectares (approximately 60,500 acres) of planted sugarcane. Once operational, the project is expected to employ up to 800 full-time employees, as well as 6,500 seasonal workers.BioEnergy Africa said it’s in discussions with Dedini S/A Indústrias de Base of Brazil to supply a turnkey ethanol plant for the project.

The company is considering a modular plant that initially will run at 50 percent of nameplate capacity by the end of 2011 and at full capacity sometime in 2012 or 2013. It is considering a dual-function plant that can produce sugar and ethanol, as well as a cellulosic processing module to produce ethanol from the bagasse byproduct. Bagasse will also be used to fire boilers to produce electricity. Ethanol will be transported to Maputo, Mozambique, where the country’s main port and rail links are located and where a bulk liquid terminal is under construction. The company is investigating construction and operation of a 40-kilometer (approximately 25 miles) rail spur from the main line to the ethanol plant.

According to Phil Edmonds, chairman for BioEnergy Africa, the company is investigating additional sugarcane ethanol opportunities in southern Africa. According to the company, Africa’s premier sugar growing region is eastern and northeast South Africa, southeast Zimbabwe, Swaziland, and southern and central Mozambique.

Five of the top eight cheapest sugar producers in the world are in southern Africa.On Aug. 12, BioEnergy Africa acquired a 94 percent share of ProCana Limitada of Mozambique, which has an investment agreement with the government of Mozambique to develop the sugarcane ethanol project in Massingir District.

source: http://africanagriculture.blogspot.com/2008/09/investment-fund-to-raise-15-million-for.html