Indonesia tops the list of places where you can make the most by renting out an apartment.
HONG KONG -- Property prices in some parts of Asia are skyrocketing; since the first quarter of 2009 China's rose 68% and Hong Kong's 31%. But some of the best real estate buys may be farther south.
"We try to explain to people where they should be investing," says Matthew Montague-Pollock, Global Property Guide's publisher. "One reason is for income. One is for capital gains."
In Depth: Best Places In Asia To Be A Landlord
Jakarta boasts the best rental yield, 12.34%; Manila has 8.98% and in Kuala Lumpur a landlord can make back 8.76%. Rounding out the top five are Bangkok, Thailand, and Auckland, New Zealand.
"Not only will you make more money from the rent, but also the chance that the value of your property will appreciate is greater," Montague-Pollock says. "The yields are an excellent signal of property markets in general."
Local Indonesian markets are attracting the attention of fund managers and property developers from places like Japan, India and Singapore, according to Anton Sitorus, head of research at Jones Lang LaSalle ( JLL - news - people ) Indonesia. But they are finding some obstacles.
"Unlike investing through the stock market or through project-financing schemes, investing directly in real development projects or by buying property in Indonesia is regarded as difficult and complex for investors and individuals from overseas," he wrote in an op-ed in the Jakarta Post. "Current laws and regulations and a lack of market transparency are the main concerns hampering foreign investment."
Meanwhile, the Philippines is a particularly good pick, according to Claire Brown, founder and managing director of Claire Brown Realty, which specializes in investments in Southeast Asia for clients in the region as well as in China, Europe and the U.K.
"Most capital cities are much more expensive now. The Philippines is still really, really cheap for buying real estate," Brown says. "We've got a development in Ortigas, an up-and-coming CBD [Central Business District] in Manila. We have units for $70,000, which is ridiculously cheap compared to Hong Kong."
"You can get bank financing up to about 80% even if you're foreign. The capital gains tax has been slashed to 5% so it's easy to get in and out of that market," Brown says. "There is an abundance of expats who are happy to rent, but there is also a huge amount of local interest.
If your tenants are a mix of local nationals and a smattering of expats, you’re going to have good, healthy rental income and very few void periods.”
There are some downsides, however, to becoming a landlord in these developing Southeast Asian markets. For one, there are often roadblocks facing foreigners looking to buy property.
"You can't just walk in as a big American fund and buy a building, necessarily," says Andrew Ness, executive director of CB Richard Ellis Research Asia. "The lack of openness is what tends to keep yields high."
By contrast a place like Singapore, he adds, has a "more pronounced boom-to-bust syndrome because of its openness to global capital." Though its yields are lower--and it ranks number nine on the list with a rental yield of 3.79%--it offers other pros.
"It's the most open economy with the least restrictions on foreign investors," Ness says. "It’s the most transparent. The only problem is that a lot of the best assets are held by government-linked properties. It's not a place in Asia where we see a lot of distressed debt."
Ness also warned of the risk of inflation in countries like Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, as well as the reservations some foreign investors still hold after the protests in Bangkok this spring and recent terrorist bombings in Bali and Jakarta.
Indonesia, though, didn't suffer the same consequences from the global financial crisis as other Asian nations. The archipelago's economy relies less on overseas investment, which contracted in 2008, and on exports, whose buyers cut back around the same time, according to Bagus Adikusumo, director of real estate research firm Colliers International Indonesia. Those developments make Indonesia's economic climate look more attractive and resilient by comparison to its neighbors, he says, because "the other countries are getting less and less rental yield and revenue."
Aspiring landlords, take note.
In Depth: Best Places In Asia To Be A Landlord
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