Also, the Indonesian term for REIT is DIRE (Dana Investasi Real Estate), in case you want to do searches on it.
The one listed on IDX is Cipta Dana https://www.bloomberg.com/quote/XCID:IJ
Judging from price to rent ratio for many Indonesian real estate, I'm wondering how REIT can make any money at all.
Do you mean the price of rent is too low, or the price of purchasing a property is too low.
Frankly having lived in a few countries, Indonesia's price/rent ratio is the best for a landowner. A purchased property seems to be able to recoup the investment in ~15 years which is super fast compared to many other markets.
Comments welcomed![]()
Do you mean the price of rent is too low, or the price of purchasing a property is too low.
Frankly having lived in a few countries, Indonesia's price/rent ratio is the best for a landowner. A purchased property seems to be able to recoup the investment in ~15 years which is super fast compared to many other markets.
Comments welcomed![]()
Do you mean the price of rent is too low, or the price of purchasing a property is too low.
Frankly having lived in a few countries, Indonesia's price/rent ratio is the best for a landowner. A purchased property seems to be able to recoup the investment in ~15 years which is super fast compared to many other markets.
Comments welcomed![]()
Rent is way too low in Indonesia to make any money, particularly combined with the high interest rate for mortgage.
For comparison, the same amount of money earning interest of 8%, which is doable in Indonesia would double in less than 10 years. This is a lot less risky than holding property which requires maintenance, property tax, tenant turnover, etc.
One should never bank on the asset appreciation when considering feasibility of a rental property.
It really depends on location, but in general rental returns are low. Especially for residential areas. I routinely rent land at 1/100th of the sale value (eg. sale price Rp 500 million, rental price Rp 5 million/year) for long term rentals (30+ years). The land lord expects the return to come from any improvements I add on the land, but will have to wait at least 30 years for it.
Commercial real estate has better rental to purchase ratio, as I understand it.
The REIT (or DIRE, lol) that is listed on the IDX has not been an attractive investments, with around 6% yield and no discernible increase in price over the last 5 years.