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The sharks are getting hungry


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In Buriram province there has been a significant rise in land for sale where sugarcane is grown. Crop prices have gone down so the farmers who took out bank loans need to sell up to repay the bank which has the land as security for the loan. The alternative is to let the bank keep the land and they pay the owner the banks minimal valuation of the land minus the loan-plus-interest.

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2 minutes ago, smutcakes said:

What the hell are the banks, loan sharks going to do with 100's of land parcels scattered around rural villages around the country.... you can barely give that <deleted> away never mind sell it.

I feel that banks will be happy to own a concrete asset which they can just sit on for time, and not just lose their loans to bankrupt individuals. I've known companies (eg Polly Peck) who invested in a shipping company who h went belly up, and ended up owning ships, then employing a ship management company to try to run them. It's called making the best best of a bad job. After a few years the did sell them though. At least at the end of the day you have a physical asset worth cents on the dollar, rather than zip. ????

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1 hour ago, Sydebolle said:

Usually such sale is not made toooooo public as it involves faces and the loss thereof. Remember the tremendous area of land which changed hands after tsunami 2004 along the west coast from Phuket upto Takuapa. Some land plots got sold at the price of a new fishing boat ......... 

It is always the same, those at the bottom of the ladder get wet first! 

And probably drown unfortunately.....

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6 minutes ago, jomtienisgood said:

It seems to me a lot of Th people invest a lot ( loan or not ) in farming land, from my own personal experiences they never made any Bath out of it. Already a long time pre-covid. Once the labor, etc is paid there is hardly anything left, being it rice, rubber, sugarcane, peanuts, etc.. Hardly a surprise if you look at the revenue and living circumstances of farmers even in Eu.

I agree. I think it is a case of what else will I do?

 

Unskilled, uneducated.....so only option is to grow rice and sugar etc.

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12 minutes ago, Speedhump said:

I feel that banks will be happy to own a concrete asset which they can just sit on for time, and not just lose their loans to bankrupt individuals. I've known companies (eg Polly Peck) who invested in a shipping company who h went belly up, and ended up owning ships, then employing a ship management company to try to run them. It's called making the best best of a bad job. After a few years the did sell them though. At least at the end of the day you have a physical asset worth cents on the dollar, rather than zip. ????

Polly Peck? That didn't end well, run by crooks and ended up £1.3bn in debt.

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7 minutes ago, Speedhump said:

I feel that banks will be happy to own a concrete asset which they can just sit on for time, and not just lose their loans to bankrupt individuals. I've known companies (eg Polly Peck) who invested in a shipping company who h went belly up, and ended up owning ships, then employing a ship management company to try to run them. It's called making the best best of a bad job. After a few years the did sell them though. At least at the end of the day you have a physical asset worth cents on the dollar, rather than zip. ????

Sure better than nothing, but hell of an administration process for banks, insuring, paying property taxes on these land plots scattered all over. I expect the vast majority of rural land would be local loan shark groups rather than banks tbf.

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I've seen land for sale as well, not priced correctly though otherwise would have bought some. It really is something I can't get my head around land prices in Thailand. I know one plot of 1.1 rai the owner wants to sell for 6 million or rent for 2k a month out in the countryside, it is on a big road but still he's happy to make less than half a percent by renting (which no one is actually renting). Land should be 500k tops.

 

I have always been someone dead against any form of tax on property, but I would like to see property tax be more of a thing in Thailand, if only just to reduce the prices of land and get land out of the hands of people who have no business owning land ie peasants. 

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7 minutes ago, smutcakes said:

Sure better than nothing, but hell of an administration process for banks, insuring, paying property taxes on these land plots scattered all over. I expect the vast majority of rural land would be local loan shark groups rather than banks tbf.

Insurance and property taxes on undeveloped land? 

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3 minutes ago, Speedhump said:

Insurance and property taxes on undeveloped land? 

Yes, property tax is payable based on the assessed value of the land (& building)- starting from last year, although its a bit stop start. (with the normal exemptions)

 

I presume corporates would have insurance covering all their properties.

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1 minute ago, smutcakes said:

Yes, property tax is payable based on the assessed value of the land (& building)- starting from last year, although its a bit stop start. (with the normal exemptions)

 

I presume corporates would have insurance covering all their properties.

Ah right. 

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Just now, Andycoops said:

I went passed my local honda dealer the other day and there was at least a trebling of the number of secondhand motorcycles/scooters sitting outside.

People just can't afford to pay the monthly amount anymore so are having them repossessed.

Or stolen...555

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24 minutes ago, Andycoops said:

I went passed my local honda dealer the other day and there was at least a trebling of the number of secondhand motorcycles/scooters sitting outside.

People just can't afford to pay the monthly amount anymore so are having them repossessed.

The Honda dealer does the repo's ?

 

I would have thought the finance company does that and then sends to Auction.

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57 minutes ago, Blue Muton said:

Polly Peck? That didn't end well, run by crooks and ended up £1.3bn in debt.

Ahh, good old Asil Nadir.

 

A bit OT but my old company caught a rather nasty cold having been contracted to build a hotel in Antalya for his mob in the late 80's. I see he did eventually do some time for his crimes, sentenced to ten years in 2012, served four years in the UK then transferred to Turkey where he was released after one day!!

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4 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

There is bound to be a major reckoning here. You cannot sabotage the economy, destroy tourism, put millions out of work, and not face consequences. It is likely to be far worse than 1997, and several economists have already stated this. It will take years to sort out. Condos are bound to drop significantly, possibly as much as 50% or more, except in the best buildings. Land? Anyone's guess. Likely less than condos, which were way overbuilt to begin with.

 

Build it and they will come. I do not think so. Sheer hubris. 

and yet the teflon Thai Baht remains unaffected , in fact it's only 44.5 to the £ today .

What the heck is going on ?  Is there gonna be an almighty Baht crash ?

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