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Author Topic: Cambodia, the new Gold Coast?  (Read 121 times)
Casper
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« on: November 15, 2008, 01:06:07 AM »

If Martin Kaye gets his way, the Cambodian-Vietnamese coast will be known as the Indochine Riviera.


 
Martin Kaye has a name for the barren beaches and empty tropical islands that line the Cambodian and western Vietnamese coast. He touts this 125-mile stretch as the Indochine Riviera and envisions a sun-drenched playground for jet-setters and holidaymakers from around the world. "Just look across the border in Thailand, at Phuket and Ko Samui," he says. "It's not a question of if, but when." The Hong Kong real estate investor plans on being right in the middle of all this construction: He could be the Donald Trump of Asia's next great resort strip.

Kaye has lots of company. Investment groups from Malaysia, Hong Kong, Russia and France have raced to stake claims in what has become a gold rush. Over the past two years nearly all of Cambodia's five dozen islands have been leased, and much of the shoreline has been carved up for huge concessions. Property values have boomed around Kep, a seaside destination for the French through the 1960s, before the rise of the Khmer Rouge riddled the charming seaside villas with bullet holes that are still visible. Bigger gains are reported around Sihanoukville, the site of several beach resorts and the country's main port, after a $30 million revamp of the airport two years ago. "That was the trigger to all the growth," says Matthew Rendall, partner at the Phnom Penh law firm of Sciaroni & Associates and the country's leading land lawyer. "After that, the entire coast really took off."

Not that you could tell by looking around. Sihanoukville remains a grungy coastal town with a slew of casinos and only one high-end hotel. Yet billboards heralding planned villa projects run for miles up and down the coast.

In the past year Kaye has won the right to build vast resort communities on the two biggest chunks of this coast, though he also hasn't built anything yet. But in the Ho Chi Minh City office of Kaye's company, the Millennium Group, there are lots of plans being drawn up. Don Taylor, who designed many of Phuket's resorts, shows off the master plan for Dai Beach: 1,500 condominiums, 700 luxury villas, two golf courses, 20 hotels and resorts, a marina and lots of shops, all sprawling across 1,335 acres at the northern end of Phu Quoc. Part of Vietnam, Phu Quoc is the largest island in the Gulf of Thailand. Kaye sealed the deal for the project in April after years of discussion and plenty of local liquor consumed with the island's village chiefs.

At the time, investors were focused on Phu Quoc after Vietnam unveiled new policies to promote foreign land ownership and promised to expand the airport for international use. But the expansion has been delayed, along with many of the plans for resorts. "Until the infrastructure is in place, especially the new airport, I am happy to sit," says John Goodyear, who runs a boutique resort in Tasmania and has leased land for another on Phu Quoc. Indeed, with the recent slowing of the Vietnamese economy, money is now moving across the border into Cambodia, says Bernard Lang, of First Indochina Group, a Vietnam consultancy. "Cambodia offers a fantastic investment environment."

Kaye's other site is in Cambodia, so he has horses in both races. He found it quite by accident. Parked on a deserted beach in Phu Quoc in October of last year, he was enjoying a surfing break after winning the initial agreement for the land. But like any Hong Kong wheeler-dealer on holiday, he couldn't resist thinking ahead to the next deal. Soon he was browsing the Web. Using Google Earth, he spied an island only 40 miles away, big as Hong Kong island, but a place he'd never heard of or seen on maps. Chartering a helicopter, Kaye was soon circling above Koh Rung, Cambodia's biggest island, his eyes bugging out of his head. Even now his pulse accelerates as he describes how he soaked up the sight of Koh Rung's emerald hills, teeming jungle and mile after mile of crystalline white beaches. "This was uncharted territory," he recalls. "Totally pristine."

But not for long. In September Kaye won a commitment from the Cambodian government for a project that makes his gargantuan Phu Quoc development seem minuscule. He now controls the entire island and plans luxury resorts by the score, an airport, parks, even a university. The total investment could top $12 billion and play out over decades. "This is the chance to do Phuket or Ko Samui all over again, but do it right this time," says Kaye, sweating profusely between cigarette breaks at his office in Phnom Penh. "This is a chance to do something truly special."
 
Kaye is scurrying to find $200 million in financing to start on Koh Rung, but he's running headfirst into the global credit crunch. "Real estate debt financing has dried up," he says. He's focusing his fundraising in the Middle East, but it's proving a tough slog. His Cambodian partner for the project, Phnom Penh tycoon Kith Meng, says there's interest in Kuwait, Dubai and Qatar, and Kaye says there's also interest from Chinese and Japanese investors and British funds. "People will come to Cambodia because this is where you can double, even triple, your money," says Kith, whose Royal Group is involved in hotels, telecoms, banking and development.

Kaye says the financial crisis could set the project back by six to nine months. For now he expects to start clearing the site by the third quarter of next year, "but if it drifts into 2010, that's no problem; this is a 20-year project and we want to do it right." He doesn't think the crisis will have a long-term impact on his two Indochine projects: "Tourism growth has been phenomenal, and that will continue."

The 41-year-old Kaye comes from a real estate family. Born in Hong Kong, he grew up yachting: "That where the concept of mixing real estate and my love of sailing really started me with resorts," he says. After climbing the ladder as a young sales agent, he set off on his own in 1999, forming his Hong Kong firm, and became involved in several projects on Phuket.

As Kaye gears up to develop his islands, other projects are springing up along the coast. In September the Sokha Hotel Co., which runs Sihanoukville's only five-star hotel, the Sokha Beach Hotel, broke ground on a 500-room resort on the town's Ochheuteal Beach. Sokha is also behind the $1 billion renovation of the Bokor Mountain Lodge, which will add a pair of golf courses and five-star resorts to an old French colonial hill station overlooking the coast.
« Last Edit: November 15, 2008, 01:10:31 AM by Casper » Logged
adammike
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« Reply #1 on: November 15, 2008, 04:13:24 AM »

So over the years I have been run out by over development from Samui,Hua Hin,Kho Chang now it looks like Snooky as well.
Oh well start looking for the next place Nam I guess Cool.
Mind you If  you want 5star resorts would you really come to Cambodia?
And this time the economic woes look like the real thing this one is gonna hurt.
lets see if they can get these resorts built and fill them with paying guests and
get quality staff to run them
The US$ has staged a comeback but for the rest the pound has lost over %25 from a high of $2:10
its now $1:51,the Euro from a high of $1:60 its now $1:27.
Throw in inflation ouch, hope I can still get my jollys at BM for $10 I know you ex-pats pay $5
but i bet I get  better service Kiss
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Dacah
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« Reply #2 on: November 15, 2008, 10:03:48 AM »

The worldwide credit crunch will hit Cambodia just as hard as anywhere else...

These projects will sit for a while yet...

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Casper
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« Reply #3 on: November 15, 2008, 08:11:54 PM »

Exactly right, the strong dollar (and of course the Reil hasn't suffered so badly against it!) has put all construction on hold for the time being.

Still got at least 10 years whilst "Sihanoukville remains a grungy coastal town with a slew of casinos and only one high-end hotel". Wouldn't have it any other way Smiley
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joe
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« Reply #4 on: November 15, 2008, 11:19:58 PM »

too many of these white monkeys in sville trying tomake money.j
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Casper
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« Reply #5 on: November 16, 2008, 03:08:07 AM »

That's always going to happen Joe, wherever the tourists go, the profiteers will follow.

Then again, many of the complaints about Sihanoukville involve the regular powercuts, lack of decent wifi, poor quality hotels, bad roads, none existant drainage, no shopping malls .... even the lack of McDonalds.

All these things will come in due course ...... but for now i'm quite happy to put up with things.
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Damon
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« Reply #6 on: November 16, 2008, 05:57:52 AM »

That's always going to happen Joe, wherever the tourists go, the profiteers will follow.

Then again, many of the complaints about Sihanoukville involve the regular powercuts, lack of decent wifi, poor quality hotels, bad roads, none existant drainage, no shopping malls .... even the lack of McDonalds.

All these things will come in due course ...... but for now i'm quite happy to put up with things.

Except for the "lack of decent wifi" part, all these things you mentioned are good things. Of course, I'm preaching to the choir here. Too much development can be a bad thing.

And like the others here, I don't think these master plans are actually going to happen. The global economy will not be good enough to make luxury resorts in Cambodia financially viable.

As soon as I finish re-building my own business, I'll definitely be back to enjoy good old Snooky with it's Third World features ... just the way I like it.  Cheesy
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Dacah
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« Reply #7 on: November 16, 2008, 10:53:13 AM »

 I for one like the idea of a slowdown...

It will be like Ireland was pre Celtic Tiger days...

people in general were nicer when there wasnt so much money sloshing around...

less jealousy...less greed ...

The only major concern is the medical one...

I read where a TV presenter in Phnom Penh had her face slashed and was beaten up...

Jealous wife...

She ends up in a Viet hospital !!!

Anyone have hospital experience in Snooky ?



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