Malaysia’s property market is no longer moving in a broad, synchronised cycle. Instead, it is transitioning into a more selective, asset-driven phase following what can be described as a “Super-Boom Cycle” from 2010 to 2025.
Current Market Outlook: Selective Growth Emerging
As of 2025:
- Transaction value reached a decade high of RM241.87 billion
- Transaction volume declined slightly by 1% to 416,413 units
This divergence signals that:
- The market remains resilient in value
- But activity is slowing, indicating reduced breadth of demand
More importantly, growth is no longer uniform:
- Industrial: 14.7% CAGR (fastest-growing, though only ~14% market share)
- Commercial: 12.5% CAGR (driven by improving occupancy)
- Residential: 6.9% CAGR (largest share at 44.8%, but slowing)
This confirms a structural shift toward quality and relevance over volume-driven expansion.
Looking Back: The Super-Boom Cycle (2010–2025)
The previous cycle unfolded in three phases:
- Expansion (2010–2014)
- Driven by easy credit and speculative tools like DIBS
- Stagnation (2015–2021)
- Policy tightening
- Property overhang
- Covid-19 disruption
- Recovery Rally (2022–2024)
- Pent-up demand release
- Strong rebound in activity
By 2025, a key signal appeared:
- Transaction value rising
- Transaction volume declining
This value-volume divergence is widely recognised as a late-cycle indicator.
Alternative View: The Cycle Started Earlier (2021, Not 2026)
While many believe 2026 marks a new cycle, a deeper analysis suggests:
- The actual cycle began in 2021, driven by:
- Record-low OPR (1.75%)
- Home Ownership Campaign (HOC)
- Post-pandemic behavioural shifts
This created a compressed growth cycle:
- 2021–2024: Rapid expansion
- 2024: Peak (value, volume, launches)
- 2025: Start of correction
- 2026 onward: Cooling / adjustment phase
A Hybrid Cycle: Two Distinct Phases
Phase 1 (2021–2024): Growth
- Liquidity-driven demand
- Strong policy support
- Broad-based expansion
Phase 2 (2025–2029): Adjustment
- Slower transaction volume
- Strong high-value deals (industrial, data centres)
- Increasing value-volume gap
This reflects a late-cycle environment, where demand becomes selective.
Recurring Pattern in Malaysia’s Property Cycles
Malaysia has experienced three major cycles:
- 1990–2000: Boom → crash (Asian Financial Crisis)
- 2001–2009: Gradual recovery
- 2010–2020: Debt-fuelled expansion
A consistent warning sign across cycles:
👉 Prices rising while transactions weaken = market fatigue
Developer Strategy: Shift Toward Resilience
Leading developers are already adapting:
- Industrial Hedge
- Sime Darby Property Bhd
- Mah Sing Group Bhd
- Increasing focus on industrial parks and data centres
- Hyper-Localised Developments
- Transit-oriented projects linked to infrastructure like:
- Johor-Singapore RTS Link
- MRT3
- Inventory Discipline
- Smaller, phased launches
- Focus on clearing existing stock
This results in a two-tier market:
- Strong, institutional-grade assets
- More selective and slower-moving residential segment
Strategic Conclusion: Inflection Point, Not a Fresh Start
Rather than a new cycle, 2026 represents:
- A mid-cycle turning point
- A shift from expansion → absorption and consolidation
Key implications:
- The market is entering a supply digestion phase (2027–2029)
- Residential faces increasing pressure from affordability and oversupply
- Industrial and logistics assets remain defensive winners
Future capital will favour:
- Infrastructure-linked developments
- ESG-compliant industrial assets
- Logistics-driven locations
What I Learned
- The current property cycle likely started in 2021, not 2026, due to strong policy and liquidity support.
- 2024 was the true peak, and the market is now in a cooling and adjustment phase.
- The gap between rising values and falling volumes is a warning sign of late-cycle conditions, not strength.
- Industrial and commercial properties are outperforming because they are aligned with real economic demand (logistics, data centres).
- Residential property is becoming more selective and price-sensitive, especially in the mass market.
- Developers are shifting strategies from expansion to defensive positioning and cash flow management.
- The next few years (2026–2029) will focus on absorbing supply rather than aggressive growth.
- Success in this cycle depends on asset relevance, location, and alignment with infrastructure and economic trends, not just scale.