Thursday, August 28, 2008

What is DLFs strategy? First buyback spending 1100 crore and now fundraise of 10000 crore?

DLF has approached its shareholders for an approval to raise Rs 10000 crore ($2.3 billion) through a placement to qualified institutional investors. This is quite surprising given that DLF is still on with a buyback process where it shelled out Rs 1100 crore to prop up its shares. If DLF had significant amount of money to buyback shares, why is it now looking to raise capital. Proves that the earlier strategy was simply to increase the share price of DLF which is currently below the IPO price of 525 at Rs. 487? The buyback price is Rs 600.(Read about the buyback)

The problem that DLF will face while raising funds is that it has to wait for six months after the buyback closes before raising money from the capital market. But the buyback hasn’t even begun and would take at least three months to be completed. In which case, the fund-raising is still some time away and the company is merely using the annual general meeting to arm itself with the necessary approvals. The DLF stock has lost over 60 per cent from its peak of Rs 1,205.

Another thought on why the company could have gone for a buyback was
that the buy back will help increase the EPS. This will also lead to a reduction in the price earning (PE) ratio, hence helping to push up stock prices. High stock prices always work to a company’s advantage when it wants to raise funds. However, the buyback hasnt really helped DLF share prices given the market sentiment.

DLF’s June 2008 quarter results were disappointing with the net debt increasing to Rs 13,200 crore from Rs 10,000 crore in the March 2008 quarter, while receivables (net of customer advances) were up at Rs 5,800 crore from Rs 5,000 crore. Operating profit margins fell around 1000 basis points to 61.5 per cent. Sales were up 24 per cent y-o-y at Rs 3,850 crore but were down sequentially. The net profit, too, was up 23 per cent y-o-y but down sequentially. The company’s revenues from DAL (a company owned by the promoters of DLF) have been coming down over the past few quarters and now account for 40 per cent of the total revenues.


These tactics clearly show the pain that India's largest real estate developer is in terms of funds. We can only imagine the plight of the smaller developers who are now at the mercy of moneylenders and other sources that charge over 30% that too with safety conditions to avoid any downsides.


* Akruti City stock continues to outperform the other stocks. The stock was up over 10% in yesterday's trade :)

DLF Buyback desperate attempt to floor share price

DLF Assets and DLF

DLF puts REIT listing on hold

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Retailers Take a Slower Road in India because of realty slowdown

India's expected retail boom hasn't taken off, leaving companies large and small to rethink their expansion plans because of the economic slowdown and the real estate bust.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which unveiled plans to enter India with a joint-venture partner two years ago amid great fanfare, will open its first wholesale store next year, but it won't comment on future plans. Three Build-A-Bear Workshop Inc. franchises in India opened by Murjani Group have closed. Straps, a chain run by India's Oswal Group that featured Wonderbra lingerie from U.S.-based Hanesbrands Inc., has closed its more than 20 stores. Big German retailer Metro AG, after five years here, operates only four wholesale stores; the company says it is taking its time developing its Indian business.

India's retail industry -- including everything from carrots to cars -- clocks around $350 billion a year in sales. That figure had been expected to double in the next seven years. But now, some retail executives are taking a closer look. Growth is less than hoped for. And thousands of new shops have sprouted in the past few years, so there are more players competing for the same consumer.

Just three years ago, an explosion of conferences, analyst reports, Web sites and magazines predicted the arrival of a new Indian consumer who would change the global retail landscape. The first modern retail stores here were so popular that many entrepreneurs thought people would buy almost anything at any price. They were wrong, as both large and small retailers are discovering. For some, the forecast retail boom that promised jobs for Indians and a new market for global retail giants is already a bust.

Most retailers say they are grappling with the same problems: rising costs and fewer buyers. In the early days of the boom, retail rents and salaries soared, though recently they have started to come down a bit. Many outlets discovered that consumers didn't really want their products. And unlike shoppers in Asia's other booming economy, China, Indians are rarely willing to pay three to 10 times more for an international brand than for its domestic equivalent. The average Chinese consumer has more disposable income, and more than a decade extra of experience with international brands.
[Chart]

Nevertheless, India still generates excitement among some investors. Earlier this month, both British retailer Tesco PLC and Vornado Realty Trust, one of the largest mall developers in the U.S., announced plans to enter the country with local partners.

Shoppers Stop Ltd., one of the first companies in India to attempt modern clothing and houseware chains, has posted net losses for the past two quarters. Some companies that still have big plans, including Indiabulls Financial Services Ltd. and Aditya Birla Group, have changed tack, closing some stores and making management changes.

If retail growth sputters, India will lose an important avenue for growth to trickle down to the masses: the jobs retail provides.

The country's recent economic expansion has been fueled largely by its service sector, and hasn't created millions of manufacturing and export jobs in the way China's boom has. But the Indian government had counted on retailing to soak up millions of rural and young job seekers. Two years ago, Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries Ltd., projected that thousands of his new stores would provide jobs for "500,000 young boys and girls in the next few years." Since that speech, the company has built around 700 stores, an impressive number but far from earlier targets.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Indian Real Estate Roundup : The mood swings in the last year

In a recent report, HSBC predicted that house prices across most Indian cities could fall by 25-30%.

Less than a year ago India’s property market was smouldering with excitement fuelled by unprecedented economic growth. Companies demanded high-quality office space and a growing clique of upwardly mobile, middle-class buyers wanted swanky new homes. The industry had also been given a boost in 2005, when the government eased rules on foreign investment in the construction industry. Property developers were among the biggest winners in India’s economic boom. When DLF, India’s best-known developer, floated on the stock exchange last summer, it was India’s biggest-ever initial public offering at the time. The company has played a leading role in transforming Gurgaon, on the edge of Delhi, from a scrubby plain into a posh satellite city that is a symbol of India’s ballooning self-confidence.

In recent weeks, however, inflation has tipped over 12%, largely driven by surging oil prices. This has pushed up interest rates and turned property companies into the biggest corporate losers of India’s slowing economy. They have been kicked from several sides. Homebuyers are put off by expensive or elusive credit; banks are rationing credit to developers; prices of building materials like cement and steel have soared. The share prices of property firms are down by 40-70% from their highs earlier this year.

In July DLF announced it would buy back part of its equity—a move some saw as a sign of alarm among its controlling shareholders at the falling share price. The company has shelved plans to list its real-estate investment trust on the Singapore stock exchange, as has Unitech, India’s second-biggest developer. “We’ll have to wait for the market. Isn’t everyone?” remarks Rajeev Talwar, DLF’s executive director.

Part of the problem is that when the market was strong, developers piled into the most expensive properties where the biggest profits were to be made. One upmarket enclave in Gurgaon, which boasts a nine-hole golf course and a “cigar lounge,” has sold fewer than half the houses built in the first phase of development, even though it is now more than a year since they went on sale. HSBC reports that sales in the luxury segment have fallen by up to 70% in Gurgaon.

Until there is a sharp fall in interest rates, developers are focusing on more affordable homes, and ones that are bought to be lived in rather than speculated upon. Gary Garrabrant, chief executive of Equity International, an American property firm which has invested in mass housing in Mexico and Brazil, says he is looking for investment opportunities in affordable housing in India. He cautions, however, that infrastructure, especially roads, will have to improve “before record-breaking speed can be achieved.”

Like so much else, India’s property market hinges on confidence. Even when property prices and interest rates fall, buyers will be slow to catch on, reckons Ashutosh Narkar of HSBC. “It’s not like buying a car,” he notes. “House buyers tend to wait for much longer before they think about spending so much money.”

Sunday, August 24, 2008

The Big Bull, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala optimistic of the future of stock markets

The Indian stock market is a function of the country’s economic growth, return on equity and return on capital employed, said Mr Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, Partner, RARE Enterprises and eminent equity investor.

Delivering a lecture organised by Confederation of Indian Industry titled ‘Sensational Sensex – Retrospect and Prospect’ he said: “Also, infrastructure to attract local money, growth of the Indian financial savings, correction of Indian under-exposure to equities are some of the other factors that will drive the markets,” he said.

He said the movement of the Sensex from 3,000 to 21,000 over a five-year period (2003-2007) and now back to 14,000 was no mean achievement.

“In this entire journey, we have had a few significant price-wise corrections but almost no time-wise correction. This is the first significant time-wise and price-wise correction being witnessed,” he said.

Analysing the genesis of the Indian downturn, Mr Jhunjhunwala said, until now we have had three bear markets. “In April 1992, the peak PE was at 63.1 per cent and we have the scam of Mr Harshad Mehta, then in 1994 we peaked at 42 times the earnings, then in December 1999 we peaked at 30 times the earning and had the Ketan Parekh scam. In 2008, we peaked at 21 times the earnings with no scams. While there was euphoria and mania, this time we have peaked at a far more reasonable valuation and are still below peak PE levels of the past,” he said.
Factors to watch

According to Mr Jhunjhunwala, the key factors to watch for are the US economy and world slowdown, global financial system stability, commodity prices, local and global inflation. “Also political elections, the performance of the Indian IT sector, base forming patterns in equity indices and Indian and foreign fund flows are other key factors to watch for the markets,” he said.

He noted that the aftermath of the 25-year-old US bull market cannot be pretty and the end of the easy money era in the financial markets will shake many out of complacency.

Delhi based Realty player in big debt. May go down!!!

A Delhi based real estate company, which claims to have transformed the dreams of several of its customers to reality, is being trampled by a leading Mumbai-based NBFC.

The promoters of the real estate company had pledged its shares with the NBFC and accepted a funding of Rs 300 crore to meet its short-term working capital. But as a result of the prolonged bearish phase and constant pounding of realty shares, the promoters are unable to meet margin calls that are triggered when share prices slide.

If market sources are to be believed, the company is not in a position to even meet the interest due on its borrowings. Fearing that the loan would end up as bad debt, the NBFC has started dumping the shares of the real estate developer, triggering a further slide in the stock price.

The stock is already down 80% from its peak price seen some months ago. But market circles feel the hammering is not yet over, and the stock may test new lows in the coming days.

Developers giving late delivery of homes

Realty slowdown is delaying delivery of homes. Several developers have postponed execution of their housing projects as funds become scarce, demand softens and raw material prices rise. While some others are deliberately delaying projects in order to reduce supply as demand weakens.

Several projects across the country are getting delayed as developers aren’t able to generate enough cash to continue construction work. Projects are delayed by as much as 6 months to over a year. “Funding is largely unavailable. Those developers who can access funds are also shying away from it since it has become very expensive. In addition, income from sales of housing units has declined with the softening of demand,” says Cushman & Wakefield MD Sanjay Verma.

All developers are facing the heat on account of high interest rates, which the country’s central bank has been hiking in order to tame inflation. Mid and small developers are faring worse as banks have almost shut their door on them.

“It is a tough time for real estate firms. A weak demand is affecting cash flow. Moreover, the cost of debt and construction has risen. How can one continue construction with the same pace in this environment,” says a senior executive at Omaxe

Some developers cite usual reasons such as delayed government sanction and unavailability of men and material for the current unusual delays. “Till the last month, steel was difficult to procure even at a very high rate delaying execution of projects,” says Gaursons joint MD Manoj Gaur.

Not all delays are forced by just funding or material constraint. Says Sanjay Verma of Cushman & Wakefield, “Some developers are not minding delaying projects as they feel a reduced supply of homes will help them sustain prices in the face of slowing demand.”

In such cases, early buyers in the project are surely going to suffer as they will have to wait for a much longer time for delivery of their dream homes. Verma feels the scenario in real estate is unlikely to improve for at least one year as interest rates are expected to remain high.

There are rumours that a Delhi based real estate developer is going down and is badly in debt.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Is America headed towards Japanese fate of 1990's? Housing bust = Stagflation

Will America follow Japan into a decade of stagnation?

AS FALLING house prices and tightening credit squeeze America’s economy, some worry that the country may suffer a decade of stagnation, as Japan did after its bubble burst in the early 1990s. Japan’s property bubble was also fuelled by cheap money and financial liberalisation and—just as in America—most people assumed that property prices could not fall nationally. When they did, borrowers defaulted and banks cut their lending. The result was a decade with average growth of less than 1%.

Most dismiss the idea that America could suffer the same fate as Japan, but some of the differences are overstated. For example, some claim that Japan’s bubble was much bigger than America’s. Yet average house prices nationwide rose by 90% in America between 2000 and 2006, compared with a gain of 51% in Japan between 1985 and early 1991, when Japanese home prices peaked (see left-hand chart). Prices in Japan’s biggest cities rose faster, but nationwide figures matter more when gauging the impact on the economy. Japanese home prices have since fallen by just over 40%. American prices are already down by 20%, and many economists reckon they could fall by another 10% or more.

What about commercial property? Again, average prices rose by less in Japan (80%) than in America (90%) over those same periods. Thus Japan’s property boom was, if anything, smaller than America’s. Japan also had a stockmarket bubble, which burst a year earlier than that in property. This hurt banks, because they counted part of their equity holdings in other firms as capital. But its impact on households was modest, because only 30% of the population held shares, compared with over half of Americans.

Nor were Japanese policymakers any slower than American ones to cut interest rates and loosen fiscal policy after the bubble burst, contrary to popular misconceptions. The Bank of Japan (BoJ) began to lower interest rates in July 1991, soon after property prices began to decline. The discount rate was cut from 6% to 1.75% by the end of 1993. Two years after American house prices started to slide, the Fed funds rate has fallen from 5.25% to 2% (see right-hand chart). A study by America’s Federal Reserve concluded that Japanese interest rates fell more sharply in the early 1990s than required by the “Taylor rule”, which establishes the appropriate rate using the amount of spare capacity and inflation

Japan also gave its economy a big fiscal boost. The cyclically adjusted budget deficit (which excludes the automatic impact of slower growth on tax revenues) increased by an annual average of 1.8% of GDP in 1992 and 1993—similar to America’s budget boost this year. Japan’s monetary and fiscal stimulus did help to lift the economy. After a recession in 1993-94, GDP was growing at an annual rate of around 2.5% by 1995. But deflation also emerged that year, pushing up real interest rates and increasing the real burden of debt. It was from here on that Japan made its biggest policy mistakes. In 1997 the government raised its consumption tax to try to slim its budget deficit. And with interest rates close to zero, the BoJ insisted that there was nothing more it could do. Only much later did it start to print lots of money.

America’s inflation rate of above 5% is an advantage. Not only are real interest rates negative, but inflation is also helping to bring the housing market back to fair value with a smaller fall in prices than otherwise. But in another way America is more exposed than Japan was. When its bubble burst in 1991, Japan’s households saved 15% of their income. By 2001 saving had fallen to 5%, which helped to prop up consumer spending. America’s saving rate of close to zero leaves no such cushion.

Over the past year, American banks have been quicker than those in Japan in the 1990s to disclose and write off losses and raise new capital. In Japan it took a long while before the political will was there to use taxpayers’ money to plug the banking system. A big test for America’s Treasury will be how quickly it recognises the need to nationalise Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the teetering mortgage giants.

One advantage over Japan is that America is spreading the costs of its housing bust across other countries. Foreigners hold a large slice of American mortgage-backed securities. Sovereign-wealth funds have provided new capital for American banks. And America’s booming exports have helped to support its economy, thanks to the cheap dollar. In contrast, the yen’s sharp appreciation after Japan’s bubble burst hurt exports at the same time as domestic demand was being squeezed.

By learning from Japan’s mistakes, America can avoid a dismal decade. However, it would be arrogant for those in Washington, DC, to assume that Japan’s troubles simply reflected its macroeconomic incompetence. Experience in other countries shows that serious asset-price busts often lead to economic downturns lasting several years. Only a wild optimist would believe that the worst is over in America.

Real Estate slowdown : Mumbai Bandra plot sees just one bidder!!; Valuations in Real Estate

Amused by a news article today morning, that talks about a Bandra Kurla plot seeing just one bidder. Sounds unbelievable, it is true! A bandra Kurla plot was sold for Rs Rs 1.55 lakh per square metre, ie, Rs. 92 lakh to Talim Research Foundation - less than half the price from the previous auction in March. The news showcases how the real estate players are crunched for cash and they are not ready to pay astronomical rates for land now.

Just five months ago, Jet Airways (India) Ltd picked up a plot in the same area at Rs3.52 lakh per sq. metre. Moreover, in the beginning of 2007, Wadhwa Group had bought a commercial plot in the complex at a staggering Rs5.04 lakh per sq. m. Compare that to Rs. 1.55 lakh today!
Land sales have shrunk in a tight realty market and developers have stayed away from land purchase.

The Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority, or MMRDA, had no choice but to award the 5,900 sq. m to the lone bidder in Talim. The plot would be used for an educational facility by the nine-year old foundation which does social science research with a focus on health, communication, micro-economics, social audit and poll studies. In March, only three out of five plots were sold in a land auction by MMRDA when Jet Airways picked up a plot and Starlite Systems Pvt. Ltd bought two residential plots at the same price. (Read more)

In another interesting development, Phoenix Mills gets Rs Rs1300 million funding in 21 SPV level projects by German real estate funds MPC Synergy. (Read more) This is
the second largest FDI investment in real estate in India. Largest was by Deutsche Bank for a 25% stake in a SPV owned by Lodha Group for $425 million.

Deals in the realty space are now being structured as debt instruments rather than pure equity transactions. PE funds are seeking higher returns (Over 25 - 30% IRR) besides securing their investments. Cash crunched developers have no option but to accept the stringent terms of PE funding. Debt like covenants are structured with the PEs continue to share in the equity upside. Unlike past, plain vanilla PE deals are now rare in realty. Under the preferred mode, if the project generates a lower than expected return, then the PE firm first gets its share (equivalent to the agreed IRR) from the overall profit and the balance accrues to the developer.

Real Estate stocks majorly beaten! where are they headed???

I have been specifically tracking the bigger realty players and the strange part is that HDIL has lost over 40% in the last 20 days whereas the rest of the pack is down by about 10% only. My best bet, Akruti City is up by a 2% :), outperforming the realty stocks and the sensex as a whole . Even DLF has taken a beating despite the buyback offer at Rs 600, with the stock down by 12% to Rs. 481. Any ideas on whats happening with HDIL??Most of the brokerage houses are very bullish on HDIL (in the real estate space) and this comes as a major surprise to me.


Taking a look at the 150 day moving averages for the bigger real estate players, it is evident that none of the stocks are anywhere close to those prices currently. Even for the 50 dma, only Akruti (by 2 Rupees) and DLF (by 5 rupees) is above the 50 DMA price. The others are dangling way below these averages. They are obviously way off the 200 DMA!! Where is the market headed.

Take a look at the 52 week highs and lows of these real estate stocks!! Its mindblowing. Most of the stocks are down by over 60% and near their 52 week lows.

Any guesses where the stocks are headed with the inflation rates expected to be near 13% by September and another rate hike by the RBI. Its anybody's guess where realty stocks are going to be in September!

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Unitech : Realty Check

In its balance sheet for the year to March 2008, the Unitech management has sounded a cautionary note. “It is quite clear that after a fairly long bull run, the real estate sector in India has begun to show signs of slowing down to a more realistic equilibrium rate of growth.

The first signs of market slackening were evident in the second half of FY08. The correction has become more pronounced thereafter.
In the June 2008 quarter, revenues for the developer were up a somewhat disappointing 19 per cent to Rs 1000 crore y-o-y although the operating profit margin improved 114 basis points y-o-y to 59 per cent due to increased contribution from the residential segment. The profit after tax was pushed up by lower outflows on interest and a lower provisioning for tax.

The company has been able to rope in an investor for a project being executed by Shivalik Ventures—-a joint venture between Unitech and local Mumbai developers.
Lehman Brothers Real Esta
te will invest Rs 740 crore for a 50 per cent stake in the first phase of the project to develop one million square feet in Mumbai.

The inflows should help ease Unitech’s cash flows —- the company’s gross debt is estimated at around Rs 8,600 crore and analysts estimate that the average cost of the debt should be about 12 per cent. Outflows on interest had increased to Rs 280 crore in FY08 from Rs 120 crore in the previous year.
It is believed that a couple of the firm’s projects in Chennai and Hyderabad may have been pushed back because of delays in approvals.

The firm has a strong presence in the eastern and northern parts of the country and residential projects account for close to 75 per cent of its land bank.
Of the approximately 55 million sq feet under construction currently, about 30 million sq ft is in the residential segment. Analysts estimate the net asset value of the firm at around Rs 200 per share for FY 10. The stock currently trades at Rs 165.


Sourced from Business Standard

Official World's 100 Tallest Hotels

# Building City Height Height Floors Year
1. Rose Tower Dubai 333 m 1,093 ft 72 2007
2. Ryugyong Hotel Pyongyang 330 m 1,083 ft 105 1992
3. Burj Al Arab Dubai 321 m 1,053 ft 60 1999
4. Jumeirah Emirates Towers .. Dubai 309 m 1,014 ft 56 2000
5. Baiyoke Tower II Bangkok 304 m 997 ft 85 1997
6. The Cullinan I Hong Kong 270 m 886 ft 68 2008
7. Grand Lisboa Macao 258 m 846 ft 52 2008
8. Lanko·Grand Hyatt Hotel Chongqing 258 m 846 ft 60 2004
9. Oasis Skyway Garden Hotel Shanghai 226 m 742 ft 52 2007
10. JR Central Hotel Tower Nagoya 226 m 741 ft 53 2000
11. Swissôtel The Stamford Singapore 226 m 741 ft 73 1986
12. Detroit Marriott at the R.. Detroit 221 m 727 ft 70 1977
13. Westin Peachtree Plaza Atlanta 220 m 723 ft 73 1976
14. Ritz-Carlton Jakarta Towe.. Jakarta 212 m 696 ft 48 2005
15. Ritz-Carlton Jakarta Towe.. Jakarta 212 m 696 ft 48 2005
16. Four Seasons Hotel New York City 208 m 682 ft 52 1993
17. Sofitel Jin Jiang Orienta.. Shanghai 207 m 679 ft 47 2002
18. Four Seasons Place Hong Kong 205 m 673 ft 55 2005
19. Tower A Berjaya Times Squ.. Kuala Lumpur 203 m 666 ft 48 2003
20. Renaissance Hotel Tianjin Tianjin 203 m 666 ft 48 2002
21. Yuanyang Building Dalian 201 m 659 ft 52 2000
22. Guangdong International B.. Guangzhou 200 m 657 ft 63 1990
23. Radisson Hotel Shanghai N.. Shanghai 200 m 656 ft 46
24. Dolton Hotel Changsha Changsha 200 m 655 ft 51 1998
25. Hotel Ukraine Moscow 198 m 650 ft 34 1955
26. Waldorf=Astoria New York City 191 m 625 ft 47 1931
27. Wynn Las Vegas Las Vegas 187 m 614 ft 45 2005
28. Gran Hotel Bali Benidorm 186 m 610 ft 52 2002
29. Hotel Sofitel Silver Plaz.. Jinan 186 m 610 ft 53 1999
30. Grand Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur 184 m 604 ft 40 1998
31. Makuhari Prince Hotel Chiba 181 m 594 ft 49 1995
32. The London NYC New York City 180 m 590 ft 54 1990
33. The Millenium Hilton New York City 179 m 588 ft 59 1992
34. North Building Tokyo 178 m 584 ft 47 1971
35. W Times Square New York City 178 m 583 ft 53 2001
36. Holiday Inn Qingdao Qingdao 175 m 574 ft 38 1998
37. New York Marriott Marquis New York City 175 m 574 ft 56 1985
38. Lotte Hotel Busan Busan 173 m 567 ft 41 1997
39. Four Seasons Hotel Shanghai 172 m 564 ft 37 2002
40. Helmsley Palace Hotel New York City 172 m 563 ft 51 1981
41. Hotel Sherry-Netherland New York City 171 m 560 ft 40 1927
42. Langham Place Hotel Hong .. Hong Kong 170 m 557 ft 42 2004
43. Marriott Marquis Hotel Atlanta 169 m 554 ft 52 1985
44. Sheraton Dallas Hotel Cen.. Dallas 168 m 550 ft 42 1959
45. Marriott Rivercenter San Antonio 166 m 546 ft 38 1988
46. Wang Fu Jing Century Hote.. Chengdu 165 m 541 ft 45
47. Baynunah Hilton Tower Hot.. Abu Dhabi 165 m 541 ft 40 1994
48. Ritz Hotel Tower New York City 165 m 541 ft 41 1926
49. The Portman Ritz-Carlton Shanghai 165 m 541 ft 48 1990
50. J.W. Marriott Hotel Hong Kong 165 m 540 ft 50 1988
51. L'Hotel Nina Tower One Hong Kong 164 m 537 ft 42 2006
52. InterContinental Warszawa Warsaw 164 m 536 ft 45 2003
53. Westin New York at Times .. New York City 162 m 532 ft 45 2002
54. Minnan Hotel Xiamen 162 m 531 ft 38 1995
55. New Century Hotel Wuhan 162 m 531 ft 36 2003
56. Swissotel Krasnye Holmy Moscow 162 m 531 ft 35 2005
57. New York-New York Las Vegas 161 m 529 ft 49 1997
58. Linden Hotel Kaohsiung 160 m 526 ft 41 1994
59. Hotel Pierre New York City 160 m 525 ft 41 1930
60. International Foreign Tra.. Shenzhen 160 m 525 ft 50 1985
61. Qilu Center & Tower Jinan 158 m 518 ft 39 1995
62. Shin-Kobe Oriental City Kobe 158 m 518 ft 37 1988
63. Tokyo Dome Hotel Tokyo 155 m 509 ft 43 2000
64. Smitomo Fodo-san Mita Twi.. Tokyo 155 m 508 ft 42 2005
65. Bellagio Resort & Casino Las Vegas 155 m 508 ft 36 1998
66. Hilton Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur 154 m 505 ft 38 2004
67. Hotel Arts Barcelona Barcelona 154 m 505 ft 44 1992
68. JW Marriott Hotel Chongqi.. Chongqing 154 m 505 ft 45 1999
69. Le Meridien Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur 154 m 505 ft 38 2004
70. Miyazaki Phoenix Hotel Oc.. Miyazaki 154 m 505 ft 45 1994
71. Süzer Plaza Ritz-Carlton Istanbul 154 m 504 ft 34 1998
72. Hyatt Regency Crown Cente.. Kansas City 154 m 504 ft 45 1980
73. Jin Jiang Tower Shanghai 153 m 502 ft 46 1988
74. The Fairmont Dubai Dubai 153 m 501 ft 37 2002
75. Sheraton New York New York City 153 m 501 ft 51 1962
76. Crown Towers Melbourne 152 m 500 ft 43 1997
77. Manchester Grand Hyatt Ho.. San Diego 151 m 497 ft 40 1992
78. The Peninsula Bangkok Hot.. Bangkok 151 m 495 ft 40 1998
79. Baiyoke Tower I Bangkok 151 m 495 ft 43 1987
80. St. Regis Hotel Shanghai 151 m 495 ft 38 2001
81. Hilton San Francisco & To.. San Francisco 150 m 493 ft 46 1971
82. Loews Philadelphia Hotel Philadelphia 150 m 492 ft 36 1932
83. NTT Credo Motomachi Build.. Hiroshima 150 m 492 ft 35 1993
84. Shin Yokohama Prince Hote.. Yokohama 149 m 490 ft 42 1992
85. Renaissance Harbour View .. Hong Kong 149 m 489 ft 51 1989
86. New York Hilton Hotel New York City 148 m 487 ft 49 1963
87. Hotel Nikko Dalian Dalian 148 m 486 ft 36 2000
88. THE Hotel Las Vegas 148 m 485 ft 43 2004
89. Swissôtel Nankai Osaka 147 m 482 ft 35 1990
90. Millennium Broadway Hotel New York City 147 m 481 ft 47 1990
91. Mandalay Bay Hotel & Casi.. Las Vegas 146 m 480 ft 43 1999
92. Crowne Plaza Hotel New York City 146 m 480 ft 46 1989
93. Sheraton New Orleans New Orleans 146 m 479 ft 48 1985
94. The Hilton Plaza Osaka 145 m 476 ft 34 1986
95. Hilton Times Square New York City 145 m 475 ft 39 2000
96. The Venetian Las Vegas 145 m 475 ft 40 1999
97. Purple Mountain Hotel Shanghai 145 m 475 ft 42 1997
98. Hotel New Otani Tokyo Tow.. Tokyo 144 m 472 ft 40 1974
99. Jing An Hilton Internatio.. Shanghai 144 m 471 ft 43 1988
100. Hotel InterContinental Chicago 144 m 471 ft 42 1929