Daily Archives: 1 Sep 2009

Squeezed even harder

THE HDB resale price index has surged relentlessly since 2007. Since the first quarter of 2007, the index has increased 35.3 per cent and is now at a record high, even though the economy is still recovering from downturn.

This is an anomaly the Government should examine.

The recent Punggol Residences launch by HDB, which drew seven applications for every unit on sale, is another case to show the Government needs to increase supply to prevent housing prices escalating further.

While there is the additional housing grant to help the lower-income group, I urge the Government not to overlook the sandwich class group – those who are not eligible for subsidised public housing, yet cannot afford private housing. The escalation of mass market property prices has made the dream of owning a private property even more distant.

I urge the Government to reconsider the income ceiling of $8,000 as a criterion to be eligible for the Central Provident Fund (CPF) housing grant, which has been in place since 1994. Since 1994, the CPF Ordinary Account contribution rate has decreased from 30 per cent to 23 per cent and the HDB resale housing index has almost doubled from 75.5 to 140.2.

The supply of executive condominiums has also come to a halt. For those who aspire to condo living, Design, Build and Sell Scheme units launched by private developers range in prices from $550,000 to $720,000. Given the income ceiling of $8,000, couples who buy such flats must take huge loans which may not be proportionate to their income. Continue reading

Bank lending dips 0.1% in July to $272b

Consumer loans rise despite drag from building and construction loans

BANK lending eased in July, reversing a modest increase in the previous two months, as a drop in building and construction loans ate into a continued rise in consumer housing loans.

But economists say that the drop in loans for construction is more likely a blip than the start of a worrying trend.

The total amount of Singapore-dollar loans held by banks here dipped 0.1 per cent over the month to $271.8 billion at end-July, estimates from the Monetary Authority of Singapore show. This followed an expansion in overall bank lending of 0.5 per cent in June and 0.3 per cent in May, which fuelled optimism that credit demand and supply could be recovering.

Compared with a year earlier, total loan volume at end-July was still 2.3 per cent higher.

Loans to businesses fell for a ninth straight month, to $151.8 billion at end-July, 1.1 per cent lower than at end-June.

The drop in business loans to the building and construction sector was the main reason for the fall. Outstanding loans to the sector shrank by $1.3 billion, or 2.6 per cent, over the month to $48.8 billion at end-July – the lowest level since end-September last year. Continue reading