Daily Archives: 5 Sep 2009

Do the criteria reflect reality?

I REFER to Monday’s letter by the Housing Board, ‘How HDB keeps it affordable’.

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The HDB states that flat prices are determined by willing buyers and willing sellers. In land-scarce Singapore, the notion of ‘willing buyer, willing seller’ has little practical meaning.

Suppose I want to buy a flat in Ang Mo Kio to live close to my parents but the HDB is not building any new flats there. I have no choice but to buy from Ang Mo Kio resellers.

Suppose too, I need to set up a family now and cannot wait for the build-to- order scheme to kick in, what choice do I have but to buy from the resale market?

So ‘willing buyer, willing seller’ is not a realistic picture of what is happening now.

If there are sufficient new flats available for people to choose from, where and when they like, who would be ‘willing’ to buy from the resale market? Continue reading

En bloc fever (or jitters)

THE sprawling Laguna Park condominium estate in Marine Parade, up for en bloc tender at $1.2 billion, is only the second offering in collective sales this year. The first was the smallish Dragon Mansion in Spottiswoode Park Road, asking for $120 million. In all of last year, only seven deals eventuated, for $371 million. Contrast the poverty with boom year 2007, when 111 developments were sold to fetch a pot of $12.4 billion for the mostly satisfied sellers. Many of these cashed-up people are behind the active condo sales of the past two months. Good for them, their living standards are rising.

At the slow rate collective-sale endeavours are emerging and taking into account some property specialists’ reservations about whether the present recovery has a solid basis, there seems little likelihood Singaporeans will be consumed again soon by en bloc fever, with all the contrasting connotations it entails. Negative emotions bubbled up in the last frenetic round: a backlash against perceived avarice; loss of rootedness in an inconstant landscape; the angst of elderly residents and those who valued a settled community; the underhand means some professional advisers and sales committees resorted to in rushing deals through. Continue reading