Daily Archives: 14 Sep 2009

People should be free to decide what a flat is worth : HDB

I THANK Mr Jason Zheng (’The issue here is cash over valuation’), Mr Steven Yeo (’Should the HDB build 19,000 flats a year instead?’) and Mr Loo Fook Kay (’What percentage of income will a single Singaporean earning $2,500 a month pay?’) for their views on HDB flats (Sept5).

HDB’s key responsibilities are to help first-time home buyers and to ensure flat values are sustained over the long term.

Mr Zheng raised the issue of cash over valuation. COV is what a buyer agrees to pay the seller when he feels a particular flat is worth more than its valuation. COV applies in the private residential market as well. Banks will grant a loan of only up to 90 per cent of valuation, and buyers will have to pay at least 5 per cent of the valuation and the excess in cash.

HDB cannot ban COV or provide loans for it, as suggested by Mr Zheng. People should be free to decide what their flat or intended purchase is worth to them, and not be forced to buy and sell at fixed prices. While financing for COVs may appear helpful, it is more likely to fuel the escalation of prices and worsen the situation.

Mr Yeo commented on the number of marriages and new flats. The 24,000 marriages last year included those with or among foreigners, re-marriages, those with high income and those who have other accommodation. Not all 24,000 qualify for subsidised flats. In recent years, total bookings of new and resale flats with grants were between 13,000 and 15,000 a year. Continue reading

Smaller homes take lion’s share of sales

Home-seekers have gotten hungrier for apartments in recent months but have yet to work up a hearty appetite for large units.

Across many property launches, studio apartments and two-bedders
remain most popular, reflecting continued price sensitivity on the buyers’
part. They are generally ’still not as ambitious’, says DMG & Partners property analyst Brandon Lee.

At NTUC Choice Homes’ Trevista in Toa Payoh where 550 units have been launched, the majority of units left are three and four-bedders. Many buyers went straight for the two-bedroom units when the project’s preview began some two weeks ago.

GuocoLand saw the same trend when it launched Sophia Residence in the Dhoby Ghaut area. ‘All one and two-bedders were snapped up as soon as they were launched,’ says a GuocoLand spokesman. The project also has three and four-bedroom units.

Anecdotal evidence also points to a preference for smaller homes at projects such as Viva and Ascentia Sky. In another instance, the 70-unit Airstream at St Michael’s Road – where most units measured 625 sq ft in size or smaller – sold out last month.

Aiding the trend, some developers caught sight of homeseekers’ shrinking pockets as the downturn came and reconfigured their projects to offer a bigger number of smaller units. Continue reading