Monthly Archives: April 2013

Singapore Q1 private-home prices rise 0.6% on quarter; tad faster than estimated

Prices of private homes in Singapore rose slightly faster than initially estimated in the first quarter compared with the previous three months, government data showed Friday, but price growth remained markedly slower than in the fourth quarter after tough government curbs sapped demand.

The private residential property price index rose 0.6% in the January-to-March period from the previous three months to a new high of 213.2 points, Singapore’s Urban Redevelopment Authority said in a statement. The index had jumped 1.8% on quarter in the October-to-December quarter.

The URA had estimated first-quarter price growth at 0.5% earlier this month.

Regulators imposed new measures in January, trying to contain prices that have been on the rise since the global financial crisis, despite repeated government interventions.

In the first quarter, prices of non-landed private residences in the core central region rose faster than estimated earlier, up 0.6% on quarter compared to the preliminary print of a 0.4% increase. Prices in this region had risen 0.7% in the October-to-December period.

Prices rose 0.2% in the rest of the central region, the URA said, revising its earlier no-change estimate. Prices in this region had risen 0.9% in the fourth quarter.

But prices outside the central region rose slower than previously thought in the January-to-March period, up 1.4% on quarter compared to the 1.7% rise estimated earlier.

In the fourth quarter, prices in this region had risen 3.8%.

Housing costs have risen almost nonstop–generating much public discontent–since Singapore’s economy recovered from the global financial crisis. Private-home prices have surged nearly 60% after the market’s most recent cyclical trough in the second quarter of 2009.

The January measures, the seventh set of curbs introduced since September 2009, included higher stamp duties, increased down-payment requirements and new borrowing caps on certain buyers. They mainly target foreign investors and local residents who already own homes.

These steps dragged monthly private-home sales to the lowest level in over a year in February, as residential developers cautiously held back launches.

Source : TheEdge – 26 Apr 2013

CapitaLand Q1 profit rises 41% on gains in home sales

CapitaLand, Southeast Asia’s biggest developer, said first-quarter profit rose 41% on higher home sales in Singapore and China.

Net income climbed to $188.2 million in the three months ended March 31, from $133.2 million a year earlier, the Singapore-based developer said in a stock exchange statement today. Sales rose 3.2% to $661.9 million.

CapitaLand is reorganizing into four main units to help focus on its key markets and has said it may exit some projects in the U.K., India and the Middle East. The developer in January said it will focus on China and Singapore, its two biggest markets by assets.

“We will sharpen our focus on the two key markets of Singapore and China for sustainable growth,” Lim Ming Yan, president and group chief executive officer at CapitaLand said in the statement. “The group’s recent streamlining in January allows us to be more nimble and able to respond more quickly to market opportunities.”

CapitaLand said it sold 544 residential units in the island state valued at $1.3 billion in the quarter, matching the sales value for all of last year. Its China business sold 955 units for about $400 million, a threefold increase over the same period a year ago.

Singapore’s March home sales rose to a record as more developers started marketing new residential projects, raising concerns the government will introduce more cooling measures to tame property prices.

Prices climbed to a record in the first quarter, according to government data on April 1. The latest measures in January, the seventh round of curbs in about four years, included an increase in the stamp duties for home buyers by 5%age points to 7%age points.

CapitaLand’s two core markets of Singapore and China accounted for 81.2% of the group’s profit before interest and tax as of March 31, the company said today.

The shares gained 2% to $3.65 at the close in Singapore, before the results were announced.

Source : TheEdge – 26 Apr 2013