Category Archives: CEA

Update on licensing and Registration exercise for Estate Agents and Salespersons

As at 1 January 2016, the Council for Estate Agencies (CEA) has licensed 1,369 estate agents and registered 29,262 salespersons. A total of 104 estate agents and 3,573 salespersons left the industry. In the past year, there were 1,299 new salespersons who joined the industry. This is a decrease from the 3,006 new salespersons in 2014.

The number of licensed estate agents and registered salespersons as at 1 January over the last three years is shown in Table 1.

As at
1 Jan 2014

As at
1 Jan 2015

As at
1 Jan 2016

Number of salespersons

31,783

30,830

29,262

Number of estate agents

1,425

1,369

1,369

The number of new salespersons into the industry over the last three years is show in Table 2.

1 Jan – 31 Dec 2013

1 Jan – 31 Dec 2014

1 Jan – 31 Dec 2015

Number of new salespersons

3,336

3,006

1,299

Commenting on the overall decrease in the number of registered salespersons, Mr Heng Whoo Kiat, Director, Policy & Licensing, CEA, said, “This could be a reflection of the property market sentiments.” He added that salespersons are also probably mindful of the cost of being in the industry. Under CEA’s regulatory framework, salespersons are obliged to commit time and resources to meet the continuing professional development requirements for annual renewal of their registration. As for new entrants to the industry, they have to complete a course and pass a qualification examination.

More property agents quitting the industry

The Council for Estate Agencies’ (CEA) October-to-December licence renewal period saw several property agencies lose many of their real estate agents, reported The Business Times.

In fact, 22 of Singapore’s 30 biggest agencies are now left with fewer agents than last month, with HSR International and ECG Property registering the biggest drop in percentage terms.

The CEA’s aggregated statistics on the number of salespersons and agencies will be released later this month or in early-February.

Meanwhile, ERA Realty and PropNex Realty are still the two biggest agencies even after their agent numbers dropped by 6.6 percent and 8.9 percent to 5,947 and 5,506 agents respectively.

A distant third is Huttons Asia, which witnessed its agent numbers fall 10.7 percent to less than 3,000.

Nonetheless, some firms grew their agent pool. These include Onehome Property (started in 2014 by former ECG Property agents), OrangeTee.com, Century 21 (Asia-Pacific) Realty (part of the Century 21 franchise network and former UPG International), and Real Centre International.

According to Arthur Zhang, Key Executive Officer of Onehome Property, the multi-fold increase in agent strength – from 20 last year to 197 agents this month – is due to the service support provided by the company to its agents via digital platforms, in-house telemarketing as well as a customer service team which liaises with tenants and landlords.

“We offer free-of-charge handyman services for all landlords and tenants who conduct their transaction through us. This helps all parties, as our agents are not inundated with maintenance-related issues, and landlords and tenants get quicker and easier access to maintenance and minor repair services,” he said.

OrangeTee Managing Director Steven Tan revealed that his company takes advantage of communication and information technology in order to recruit new agents, while investing in branding and training to retain existing agents. OrangeTee’s agent pool increased by 5.3 percent from last month to 2,328 this month.

Meanwhile, HSR International and ECG Property lost the most number of agents at 25.3 percent and 30.8 percent month-on-month respectively to 578 and 146 this month.

While the city-state possibly has one of the biggest number of agents, the CEA noted that one-third of these registered agents have other jobs, of which a third is inactive in estate agency work.

However, the current external environment is unsupportive of property agents planning to get out of the industry, said Ku Swee Yong, Chief Executive Officer of the Century 21 Singapore franchise and the Key Executive Officer of International Property Advisor.

“In the 2009 down-cycle, some agents could find jobs in tourism when integrated resorts came onstream, but now, there are not many options for them to move on to,” he said.

Fortunately, on-demand private-car hire services Uber and Grabcar “have become welcome platforms to see these people through,” he added.