Category Archives: Cooling Measures

Sentosa condos, bungalows feeling the blues

Prices of bungalows and high-end condominiums in Sentosa have fallen significantly due to the series of cooling measures by the government, according to media reports.

But the most debilitating factors are the Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD), tax of up to 18 percent for foreign property buyers and the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework.

Under the SSD rules, all sellers are required to pay 16 percent of a property’s value if they sell it within a year of its purchase. Foreigners also need to pay a buyer’s stamp of 15 percent in addition of basic buyer’s stamp duty of around three percent, while the TDSR limits the loan quantum purchasers can get to 60 percent of their monthly income.

As a result, current prices of luxury condos at Sentosa are hovering near their record-low since end-2006 based on 15 deals, said Maybank Kim Eng.

Residential properties bought after 2006 and sold off in the past 12 months posted price drops of between five percent and 21 percent estimated its Singapore-based analyst Ng Wee Siang.

But the values of some repossessed condos auctioned off by banks in early-2014, such as two units at the Turquoise, dived by as much as 45 percent compared to their purchase price in 2007.

Chestertons’ Managing Director Donald Han noted the most affected segment consists of high-end homes bigger than 2,000 sq ft and costing from $4 million to $5 million

In fact, URA data showed an 11,280 sq ft bungalow at Treasure Island in Sentosa Cove lost over 50 percent of its peak-value when it changed hands this year, while a 7,341 sq ft property was sold for 39 percent less than the record-high of $3,214 psf.

Last quarter likely to be quiet

Prices of private residential property could show slowing declines in Q4 2014, especially for the mass-market segment, according to Knight Frank’s Director and Head of Consultancy and Research Alice Tan.

She predicts prices of non-luxury homes in Outside Central Region (OCR) to fall by another 0.5 to 0.8 per cent in Q4 2014, while prices in the Core Central Region (CCR) are expected to fall by another 1 to 2 per cent quarter-on-quarter. Meanwhile, prices in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) are expected drop by around 0.4 to 0.5 per cent from October to December.

The last quarter of the year is also likely to be a quiet period for project launches in view of the upcoming year-end holiday season. Tan said, “Going forward, the number of new unit launches could remain at current levels, with a marked fall in total number of residential units being made available under the H1 2014 GLS programme, of just 4,600 units.”

Additionally, volumes of the private residential property market are not anticipated to rebound strongly in Q4 2014, but HDB resale transactions may rise, according to OrangeTee.

“However, we expect resale volumes to continue to increase as more and more residential projects (BTO, EC and private) attain TOP and these buyers would have to sell their existing flats within six months, as some private property upgraders would sell to finance their upgrade and to claim ABSD rebate,” Steven Tan, Managing Director of OrangeTee.

By the end of 2014, 17,000 to 18,000 units are likely to be completed, according to JLL, and the supply in each of the next two years is expected to be around 20,000 units or more. “This will intensify competition in the leasing market and exacerbate the softening in rentals,” JLL said.