Category Archives: Cooling Measures

Cooling measures have been effective

The curbs imposed by the government from 2009 to 2013 have not only controlled the property bubble, they were also an important complement to monetary policy, said the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) Managing Director Ravi Menon in media reports.

However, as they were introduced during a “highly unusual situation”, they will not be a permanent feature of policy and will only be implemented from time to time.

The eight rounds of property cooling measures include limiting the maximum loan tenure at 35 years, pegging the total debt servicing ratio (TDSR) at 60 percent, and capping the property-related exposure of banks at 35 percent of their overall lending.

For mortgages with tenures of less than 30 years, the loan-to-value (LTV) ratios were fixed at 80 percent for the first loan, 50 percent for the second and 40 percent for the third. For mortgages payable over 30 years, the LTV ratios were reduced to 60 percent, 30 percent and 20 percent respectively.

Interestingly, Singapore was one of the pioneers of such initiatives, introducing them as early 1996. Asian countries with similar existing measures are China, Korea, Malaysia and Hong Kong.

The city-state also introduced fiscal measures, such as buyer stamp duties of three to 18 percent and seller stamp duties of four to 16 percent, because the aforementioned macroprudential measures may not be enough to control loan growth and asset price increases.

“These are essentially transaction taxes that aim to curb the speculative flipping of properties,” added Menon.

Source : PropertyGuru

Private home prices down 1.3%, most in 5 years

Private home prices fell by 1.3 percent in the first three months of 2014, following a 0.9 percent drop in the previous quarter, revealed latest data from the URA.

This is the second consecutive quarter of decline and also the biggest drop since Q2 2009.

Prices tumbled in all segments of the market. Mass market home prices in the Outside Central Region (OCR) decreased for the second straight quarter by dipping 0.1 percent; Rest of Central Region (RCR) prices fell 3.3 percent – reversing a 0.4 percent gain in Q4 2013. Finally, high-end properties in the Core Central Region (CCR) fell for the fourth consecutive quarter as it dropped 1.1 percent.

According to PropNex Realty, the price decline is in line with slower transaction activity in both the primary and secondary markets as the existing cooling measures continue to bite, particularly the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework.

“By now we are convinced that the private residential market has turned the corner and is entering into a consolidation phase with reduced transactional activity and prices under pressure,” said Mohamed Ismail, CEO of PropNex.

He added that declining HDB resale prices may have deterred some sellers who were looking to sell their flats and upgrade to a private property.

“The smaller gain achieved from the sale of their HDB flat will limit their budget for their new private property and may cause many to put their plans on hold because the potential profit is insufficient to allow them to upgrade.”

Moving forward, Ismail expects overall price weakness to persist if the current policies stay in place, and prices could decline by about four to five percent this year.

“It may be timely to adjust some of the cooling measures – especially the ABSD (additional buyer’s stamp duty), in order to ensure a sustainable growth of private property prices in the long term,” said Ismail.