Category Archives: General

Why 1996 was used as a reference point

I REFER to Wednesday’s letter, ‘Affordability of homes: Let’s do the comparisons right’.  When it comes to the appropriate base year of comparison, there is always room for debate.  Using 1996 as a reference point is in response to a question of whether the current property rally
represents a bubble.  Looking at affordability during the bubble years would
help to answer this question, and it is in this context that the comparison
should be viewed.There are also various definitions of income.  The
measure referenced in the original article (’Homes more affordable as incomes rise’, Aug 22) was based on average annual wage, computed from the average monthly earnings of individuals compiled by the Department of Statistics.

This is based on earnings of Central Provident Fund contributors obtained from the CPF Board administrative records, and includes all remuneration received before deductions of employee’s CPF contributions and personal income tax.  This
measure of income differs from median household incomes which, apart fromgrowth in individual wages, is also affected by the number of working members per household.Using this measure, average wage growth had outpaced growth in average condominium prices in nine of the past 11 years.  The average condo price, as a multiple of annual wage, was close to the 10-year average which excludes the bubble peaks) as of June.  This simple measure of affordability does not take into account current low interest rates, or the probability that the average condo buyer is likely to have a higher-than-average income – both of which would have increased affordability.
Our studies also showed that households have seen a significant increase in
their financial assets since the start of the decade, which would have also
improved overall affordability from a stock (as opposed to just a flow)
perspective.Comments in the original article should not be misconstrued
as implying that prices can continue rising indefinitely.

Indeed, as
indicated, there is uncertainty about whether current demand will be
sufficiently sustained to absorb the considerable pipeline of new supply in the coming years, especially if interest rates rise, or when prices rise to the
point where they become substantially less affordable.

Source : Straits Times – 29 Aug 2009

Older properties find buyers at auction

As prices of new homes rise, investors are turning to auctions and the resale market

INVESTORS who are put off by the exuberant prices of late for newer properties are turning to auctions to pick up older properties that have not quite appreciated in the same way.

Two apartments at Four Seasons Park near Orchard Road and an apartment at The Waterside in Tanjong Rhu have changed hands at auctions this week.

Colliers International sold the pair of neighbouring three-bedroom apartments at Four Seasons Park, on the fifth floor of the development’s Autumn block, for more than $2,100 per square foot each.

The apartments, each of 2,260 square feet, were put up for sale by a mortgagee bank on vacant possession basis. Unit #05-01 was sold for $4.8 million or $2,124 psf, while the next door #05-02 fetched $4.84 million ($2,142 psf). Continue reading