Category Archives: HDB

HDB resale volume up but prices fall

Resale transaction volume for public housing rose by 16 percent from 3,781 cases in January to March 2014, to 4,389 cases in April to June 2014, HDB announced today. The most number of resale flats sold this quarter were four room flats.

However, the Resale Price Index for public housing fell by 1.4 percent from 198.5 in the Q1 2014 to 195.7 in Q2 2014.

According to PropNex, this is the lowest in two years, and also reflects the fourth consecutive quarter of price drops. “For the first two quarters of 2014, the fall of three per cent has already eclipsed the 0.6 percent registered in the entire 2013, and this sets the stage for further price falls in the year,” it said in a statement.

HDB Median Resale Prices in 2nd Quarter 2014

Subletting transactions dropped slightly by 0.4 percent from 8,485 to 8,455 cases. Flats in Queenstown, Bukit Merah and the central areas are among the highest median rent registered.

The total number of HDB flats approved for subletting increased slightly by 0.8 percent from 46,637 to 47,015 units. Notably more two, three and four room flats were rented out this quarter.

In H2 2014, HDB will offer 12,700 BTO flats, as well as about 3,000 balance flats in a Sale of Balance Flats (SBF) exercise in November 2014.

PropNex predicts the imminent increased supply of HDB resale homes from owners collecting the keys to their new BTO flats and private properties will add further pressure on resale prices, even though transaction volume may also improve slightly due to the lower asking prices of sellers.

“This will be a quiet year for the HDB resale market, similar to 2013 which had seen the fewest deals in years. However, transactions have increased in Q2 and I expect the resale market to pick up in the second half as lower prices may entice more buyers to possibly upgrade to a larger flat,” PropNex’s CEO Mohamed Ismail Gafoor said.

He expects HDB resale prices to soften 6 to 7 per cent in 2014, with volumes hitting around 17,000 units — likely to be the lowest in the last decade.

In a bind when new flat’s ready but old one’s still unsold

Some home buyers can’t dispose of existing units, as required by HDB.

FOR Mr Balaji Lakshmanan, the four-year wait for his new Housing Board flat ended this week when he collected his keys. But another countdown began: to dispose of his existing flat, as required under HDB rules.

“I don’t know if I can sell this house within six months,” he said, referring to his three-room flat in Bukit Batok East.

He is part of an emerging group of home buyers caught between their newly ready Build-to-Order (BTO) flats and their old ones – which lack buyers in a sluggish market.

The 42-year-old manager has been trying to sell his old flat for half a year, with about 10 viewers but no offers so far.

It was valued at $340,000 in January – down from $380,000 the year before – and he is willing to accept $10,000 below that.

The wait itself will cost, given that he now has a new five-room BTO flat in Taman Jurong. “Now I have to pay for both.”

Under HDB rules, he must dispose of the old flat within six months of getting his keys.

But fewer and fewer flats are changing hands. There were just 3,781 resale deals in the first three months of this year, a record low.

Some BTO buyers have turned to their Members of Parliament for help in getting deadline extensions from the HDB.

Sembawang GRC MP Ellen Lee has seen five or six cases this year. Some have come up against the six-month deadline. Others would like more time before collecting their keys. “People try to delay taking the (keys to their) BTO flats now, in case they cannot sell their old flats,” she said.

Thus far, the HDB has been very helpful in granting extensions, often for three months at a time, she added.

Nee Soon GRC MP Lee Bee Wah started seeing such cases in the past two months.

For some, it is not just about the deadline, but needing the proceeds for their new flats, she said. “They have to have money in order to collect the keys.”

On Monday evening, she wrote a Facebook post about such requests, wondering if these were a “sign of oversupply of flats”.

A few years ago, both new and resale flats were seen to be in short supply, with tempers running high over tough BTO competition and soaring resale prices.

Since then, BTO supply has been boosted and the backlog cleared, while in the resale market, home loan curbs have cooled demand and lowered prices.

Said Ms Lee Bee Wah: “I would think that (the HDB) achieved the target of stabilising the price of property. That is a good outcome. But for those who want to sell their flats, they have to be more realistic now.”

The falling market is a factor, Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC MP Gan Thiam Poh agreed. But he does not think the situation is that bad.

Of the two or three cases he has seen, one was affected by the HDB’s ethnic quota and could sell only to someone of the same ethnicity. The unit was also on a low floor, so the case is not really representative, he said.

Nor does the problem seem widespread, even in usually less popular non-mature estates.

Some other MPs in Sembawang and Pasir Ris-Punggol GRCs have not seen such requests. But with over 28,000 BTO units to be completed this year and resale volumes still low, more buyers may find themselves struggling to sell in the coming months.

Said Sembawang GRC’s Ms Lee: “Looking at reports on the resale market, it may get worse.”

But for its part, the HDB said that if buyers need more time due to special circumstances, it will assess each request based on the merits of each case.