Category Archives: Property Market / Real Estate

Global property buyers fall off

The developers of Reflections at Keppel Bay, the project designed by Daniel Libeskind on the Singapore waterfront, are among the local real estate companies offering to pay at least part of a stamp duty recently imposed on their foreign customers.

“Developers who are willing to partially absorb the duty will be able to continue sales,” said Albert Foo, general manager of marketing for Keppel Land, developer of the Reflections project.

The stamp duty is one of several measures enacted by the Singapore government to curb sales to international investors amid concerns that homes in Singapore are becoming too expensive for residents.

Government leaders “clearly are saying as a policy we need to keep control of escalation in prices,” said Chris Fossick, managing director in Singapore and Southeast Asia for Jones Lang LaSalle, the property company.

The international sales market already had muted as a result of the global economic situation, Mr. Fossick said, adding, “The introduction of additional taxes only adds to that quietness.”

Home values in Singapore fell in the first quarter of 2012 for the first time in three years, according to government data. And prices in the higher end of the market fell 0.9 percent from the previous quarter.

Given the number of properties on the market, prices of private residences are expected to slide through the end of the year, according to Nicholas Holt, Knight Frank’s research director for Asia-Pacific. The government measures will “push money elsewhere,” Mr. Holt said.

While the declines in some sectors have been slight, they still are in sharp contrast to results in recent years, when Singapore posted some of the largest price gains in the world.

Despite the global slowdown, prices in Singapore rose 50.5 per cent from the fourth quarter of 2006 to the same period of 2011, an increase bested only by those in mainland China, Hong Kong and Israel, according to Knight Frank. In 2007 alone, the increase in the city-state was 33 per cent.

Foreign buyers, who viewed Singapore as a relatively open, fast-growing market in comparison with some other Asian cities, played a large role in the sales activity – even though by law their purchases are limited to apartments and land in only a few developments.

The percentage of international buyers in the overall market increased to 17 per cent in 2011 from 11 percent in 2005, according to DTZ, the property consultancy.

Reflections at Keppel Bay, the first major residential project in Asia designed by Mr Libeskind, was one of several high-profile projects announced in Asia between 2006 and 2008 in the hope of catching the eye of international buyers. One of those, Opus Hong Kong, the first residential project in Asia by the architect Frank Gehry, opened this year in Hong Kong.

The Keppel Bay project features six curved glass towers that were designed to appear as if they sway in the breeze. Each of the buildings, which range from 24 to 41 stories, is capped by a rooftop garden, and several are connected by elevated sky bridges.

Since the project went on sale in 2007, Keppel Land sold 845 of the 950 available apartments, with 30 percent going to international buyers, primarily from Australia, Indonesia, South Korea and China, Mr. Foo said.

Keppel Land recently announced plans to start the next phase of the project, which includes 367 homes, as developers are hoping that an increase in Chinese buyers will help offset the sales decline. “We have seen a strong surge from mainland China,” Mr. Foo said, adding that they believe interest will continue to grow.

Some analysts say they believe the current slowdown in international sales is temporary. “There is still latent demand” for property, said Chua Yang Liang, head of research in Southeast Asia for Jones Lang LaSalle, and some projects, especially those aimed toward local residents, continued to report activity.

The developers of Watertown@Punggol, a waterfront development with 11 residential towers and a shopping mall, recently announced the sale of 580 of the 828 available units, with prices per square foot ranging from 980 Singapore dollars to 1,500 dollars, or $773 to $1,183.

Ninety per cent of the buyers were Singapore residents, according to the Far East Organization, one of the project’s backers.

Although international sales have slowed, the domestic market continues to grow, analysts say.

The number of millionaire households in Singapore jumped 33 per cent from 2009 to 2011, the largest increase in the world, according to a 2011 study by the Boston Consulting Group. And more than 15 per cent of Singapore households were headed by millionaires, the highest concentration in the world, the study found.

Source : Today – 2012 Jul 7

Developers take on ABSD burden as foreigners ‘push money elsewhere’

Following the imposition of the additional buyer’s stamp duty (ABSD) on foreign buyers in December 2011, property sales to non-Singaporean residents plummeted 75 percent, according to data by Knight Frank in an article by The New York Times.

As a result, some developers are now willing to absorb part of the stamp duty imposed on foreign buyers.

Over at Reflections at Keppel Bay, a luxury waterfront project designed by Daniel Libeskind, developer Keppel Land has offered to pay part of the tax.

“Developers who are willing to partially absorb the duty will be able to continue sales,” said Albert Foo, General Manager of Marketing at Keppel Land.

The stamp duty was introduced by the government to control sales of homes to overseas investors, in response to concerns that housing is becoming too expensive for Singaporeans.

Government leaders “clearly are saying as a policy we need to keep control of escalation in prices”, said Chris Fossick, Managing Director for Singapore and Southeast Asia, Jones Lang LaSalle.

Fossick added that the latest measures only aggravated an already quiet international sales market due to the global economic situation.

Even with the additional taxes, home values rose 0.4 percent in Q1 2012 while prices in the Core Central Region (CCR) alone grew by 0.6 percent.

However, Nicholas Holt, Research Director for Asia-Pacific at Knight Frank, expects private home prices to fall this year and added that the cooling measures will likely “push money elsewhere”.

Meanwhile, DTZ reported a 17 percent rise of international buyers in the overall market for 2011, up from 11 percent in 2005.

Source : PropertyGuru – 2012 Jul 6