Category Archives: Property Market / Real Estate

Singapore Private home buyers go slow

Year-end lull hits auction deals and new launches as buying sentiment cools

The auction market is seeing more sellers eager to beat the year-end lull as sentiment cools.

However, buyers do not seem to be in a hurry to commit.

Knight Frank’s auction on Thursday offered 23 residential properties for sale – its longest list this year, said executive director for auctions Mary Sai.

Among them was a rare 999-year leasehold, two-storey house in Pasir Ris Road that sits on 8,007 sq ft of land and faces a seafront park.

Even so, the bids came in below the opening price of $4.5 million, and the property was not sold. The counter offer was $4 million and the closing bid $4.24 million.

Only one residential property was sold at the auction. It was a low-floor, two-bedroom unit in freehold Regent Court which was sold for $700,000.

‘The auction attracted a large crowd of observers, but the results were disappointing as buyers remained cautious,’ said Ms Sai.

‘Of late, potential buyers have been making counter offers that are 10 to 20 per cent below the opening bids.’

Whether the sale goes through depends on whether the seller can accept such prices, she said.

These are not mortgagee sales.

Mr Shaun Poh, DTZ’s senior director for investment advisory services and auctions, said the mild slowdown in the auction market recently is partly a reflection of what is happening in the overall market.

Owners want to sell now as the school holidays are coming, and they worry that people might no longer be in the buying mood, said Ms Sai.

She added: ‘With all the government announcements, some also think it is better to sell now than later.’

The Government came out in mid-September with measures to calm the property market.

Two months later, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam warned that the Government would not hesitate to use every tool at its disposal in a calibrated fashion to prevent another boom.

Said Ms Sai: ‘People are still keen to buy, but they have become more cautious since there has been a strong word from the Government that there is no need to panic as there is enough supply.’

At Colliers International, deputy managing director of agency and business services Grace Ng said it had received fewer inquiries about properties put up for auction since the government announcements.

The number of auction deals has also fallen since prices have risen, she said.

‘At the beginning of the year, sellers were asking for prices above valuation, and buyers couldn’t get bank support,’ she said. ‘Now, they are asking for prices at valuation level, but values have since gone up, so there is some resistance.’

With the slowdown in the market, buying activities might pick up only next year, industry observers said.

The new launch market is fairly quiet too, with the exception of the posh Marina Bay Suites, which will hold a private preview on Wednesday.

The launch of the 99-year leasehold project – by a consortium made up of Keppel Land, Cheung Kong Holdings and Hongkong Land – has been delayed for nearly two years because of the global crisis. It has 221 large units (three- and four-bedders). The developers have not disclosed the prices.

CBRE’s executive director for residential properties, Mr Joseph Tan, said Marina Bay Suites is likely to be the last major condo launch this year.

Source : Sunday Times – 22 Nov 2009

Singapore Property : Serangoon Ave 3 condos top $600 psf

The Serangoon Avenue 3 area came into focus last month when Hong Leong Holdings won a land parcel there in a government tender with a bid of $221 million, which works out to $529 psf per plot ratio. Property consultants expect the breakeven price for the future condominium project to be between $900 and $950 psf. Hong Leong says it intends to develop the site into a 400- unit condo, which is targeted for launch in 1H2010.

The proposed project has ignited the interest of some homebuyers and investors, and there was a flurry of activity in some of the condos along Serangoon Avenue 3 in the week of Oct 16 to 23. Five units changed hands in the resale market in Amaranda Gardens, Chiltern Park and The Sunnydale.

At the freehold condo Amaranda Gardens, developed by Keppel Land and completed in 2004, a 1,162 sq ft unit changed hands for $1.048 million, or $901 psf, according to a caveat lodged with URA Realis. The owner had purchased the unit when it was launched in 2001 for just $730,688 ($629 psf), which translates into a 43% capital gain for the seller.

The 500-unit Chiltern Park, located on Serangoon Avenue 3 and off Lorong Chuan, saw three units changing hands at prices ranging from $617 to $721 psf, and that has set the tone for the area. The 99-year leasehold project was developed by First Capital Corp (now GuocoLand) in 1995. It is located opposite Nanyang Junior College and near St Gabriel’s Primary School, the Australian International School in Lorong Chuan as well as the temporary campus of the Stamford American School.

The development is popular with families with schoolgoing children, says Knight Frank property agent Kenneth Yeo. He says Chiltern Park is also just a short drive to New Tech Park in Serangoon Gardens and one stop along the Circle line from the Serangoon MRT station and bus interchange, which will be integrated with the new shopping mall, nex, in Serangoon Central.

A 1,571 sq ft unit on the seventh floor of Chiltern Park was sold for $980,000 on Oct 21. The owner had purchased it in 2007 for $610,000, hence, reaping a gain of 60.6% in two short years. Prior to that, the unit had changed hands for $590,000 in 2002 and at the peak of the market in 1996, it was transacted for $1.08 million. Another 936 sq ft unit on the fifth floor went for $675,000, or $721 psf. The owner had purchased the unit in 2007 for $608,000, or $649 psf, hence seeing an 11% appreciation over the last two years. Most recently, a 1,572 sq ft unit on the fourth floor of one of the three towers was sold for $970,000, or $617 psf.

The Sunnydale, a 99-year leasehold condominium developed by MCL Land and completed in 2001, saw a sole transaction. A 1,345 sq ft third-floor unit sold for $900,000 ($669 psf). The previous owner purchased it in a resale for $620,000 ($461 psf) in 2003, hence making a gain of 45%.

Property agents like Yeo note that transactions have slowed this month, and it could be the effect of the recent measures taken by the government to cool the property market, such as the removal of the interest absorption scheme and interest-only home loans for new launches, and also the record number of land parcels released in the recent government land sales programme. This should be good news for genuine homebuyers.

Source : The Edge – 16 Nov 2009