Category Archives: Property Market / Real Estate

Oct developer sales probably just 700-800

Estimate is down significantly from September’s 1,143

A BT poll this week of major developers as well as agents that marketed projects actively in October showed that about 660 private homes were sold in the primary market in October.

Developers reckon that, including other developments on the market, the total tally for primary market sales last month could come in at about 700-800 units – down significantly from the 1,143 private homes sold in September.

Developers’ monthly home sales peaked at 2,772 units in July this year, according to official data from Urban Redevelopment Authority. Its figures on developer sales for October will be released on Monday.

Market watchers noted that October was generally a quieter month, with developers launching fewer units as well as recording slower sales.

‘Things have become more cautious, after the constant messaging from the authorities advising home buyers that there’s no need to rush, that they should take their time and that there’ll be enough supply,’ said a property consultant who declined to be named.

Most developers would have sold fewer homes last month compared with September, unless they had released new projects during the month.

Far East Organization may possibly have sold the most homes last month. It told BT that it sold 173 private homes, more than double the September result of 78 units. Continue reading

Property investment in Asia grows in Q3

Office market’s fall stabilises due to improvement in employment

The Asian real estate investment market continued to gain momentum in the recent third quarter, as capital values generally stabilised and sentiment improved.

Direct real estate investment in Asia jumped 25 per cent quarter-on-quarter to an estimated US$9.1 billion, according to a report by CB Richard Ellis (CBRE).

The property firm also said in a separate note that the Asian office market down-cycle stabilised in Q3 as a general improvement in the region’s employment markets provided clear indication that the office market was close to bottom.

‘Investors in Asia have become more optimistic over the past few months,’ said Andrew Ness, executive director of CBRE Research for Asia. ‘Cash-rich domestic buyers continue to underpin investment activity, while foreign investors are slowly emerging from a quiet first half-year to look for medium to long-term investments.’

However, several Asian governments – including those in Hong Kong, Singapore, China and South Korea – have voiced concern that real estate is rebounding too strongly and have taken steps to limit risks associated with potential over-investment, Mr Ness said.

‘The measures are likely to cool down the market but are expected to have only a limited effect on pricing,’ he said.

In Q3, Hong Kong accounted for 36 per cent of total investment sales, followed by China, Korea and Taiwan. In Singapore, the number of transactions above $15 million continued to edge up quarter-on-quarter, with volume exceeding US$900 million, or 10 per cent of the total volume in Asia.

However, overall transaction volume remained low in the first nine months of this year, falling 49 per cent year-on-year.

By sub-sectors, the Asian office market attracted US$4.7 billion of investment in Q3, or 52 per cent of the total flow of capital. Residential properties accounted for 16 per cent and the retail sector 13 per cent.

In a separate report, CBRE said that Asian office markets continued to improve in Q3 as rental falls slowed further.

The overall vacancy for Asian cities remained at 12.5 per cent – unchanged from the previous quarter. But Tokyo, Hong Kong, Beijing, Seoul and several South-east Asian cities all recorded a minor decline in the amount of space vacancy.

‘Corporations outside of the export trade sector commenced expanding headcount and financial institutions began hiring staff to pursue high-margin businesses as economic conditions improved,’ said CBRE. ‘Historically, office vacancy has trailed closely behind the unemployment rate.’

On the back of this, the CBRE Asia Office Rental Index shows office rents in Asia fell 3.1 per cent in Q3, decelerating from a 6.7 per cent decline in Q2. CBRE expects the rate of decline to ease further or bottom out in the coming months.

In Singapore, office rents fell for a fourth consecutive quarter in Q3 but the pace of decline eased. Continue reading