Category Archives: Property Market / Real Estate

StanChart sees further S’pore home price drop

COOLED DOWN MARKET, StanChart’s Asean CEO said the curbs ‘really prevented the bubble from forming. This downward adjustment in prices is not a very drastic and sharp drop. That would add to the stability of the market.’ –

SINGAPORE’S home prices will probably fall further before the housing curbs introduced in the past five years are scaled back, says Standard Chartered Plc’s Southeast Asia head.

“You would start to take away some of these measures if price growth reaches a certain level of equilibrium,” Lim Cheng Teck, StanChart’s CEO for Asean, said in an interview yesterday.

“I don’t think we are at an equilibrium yet.”

The city’s private home prices dropped by the most in almost five years following a campaign that started in 2009 to curb property market speculation, with government curbs ranging from taxes on property sales, additional levies on foreign buyers and mortgage limits.

Mr Lim declined to predict how much of a downside he expects for home prices before housing measures would be lifted.

Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) managing director Ravi Menon said on May 24 that the property measures may not be permanent and will only be used from time to time, The Business Times reported, citing a speech made by him.

Under Singapore’s loan framework, lenders must consider a borrower’s total debt when granting mortgages, the central bank said last year. A borrower’s loan repayments, including mortgages, shouldn’t exceed 60 per cent of income, based on the policy guidelines.

“It’s still too early to remove curbs,” said Donald Han, managing director of Chesterton Singapore Pte, a real estate consulting company. “The government will monitor but its fingers won’t be pressing any buttons at this point in time.” Some developers that have cut prices by 10-15 per cent are drawing buyers, he said.

Mr Lim’s outlook mirrors that of CapitaLand Ltd, Singapore’s biggest developer, which said in February that the government may start easing some of its property measures if home prices drop 5-10 per cent this year. Some curbs that were introduced were for the “short term”, such as stamp duties or taxes for homebuyers, CapitaLand CEO Lim Ming Yan said in an interview at the time.

An index tracking private residential prices fell 1.3 per cent in the first quarter this year, following a 0.9 per cent drop from a record in the previous three months, according to government data. The latest decline is the largest since June 2009.

Declining home sales also eased demand for housing loans. Mortgages increased just 7.9 per cent in March – the slowest pace since June 2007, according to central bank data.

The curbs “really prevented the bubble from forming”, StanChart’s Mr Lim said. “This downward adjustment in prices is not a very drastic and sharp drop. That would add to the stability of the market.”

Elsewhere in the region, he said the “big growth markets” for the bank are Indonesia, the Philippines and Malaysia. Standard Chartered, which employs 30,000 people in South-east Asia, is “keen to participate” in the Myanmar banking sector when it’s opened to foreign lenders, he said. The bank has a representative office in Yangon.

Luxury homes left empty in quiet market

COMPLETED luxury homes without owners are gathering dust in exclusive pockets of the city centre as developers hold off selling them in a moribund luxury market.

In the Ardmore Park area off Orchard Road, for instance, an entire condominium project has been completed but not launched for sale. Other projects nearby could soon face the same fate.

Developers who can afford to wait may have chosen to hold back launches in the prime Districts 9, 10 and 11 given the very quiet luxury market, analysts say.

While the residential property market in general has slowed down markedly, the top end has been the hardest hit.

Experts point to recent rounds of property market cooling measures that have driven away many buyers in the high-end segment.

“Wealthy property buyers are the most savvy investors… Many are not in a hurry to buy luxury properties,” said R’ST Research director Ong Kah Seng.

He added that developers may find it feasible to turn their upmarket developments into serviced apartments, though that could incur hefty additional costs, such as beefing up security.

“Another option is to massively slash prices and sell the units in bulk to mega investors,” he said.

One recently built condo that has not been launched is the 58-unit Ardmore Residence, according to Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) data.

The freehold development by Pontiac Land received its temporary occupation permit (TOP) in the second quarter of last year.

It sits on the site of the old Pin Tjoe Court, which Pontiac Land bought through a collective sale for $201 million in 2006, or $1,358 per sq ft (psf) of potential gross floor area. Units in the project are large, at about 3,300 sq feet on average.

A Pontiac Land spokesman said the units are being leased out at around $25,000 a month and that the developer has traditionally preferred to lease out its projects rather than sell them.

Nearby, the 34-unit Sculptura Ardmore project developed by SC Global has also not been put on the market.

However, it still has some time – it is still under construction and is expected to get its TOP this year. Prices for its units had previously been expected to start from $5,000 psf.

Several streets south of the Ardmore Park district, the 30-unit iLiv @ Grange project in Grange Road also has yet to be formally launched, according to URA data. The freehold project got its TOP in the fourth quarter of last year.

Its developer Heeton Holdings first unveiled the project in 2010 with the intention of selling it at above $3,000 psf.

Heeton had bought the site, which formerly housed Grange Court, for $72.8 million, or more than $1,700 psf per plot ratio (ppr) in 2007.

But it was said last year to be looking to bulk-sell the units at $2,200 to $2,300 psf to a single buyer, according to media reports.

Heeton has two years after TOP to finish selling all the units in the project, under Qualifying Certificate (QC) conditions.

Analysts said the QC rules were turning up the heat on some high-end developers to clear their unsold stock.

The rules give developers up to five years to finish building a project and two more years to sell all the units. They are not allowed to rent out unsold units.

Heeton is bound by QC rules because it is a listed company, but Pontiac Land is privately held.

Developers whose shareholders and directors are not all Singaporeans have to get a QC to buy residential property for development. This is imposed to control foreign ownership of land here.

*****************Background Story *****************

YET TO BE LAUNCHED

Ardmore Residence

  • Developer: Pontiac Land
  • Number of units: 58
  • Location: Ardmore Park, at the site of the old Pin Tjoe Court, which Pontiac Land bought through a collective sale for $201 million in 2006.
  • When TOP was received: Second quarter of last year

iLiv @ Grange

  • Developer: Heeton Holdings
  • Number of units: 30
  • Location: Grange Road, at the site which formerly housed Grange Court. Heeton bought the site for $72.8 million in 2007.
  • When TOP was received: Fourth quarter of last year