Estate agents move from selling houses to…

Survival instincts kick in as sluggish property market takes its time reviving

FACED with a tepid property market, Mr Nicholas Chia, 28, decided to go from selling houses to shining cars.

An estate agent since 2010, he decided to “jump ship” in the first quarter of this year, setting up car-grooming business Doorstep Detailer as well as a franchise of a pre-school enrichment centre.

“Because of the slow market, I need something to supplement my income and something in which I can tap the network I’ve made,” he said.

Car-polishing was a natural choice: “Almost every property agent has a car, and image is important when they meet clients.”

In today’s sluggish property market, more agents are letting their licences lapse or trying their hand at other jobs, according to anecdotal reports.

Housing Board resale deals hit a record low of 18,100 last year. There were just 12,683 deals in the first nine months of this year, putting 2014 on track for a new low.

Private property deals this year barely hit 10,000 as of September, a number that was about the average of each quarter in 2012.

On top of more agents leaving, there is also less new blood entering the industry. According to the Council for Estate Agencies’ annual report last week, there were 3,061 new registered sales professionals in the last financial year, down from 4,289 the year before.

Agents say the exodus began last year, but really gained momentum this year.

Some part-time agents have returned to their day jobs, said Dennis Wee Realty agent Priscilla Pang, who is still in the business.

Full-time agents simply took their skills elsewhere. Active PropNex agent Remus Koek said: “They are mostly still in sales, but different types of sales.”

Dennis Wee Realty agent Aaron Lin said he has seen older agents turn to multi-level marketing or driving a taxi.

Alternative jobs beckon in the food and beverage as well as spa industries. Agents are also turning to forex trading, holding investment seminars and even setting up economy rice stalls.

A 41-year-old agent who wanted to be known only as Mr Ong returned to his previous field of engineering. “I’m not seasoned enough to weather the current lull,” he said.

Another agent, who wished to be known as Ms Xie, 27, stopped actively advertising around April, a year after she got her licence.

“Ideally I would have continued my activities in real estate but it just wasn’t viable.”

Besides the slow market making it tough to close deals, the new Personal Data Protection Act has made it harder to get clients, she said. Potential leads must be checked, for a fee, against the Do Not Call list of people refusing unsolicited marketing requests.

Still, she has renewed her licence for next year – just in case.

Indeed, some agents are biding their time, noted Mr Michael Long, key executive officer of Spacez Real Estate. They have told their agencies they would let their licences lapse on the understanding they can return in 2016.

Property experts expect transaction figures to start recovering by the end of next year.

Spike in bad home loans swells Singapore banks’ NPLs

SLIDING Singapore home prices – especially those of high-end residences – are piling on more bad loans onto local banks’ non-performing loan (NPL) books.

United Overseas Bank (UOB) yesterday said that its housing NPLs have increased in the past two consecutive quarters to S$502 million for its fiscal third quarter, due primarily to borrowers investing in a particular high-end residential project in Singapore.

“Total NPL associated with this project was S$166 million, of which S$80 million and S$59 million arose in Q214 and Q314 respectively,” UOB said as it released Q3 results. The bank declined to name the project concerned or its location.

“This NPL was well collateralised with minimal impairment charge. Excluding the NPL from this isolated case, overall housing loans remain relatively flat.”

Jimmy Koh, UOB managing director, investor relations, said: “We are confident we’re on the other side of this issue and we are confident of the resilience of the rest of our housing loan portfolio.

“The regional economy is moderating with China going for quality growth and the government in Asean pro-actively controlling consumer debt. This means that the asset quality headwinds that we are seeing now will improve in the medium to long term.”

The group posted Q3 net profit of S$866 million, up 18.7 per cent due to loans growth and strong gains in fee and trading income. The earnings were 7.2 per cent higher than the S$808 million for the previous corresponding quarter.

OCBC Bank also reported higher housing NPLs tied to high-end homes in Singapore. Its housing NPL for the third quarter rose to S$272 million, up S$45 million or 20 per cent from S$227 million a year ago. The figures at end-June 2014 and end-December 2013 were S$253 million and S$217 million respectively.

“The increase in the housing loan NPLs in third quarter over the second quarter is largely attributable to the consolidation of OCBC Wing Hang’s portfolio with OCBC’s,” said a bank spokeswoman. “The rest of the increase prior to the second quarter was due to isolated high end property cases (in Singapore).”

OCBC reported that Q3 net profit rose 62 per cent to S$1.23 billion, boosted by a one-off gain and contribution from Wing Hang Bank.

Singapore property prices are expected to fall further as the market grapples with increasing supply and tight financing rules.

On Tuesday, Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said: “We have seen some correction in both private property prices and HDB resale prices over the last 4-5 quarters, but there is some distance to go in achieving a meaningful correction after the sharp run-up in prices in recent years.”

Mr Tharman, who is also chairman of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), added: “If we do not get a meaningful reversal after each upswing, property prices will run ahead of the growth of household incomes over the long term, which we should avoid.”

Last Friday, figures from the Urban Redevelopment Authority showed prices of private property falling by 0.7 per cent in the third quarter of this year, compared to three months earlier. That marked the fourth consecutive quarterly drop, though it was also the most benign dip since prices chilled a year ago.

The HDB resale market was hit much harder in the latest quarter, with prices slipping 1.7 per cent from a quarter ago – the biggest decline since Q3 2005.

Mortgagee sales or sales of properties by banks have also surged.

Data compiled by Colliers International, as reported by BT last month, showed the number of properties put up for auction by mortgagees climbing to 112 in the first nine months of this year from 20 in the same year-ago period.

The report also quoted Mok Sze Sze, head of auction and sales at JLL, as saying that the number of properties put up for auction by mortgagees in the first nine months of this year was the highest in five years since 2010.

*Bank results: UOB, OCBC