Tag Archives: build-to-order

How Minister Mah will manage the affordability of BTO flats

If the income ceiling for Build-To-Order (BTO) flats is raised, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan will be watching closely one set of figures: The average incomes of applicants for each flat type.

Based on those numbers, he will price the flats within a range they can afford. And in the long term, it will be a price range equivalent to a monthly mortgage within one-third of household income.

That is how he will manage affordability for the future, Mr Mah told Today in a one-to-one interview, two days after the surprise announcement that the income ceiling for BTO flats may be raised to S$10,000, from S$8,000.

News of the six-month review has come both as a relief to some middle-income Singaporeans and a concern to others.

Apart from the worry that BTO prices may creep up further, the question is whether the queues will get longer.

Speaking at a PAP Community Foundation kindergarten in Tampines, Mr Mah made his second promise: He will bump up supply to meet any increased demand if the income ceiling is raised.

One way to gauge demand is to look at the application numbers of current BTO launches, although it may not be a “perfect indicator”, as there are various queues for different flat types in different areas, he said.

The income ceiling review comes after a lot of feedback from the sandwiched class, Mr Mah said, and also on the back of strong economic growth and the National Wages Council’s call for higher wages.

And as he shared more on what homebuyers can expect, he also gave his take on the big housing debate at these elections. To the minister, much of the current debate is on whether a 30-year loan is too long.

“But if you want to take a 20-year loan, you can do so … whatever loan you take, the rule of thumb is don’t spend more than one-third of your salary on housing. And that, in the final analysis, is what people consider to be affordable,” he said.

The Housing and Development Board now prices new flats such that buyers spend less than 25 per cent of their household income for monthly mortgages on the 30-year loan.

In the last two years, though, property prices have risen sharply. And this is what Mr Mah wants to stress: Singaporeans should not take the “very abnormal situation” now as a gauge of price increases in the future.

Noting that property prices fluctuate in cycles, he said: “It’s very important for people to realise that things don’t just keep going in a straight line. And to base our assumptions and to base our approach on this basis, I think, would be a bit dangerous.”

The anxiety about affordability and availability of flats was not there four years ago, he said, and what the Government is trying to do is to stabilise the market.

Opposition parties have taken on Mr Mah over the housing issue and with the latest BTO review, National Solidarity Party secretary-general Goh Meng Seng has said the income ceiling should be lifted entirely “to provide a mechanism to re-adjust the private property prices when it’s too hot”.

Asked for his comments, Mr Mah said he “doesn’t see” how that will work and that, without a ceiling, even the high-income group will get a share of housing subsidies.

Still, Mr Mah had this to say about his NSP opponents in Tampines Group Representation Constituency: “We treat them as respectable people because they’ve come forward to offer themselves as alternatives. It’s much better than hiding behind anonymity and criticising.”

Asked if he felt that the criticisms against him over housing issues were fair, he said without hesitation: “Of course.”

“Anybody who doesn’t get a house the first or second time, they’ll be unhappy,” he said. “Anybody who … looks at the house price his friend bought three years ago, he’ll be unhappy.

“(But) can we sell a house in today’s market at a price three years ago? Will that be fair? I think that’s the issue.”

Source : Today – 5 May 2011

COV down 9% in Q1

HDB resale prices went up in the first quarter of this year, but Cash-Over-Valuation (COV) premiums fell during the same period.

COV premiums for HDB resale flats dropped 9 per cent, or a S$2,000 decrease, to S$21,000 for the first quarter of this year, according to data from the Housing and Development Board.

Observers attributed the decrease to the Government’s cooling measures but were divided on whether COV premiums have bottomed out or will continue to drop.

“Currently, the COVs have come to a point where it is not going any much lower,” said PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail. “Based on our PropNex data, the COV for the month of April has already gone up to a median at S$23,000, which is where we were starting prior to the first quarter.”

However, Cushman & Wakefield vice-chairman Donald Han reckons COV premiums will continue to fall.

“I think the fact that there’s going to be 22,000 new HDB dwellings going up in the marketplace, and the Government’s ramping up … its development mission to develop more HDB properties … will mean vendors cannot hold on to their COV asking prices,” he said.

The Resale Price Index increased 1.6 per cent in the first quarter, compared with 2.5 per cent in the previous quarter.

While the total number of resale transactions fell by about 4 per cent to 6,228 cases, the proportion of resale cases transacting above valuation remained at 96 per cent.

Meanwhile, median sublet rents during this period remained relatively stable with increases for one-room and five-room flats and decreases for two-room flats.

Subletting transactions rose by 8 per cent to 6,365 cases.

The total number of HDB flats approved for subletting rose to about 36,400 units in the first quarter, compared to about 35,000 units in the previous quarter.

In a separate announcement yesterday, HDB said that it will launch another 3,185 flats for sale under the Build-to-Order (BTO) exercise for this month.

HDB said it will offer 22,000 new BTO flats this year if demand is sustained. Last year, a total of 16,000 BTO flats were offered.

Despite the supply of new flats coming onto the market, Mr Han thinks that there could be a 1- to 2-per-cent uptake in HDB resale prices over the next one or two quarters.

Mr Ismail also thinks that the resale prices will trend up, as the new supply of BTO flats is not a perfect substitute for the resale units.

“Even though there are 22,000 (new) flats, there are many people who will still choose to buy resale because they can’t afford to wait three years to get the keys,” said Mr Ismail. “On that basis, I will see it as two different markets.”

Source : Today – 26 Apr 2011