Tag Archives: DBSS

Analysts expect COVs and private home prices to fall gradually

The flurry of housing announcements in recent days has increased optimism among home-seekers, especially those who have been unsuccessful in their house-hunting efforts.

Property analysts who spoke to Today noted, however, that the additional supply and a review of the income ceiling for buyers of new Build-to-Order (BTO) flats will be “no big shake-up”. The impact – including on prices – will instead be gradual, kicking in only when the first of the 25,000 new units pledged by the Government come onstream in two years.

For a start, the gap in prices between new and resale units will likely narrow, said SLP International executive director of research and consultancy Nicholas Mak.

While the market value of resale flats is likely to remain stable over the next few years, experts expect cash-over-valuation (COV) prices to shrink – as the combined effect of the new measures temper demand for these flats – leading to a 15-per-cent drop in resale prices.

Cushman & Wakefield vice-chairman Donald Han believes the COV could even become a thing of the past: “With an increased supply and the adjustment to the income ceiling, it will become a buyer’s market and the COVs may no longer be a component of negotiations.”

At the same time, the prices of new BTO flats would likely be unaffected despite the influx. Under the HDB’s current pricing model, the prices of BTO flats are pegged to market prices less Government subsidies.

Young couples looking to buy new flats, therefore have no need to hold out on their purchases, said ERA Realty key executive officer Eugene Lim.

“It doesn’t mean that if you wait, the prices will come down or the flats will be in better locations. So you should go ahead with your purchase if everything works for you,” he said.

Wild cards: Construction costs and interest rate

Analysts estimate prices in the private residential market to fall by about 10 per cent in about three years.

Said SLP International’s Mr Mak: “A review of the income ceiling will take off a chunk of demand from mass market private properties – those that cost below S$1 million.”

If more public housing in the form of executive condominiums and flats under the Design, Build and Sell Scheme are rolled out, demand for mass market private homes may also be affected, said ERA’s Mr Lim.

As the prices of resale flats fall, there may also be fewer HDB-dwellers looking to cash in on their homes and upgrade to private properties, analysts noted.

The Republic’s economic performance is also a factor as the private market is largely “liquidity-driven”, they added.

Chesterton Suntec International’s director and head of research and consultancy Colin Tan said: “Many private property buyers are investors; as we have seen, even the harshest cooling measures imposed by the Government have seen prices continue to climb.”

There are two wild cards in the equation though: The higher tempo and sheer number of new flats the Government is seeking to build could create a bottleneck within the construction sector – a point National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan noted when he revealed a ramp-up in the number of rental flats last Sunday.

Shortage of raw materials, for example, could drive up construction costs.

The other is the movement of interest rates.

Singapore’s record-low interest rates now has allowed some home buyers to pay less than one per cent in the first year of their loans, but that could well change depending on external factors.

At a recent real estate conference organised by the National University of Singapore, DTZ head of South-east Asia research Chua Chor Hoon warned of a worst-case scenario: A potential “perfect storm” unfolding in two to three years’ time, should interest rates spike while demand plunges in an abundant market – over 32,000 units will be completed over 2013 and 2014, according to the Urban Redevelopment Authority.

Mr Tan noted that it is “not impossible that interest rates remain low” as the United States continue to struggle economically. If that happens, it could also create “ghost towns” – in the event where supply outstrips demand – where people hold on to vacant units because the cost of doing so is low.

Source : Today – 1 Jun 2011

‘Strike balance’ when reviewing HDB income ceiling

As the Government reviews the income ceiling to qualify to buy new public housing – a move considered by some market watchers to be long overdue – property analysts cautioned that a balance would have to be struck between helping the sandwiched class and ensuring that the market could cope with an influx of new buyers.

Analysts whom Today spoke to said that a higher income ceiling of S$10,000 a month – the figure floated by former National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan when he announced the review during the General Election – would be a step in catching up with the median income of Singaporeans. The income ceiling has not changed in 17 years.

But with some couples earning a combined income of more than S$10,000 – yet still priced out of the private housing market – there is room for the ceiling to go still higher, suggested Mr Colin Tan, director and head of research and consultancy at Chesterton Suntec International.

“From the perspective of the lower-income buyers, they feel that those who earn more do not deserve it, but … they too have difficulties given that private property prices are now so much higher,” he said.

A household’s combined income now must not exceed S$8,000 a month for it to qualify to buy a new flat directly from the Housing and Development Board. The ceiling was raised to S$10,000 for the HDB’s top-tier Design, Build and Sell Scheme (DBSS) flats last year.

If the income ceiling is indeed raised to S$10,000, then the income thresholds for executive condominiums (ECs) and DBSS flats need to be reviewed too, given that their ceilings are also S$10,000, said analysts.

Mr Tan proposed that entry-level salaries could be used as a benchmark in the review before being adjusted to reflect the interests of other stakeholders.

But Mr Nicholas Mak, executive director at SLP International Property Consultants, noted that the Government would have to work out how many more flat buyers the market could realistically absorb and also approve a higher budget for the HDB.

“The higher the income ceiling is, the more buyers there will be. The Government ends up building more flats. It will need more land and it will also need to give out more subsidies to first-time buyers,” he said.

Mr Steven Tan, executive director at Orange Tee, said simply pegging the income ceiling to median income alone was not enough, especially if the rise in housing prices continued to outpace economic growth – for example, median incomes may rise by a few percentage points, while property prices increase by double digits in the same period.

But he added that reviewing the income ceiling more frequently would also be challenging, as the property price movements can often be faster than the adjustments in median income.

Nonetheless, Mr Mak felt that a review should be done once every two years.

Agreeing, Mr Colin Tan said: “Public housing is a social good, so why not allow people to gain access to it earlier so they can start families?”

Source : Today – 31 May 2011

See : Apply new ceiling retrospectively