Tag Archives: HDB News

Property agents call for curbs on subletting

The slew of new measures announced by the Government last Friday to curb speculative buying and selling of Housing Board flats does not address one issue – subletting – said property experts.

Under current rules, buyers of resale HDB flats can sublet the entire flat after three years if they did not take a government grant or HDB loan.

If they bought the flat with the grant and HDB loan, the minimum stay-in period is five years.

‘If you want to stop prices from rising and people from speculating, control the rental market too,’ said Mr Raymond Quah, president of Dennis Wee Properties.

The rental market indirectly influences the price of resale flats, said agents.

Home owners, realising that they can make money from rentals, are unlikely to sell their flats should they go on to buy private property.

This may lead to a dip in the supply of resale flats in the market, resulting in resale flat prices going up, said Mr Steven Tan, executive director of OrangeTee’s residential division.

There are also other factors that influence resale flat prices. One is the reselling of flats as soon as the minimum occupation period is up – one year for those who bought a resale flat without government subsidies or loans.

That is why the Government unveiled new rules last Friday to curb speculative buying and selling of public housing.

Among these new rules is one that states that the minimum occupation period for resale flats with and without subsidy is now three years.

The current rules on subletting were laid down in 2007 – after earlier rule changes in 2005 and 2003 – to allow more people to earn cash from leasing out their property.

Before 2003, owners were not allowed to rent out their flats unless they were working abroad, for example.

That year, HDB relaxed the rule to allow home owners to rent out their flats after 10 years if they had paid up the loan, and 15 years if they had not. In 2005, this was cut to five and 10 years respectively.

‘But the circumstances are different now – prices have spiked – and it is time to go back to the old rules,’ said Mr Quah.

There had been spikes in HDB resale prices in the three months following every rental rule change, suggesting there may be a connection between resale prices and subletting.

For instance, in the second quarter of 2003 following the February 2003 HDB rental rule change, resale prices went up by 2.13 per cent from first-quarter prices, according to HDB’s resale price index. This compared with only a 0.2 per cent increase in the same period a year ago.

More recently, after further easing of subletting rules in March 2007, the three months that followed saw resale prices jump 2.95 per cent. This compares with a 0.98 per cent increase during the same period in 2006.

Ms Jarina Shamsudeen, an agent with property firm PropNex, also felt the Government should revert to the old subletting rules to control property prices.

Based on anecdotal evidence, more Singaporeans approaching 35 years old are buying and subletting their flats for income. ‘Permanent residents are doing that too,’ she said.

Ms Jarina suggested that only Singaporeans posted overseas should be allowed to sublet their flats, and that private home owners should also be barred from subletting.

According to OrangeTee’s Mr Tan, tweaking subletting rules is necessary because ‘no matter how small the contributing factors are, they do add up’.

He was responding to a comment from National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan that only

3 per cent – or 20,460 flats – of eligible homes are sublet.

Mr Mah suggested that most flat owners are buying their flats for occupation and not rental.

‘If private property owners can buy HDB flats or keep their existing flat to earn money from rentals, the supply of resale HDB flats will dip,’ Mr Tan said. This will push up the prices of resale flats.

Illegal subletting may have indirectly contributed to rising HDB prices, said Knight Frank consultant Peter Ow.

It is known that some people lock up a room in the flat but lease out the entire unit, exploiting a loophole in the law.

‘This is not an issue of policy but policing,’ Mr Ow said.

Unless rules are enforced rigorously, having them will not deter people from doing things behind the backs of the authorities.

‘Even if there are rules to control subletting, people will still break them. So the rules – tighter or not – would not have much of an impact,’ said an ERA agent who did not want to be named.

But not all home owners who rent out their flats are speculators.

Retiree Christine Chan, 65, rents out two rooms in her five-room flat in Choa Chu Kang as this is her only source of income.

‘I cannot find employment anymore due to my age, so I rely on the $1,000 I make from renting out two rooms for retirement,’ she said.

‘I am not looking to make a quick buck. I feel that if the Government were to tighten the rules, it should make some exceptions.’

Source : Sunday Times – 7 Mar 2010

HDB revises policies to stamp out speculation

THE Housing & Development Board (HDB) yesterday unveiled policy changes designed to hurt speculators and make it more expensive for non-Singaporeans to buy government-subsidised flats.

The Board also agreed to make a much campaigned-for change: it will now allow buyers to take a second concessionary loan from HDB even if they downsize to a smaller flat or move to a flat of the same size. Previously, only upgraders qualified for a second concessionary loan.

Announcing these and other measures in Parliament yesterday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan noted that public housing is an especially hot issue this year.

‘Someone asked me recently if I was feeling the heat and I don’t think he was talking about the weather,’ Mr Mah quipped, beginning his reply after a slew of questions from Members of Parliament (MPs).

Many MPs were concerned that some buyers were using HDB flats to speculate in the property market and driving up prices in the process. HDB resale prices hit a new high in Q4 2009, with prices climbing 3.9 per cent from the previous quarter. The median cash-over-valuation (COV) for all resale transactions doubled to $24,000 in Q4 from $12,000 in Q3.

Data from HDB shows that the proportion of flat owners who sell their units within three years of purchase rose to 8.9 per cent for the first 10 months of last year. And in 2008, 7.9 per cent of buyers sold their units within three years. In comparison, less than 7 per cent of buyers sold their flats within three years from 2005 to 2007.

To reduce the number of people using HDB flats to speculate in the property market, the time that buyers are required to stay in their flats before reselling them (minimum occupation period or MOP) will be increased to three years for all flats bought in the resale market. Currently, the MOP is 2.5 years for buyers who choose to take up an HDB concessionary loan and just one year for buyers who either take a commercial bank loan or do not take any loan.

‘I want to emphasise that HDB flats are provided primarily for owner-occupation and not speculative profit or rental return,’ said Mr Mah.

The decision to remove the upgrading condition for the second concessionary loan, in comparison, is to encourage greater financial prudence and flexibility among homeowners. Feedback from MPs said that by providing the second concessionary loan only to upgraders, some might inadvertently be driven to upgrade even though it may not be prudent to do so.

‘Since we are now seeing a situation of greater economic volatility, the flexibility to right-size will become more important,’ said Mr Mah.

But the new policy comes with strings attached. Currently, cash sales proceeds from the sale of a flat need not be used for the purchase of the next one. But with the change, sellers can only keep the greater of $25,000 or half of the cash proceeds. The remaining cash and CPF balance has to be used to finance the purchase of the next flat if they take up a HDB concessionary loan.

The lifting of the upgrading condition is expected to benefit about 1,000 households a year. Currently, HDB grants about 4,000 second concessionary loans each year, mostly to households upgrading to bigger flats.

Social impacts

HDB also said that 3,800 more elderly lessees will now benefit from its lease buyback scheme which has been revised. The scheme allows the elderly to monetise their flats by selling the tail end of the flat’s lease back to HDB.

Other measures are calculated to have social impacts. To encourage permanent residents (PRs) to take up citizenship, HDB will withhold $10,000 of the subsidies for a household made up of one citizen and one PR when they buy a HDB flat. Once the PR converts to citizenship, or when the couple has a Singapore citizen child, the Board will return the withheld subsidy.

‘These measures will give greater assurance to citizens that they are our priority, and at the same time, encourage our PRs to view citizenship more favourably,’ Mr Mah said.

A quota cap for PR households of 8 per cent in each block and 5 per cent within each neighbourhood was also announced. It will be applied on top of the ethnic integration policy (EIP) but will not apply to Malaysian PRs. The EIP was also tweaked slightly. In line with demographic shifts, the Indian/Others limit was raised from 10 per cent and 13 per cent at the neighbourhood and block levels to 12 per cent and 15 per cent respectively.

Property analysts said that the revision of the MOP to three years and the removal of the upgrading condition will affect the HDB market.

‘By standardising the MOP at three years, the ‘turnover’ rate is slowed down from one year to three years. This has the effect of preventing ‘flippers’ from pushing up resale prices with their short-term objectives,’ said Eugene Lim, associate director for ERA Asia Pacific.

But PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail said that there will be little impact from this policy which will, at most, just encourage buyers to adopt a mid-to-long term view when buying their flat. He feels that the most notable measure was the extension of the second HDB concessionary loan to downgraders.

‘We may see an increase in market activity due to an increase in downgraders,’ Mr Mohamed said. But he declined to predict if there will be an increase in resale flat prices as it is ‘too soon’ to assess the impact.

Noted Mr Lim: ‘With this change in policy, Singapore citizen households are likely to be attracted to take loans from HDB, leaving only PR households to take bank loans. Banks may now have to re-package their loans more attractively as they battle for market share.’

ERA has a 41 per cent share of the resale HDB market and based on its transactions, some 50 per cent of buyers use bank loans, another 40 per cent get loans from HDB and 10 per cent pay for their flats using cash.

Source : Business Times – 6 Mar 2010