Tag Archives: Hong Kong

Singapore April private home sales climb to five-month high

Singapore’s private home sales jumped 29% to a five-month high as the city offers what analysts say is a safe haven following events from Japan’s worst earthquake to political turmoil in some Middle East nations.

Developers sold 1,788 homes in April from 1,386 in March, the highest since 1,915 units were bought in November, according to data on the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s website. The figure dropped from 2,208 a year earlier, the data showed.

“It shows that confidence is still there, not just locally but internationally, because of the stable economic and political landscape,” said Donald Han, Singapore-based managing director at Cushman & Wakefield, the world’s largest closely held real estate services company. “It’s a safe haven with the calamities in the Middle East and Japan, and Singapore is deemed as a jewel among investment destinations.”

Singapore’s economy grew at an annual rate of 23.5% in the first three months, driving home prices to a record. The government in January raised the down-payment on second mortgages and extended the sales tax for home sales to four years from three as it added more rules to curb speculation.

In Hong Kong, the government sold three residential sites above analyst estimates last week, highlighting developers’ confidence that property measures in November haven’t damped demand in the city.

Investors are still seeking Singapore properties because most are holding them for more than three years, while the curbs, similar to those in Hong Kong, were aimed at short-term buyers, Han said. “People are not just looking into buying properties for a quick flip,” he said.

The number of homes sold in Singapore also increased in February and March following the measures, according data on the website of government’s urban planning agency. More curbs may be introduced if the second-quarter home prices exceed the 2.2% increase in the first three months, Han said. The advance was the smallest as prices rose for seven quarters.

Source : The Edge – 16 May 2011

Asian luxury property prices rise slowly in first quarter

Values of luxury residential properties across Asia continued to slowly rise in the first quarter of 2011. As with the last quarter of 2010, values rose 1.8 per cent, according to Residential Index data from Jones Lang LaSalle.

This is a slowdown from the hectic third quarter of 2010, when prices grew by 7.4 per cent.

The cooling pace comes after various governments enacted anti-speculative measures in 2010.

The index data comes from monitoring major Asian centres including Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, Singapore, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta and Mumbai. Of these cities, only Kuala Lumpur residential prices showed a slight drop in value of 1.1 per cent over the first quarter, while capital values in Hong Kong showed the greatest increase at 8.3 per cent.

On the Chinese mainland, sales were quiet over the first quarter after new rules were introduced to curb the hot market. Bans on new purchases from owners who already have two apartments and a pilot property tax kept first quarter price increases in Beijing and Shanghai relatively minor at 3.2 per cent and 0.4 per cent respectively.

Despite the current restrictions in China, Chinese buyers will likely still have an effect on other markets within Asia. “The growing pool of high net-worth individuals from mainland China will not only lead to a structural change in buyers’ profile in Hong Kong’s luxury residential market, but will also gradually raise demand for high-quality residential properties in other Asian cities, where the investment environment and social infrastructure are good,” said Joseph Tsang, managing director and head of capital markets at Jones Lang LaSalle, Hong Kong.

Residential prices in China are expected to remain stable or decrease slightly in 2011 due to probable price reductions by developers, and the introduction of fewer high-valued units.

Meanwhile, strong end-user demand and long-term investors will likely see the luxury markets in Hong Kong and Singapore increase in strength.

Source : PropertyReport – 12 May 2011