Tag Archives: Market Report

Home supply pipeline shrinks, prices stiffen

However, URA price index for private homes still shows fall in Q2, confounding analysts

LATEST government numbers are offering clues as to why some developers are busy looking for land and nudging up home prices. The supply pipeline for private homes has shrunk, from about 71,600 units at end-Q2 last year to 62,600 units as at end-Q2 2009. The stock of unsold units in uncompleted projects with planning approvals has also contracted from about 43,500 units to around 38,500 units over the same period.

Developers had not acquired much residential land over the past year or so in the aftermath of the financial crisis but have enjoyed a spectacular revival in home sales over the past six months. Lately, however, two sites from the government reserve list were triggered for launch by developers.

Developers have also regained some pricing power of late. Urban Redevelopment Authority’s (URA) price index for private homes fell 4.7 per cent in Q2 over the preceding quarter. The fall was less steep than the 5.9 per cent decline for the period that URA’s flash estimate had shown earlier this month. The latest decline is also much less than the 14.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter price drop in Q1. While a debate rages on why URA’s Q2 price index lags the price gains seen in the market during the period, property consultants are expecting further price increases in the current half.

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Click here for URA’s news release

‘But we’re not going to see runaway prices as there will be price resistance from buyers, especially in the upgraders market as there’s the issue of affordability,’ says Knight Frank chairman Tan Tiong Cheng. ‘Developers will be mindful of competition from the secondary market as new projects are completed. From a consumer’s viewpoint, if prices get too high, they could either give the market a miss or look for alternatives – like picking up a home from earlier investors who can afford to sell below developers’ prices,’ he said.

‘There’s another reason why prices are unlikely to run away, at least not in the mass market – and that’s because the government has, under its reserve list, a substantial supply of land for this segment,’ Mr Tan added.

Giving a more bullish take, Credo Real Estate managing director Karamjit Singh says private home prices started to turn in April/May and estimates that depending on market segment, prices have increased anywhere between 15 and 30 per cent from the bottom in Q1. He forecasts the total increase between April and year-end could be in the order of 20 to 60 per cent, with the biggest hikes in the high-end segment. ‘So far, the home buying has been led mainly by Singaporeans and PRs. When foreigners and institutional funds buy in a bigger way, then momentum in the high-end residential sector will receive a boost.’ Continue reading

The big boys are getting bigger

Temasek-linked companies pumped in $5.2b cash and the amount is now worth almost double

UNTIL a few months ago, investors were generally too shell-shocked by events in the past 18 months to have any confidence to part with their hard-earned cash and dump it in newly listed stocks. Not helping was the fact that most companies seeking to list in the past 18 months or so were relatively small and Chinese companies. Memories of S-chips that have blown up in investors’ faces are still painful.

So, it is no surprise that Opera – the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s website where the prospectuses of companies that intend to sell their shares to the public are lodged – shows that no fewer than 16 companies have withdrawn their listing applications since the start of 2008.

Meanwhile, the uncertain environment last year and in the early part of this year, with the seizing up of credit sources, made it necessary for many listed companies to tap shareholders for fresh funds. Investors seem to be more receptive to putting their money in tried and tested names that have a track record as listed entities. Either that, or more likely, punters had no choice but to pump in more cash – just to ensure that their stake in companies in which they had already invested was not diluted. Continue reading