Tag Archives: REDAS

Let private property fly free, urges Simon Cheong

Redas chief says state intervention on supply side not always helpful

The president of the Real Estate Developers’ Association of Singapore (Redas), Simon Cheong, came out strongly yesterday to say the government should allow the property market here to operate fully as a free market.

Mr Cheong: Higher land cost means developers must sell at higher prices

Mr Cheong, who was speaking at the launch of a new price index for private homes in Singapore, also asked if the state should be so concerned with private housing prices when the segment serves only 16.5 per cent of the overall population.

Mr Cheong, who is also chief executive of SC Global Developments, said that he was commenting on the market despite being personally advised not to do so for fear of it being a ‘sensitive topic’.

‘But, on balance, in the interest of Singapore’s property market, I decided to do so,’ he said. ‘If Redas members who are fighting in the foxhole everyday for the interest of a healthier property market do not speak up, then who will?’ Real estate developers in Singapore now have the unenviable task of having to step up their game very quickly to satisfy demand, he said.

In Singapore, the government, which owns more than two-thirds of all land, controls the land supply. Land price here is largely determined by the reserve price system.

‘As the supply side of the development equation is managed by the public sector, market forces are often not wholly free to respond to demand,’ Mr Cheong said.

To illustrate his point, he highlighted the results of two recent government land tenders, which he said illustrated the ‘conundrum and the dilemma developers face’ when they bid for sites in the government land sales programme.

A site in Tampines first put up for sale by the government in June 2008 was not sold after the sole bid of $118 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr) was rejected for failing to meet the reserve price.

But earlier this month in another tender exercise, it was awarded to the top bidder at $421 psf ppr – 3.6 times the previous price.

Similarly, a mixed-use site at Ten Mile Junction, which had a failed bid of $162 psf ppr back in April 2008, was awarded in February this year for $437 psf ppr.

In both cases, the higher bid prices generated more revenue for state coffers but also accentuated the demand-supply mismatch.

‘With a higher land cost, these developers must now sell at higher prices just to maintain an equitable level of profitability.’

Mr Cheong also questioned recent government measures designed to keep private housing affordable, such as the introduction of a stamp duty for sellers and the removal of the deferred payment and interest absorption schemes.

While some felt private property was being priced out of their reach, he pointed out that it served only 16.5 per cent of the demography. ‘Should it (the state) intervene to restrain the rise in property values to make private housing more affordable or should it be left to market forces?’

Mr Cheong also said that a certain level of speculative activity in the marketplace can, in theory, improve the liquidity of real estate assets and catalyse the sales of new developments.

When demand exceeds supply by a large margin, speculators provide investors with another source of a scarce commodity at a price premium. And encouraged by the higher prices, developers respond by launching more developments for sale and, in so doing, narrow the gap with demand, Mr Cheong added.

He concluded his speech by pointing out that there are various factors that make real estate the preferred asset class in the near term, such as pent-up demand for mass-market housing and high liquidity, with some $301 billion of cash deposits in banks and another $67 billion of investible CPF funds reported last year.

‘Is it any wonder then that the recent measures to cool the private property market did not quench the thirst of genuine home buyers and investors – local and foreign alike – who clearly have strong confidence in the fundamentals of Singapore’s real economy and its ascendancy as a global city in Asia?’ he said.

Mr Cheong added that he hopes that the launch of the new index will be ‘a step towards improving market transparency and help lessen future needs for frequent market interventions, allowing a freer hand for market forces to work out its own genius’.

Source : Business Times – 25 Mar 2010

Developers ‘limited by land bank’

They say it is holding them back from launching projects to ride buoyant market

PROPERTY developers say they are eager to bring forward project launches to ride the buoyant market but are being held back by their limited land bank.

They were caught by surprise at the rapid market recovery, they say.

‘Many of us are now caught with a depleting land bank,’ the Real Estate Developers’ Association of Singapore (Redas) president Simon Cheong said.

‘We believe the long-term solution to a sustainable and stable market is still adequate supply,’ he added.

Credo Real Estate’s deputy managing director Tan Hong Boon summed up the mood: ‘You never know what will happen. While the going is still good, developers will want to launch quickly. This is particularly so for mass market projects.

The Government recently stepped up the supply of development sites after a lull, and believes supply is adequate.

Yesterday, a 3.02ha site at Hougang Avenue 2 was offered to developers. If interest is adequate, a tender will proceed.

Another reserve list site will be offered by May, on top of confirmed list sites, which are tendered without precondition.

The comments by Mr Cheong and Mr Tan at the Redas Chinese New Year lunch at Capella Singapore yesterday came a week after market cooling measures.

The Government imposed a duty sellers must pay if they sell within a year of purchase. It also capped bank loans at 80 per cent of a sale price, from 90 per cent.

Mr Cheong said developers want land supply fast-tracked to satisfy buyer demand to minimise speculation to ease the pressure for more anti-speculative steps.

‘Given the unexpected return of an active property market, developers over the next few months would also be actively bidding for more land,’ he said.

Redas members look forward to more confirmed list sites to replenish land banks, he said. They are looking to Government land, given limited sources of private land. A developer who declined to be named said private land owners were asking for the sky ’so we can’t buy’.

Mr Cheong said developers would rather have this problem than the bleak effects of last year’s meltdown in the banking system. ‘Managing upside is always easier than managing downside.’

The anti-speculative steps were a timely reminder, said Frasers Centrepoint chief executive Lim Ee Seng at the lunch. ‘Exceptional jumps in prices are not good for us.’ Still, he said: ‘No matter how high it gets, it will still obey the law of gravity.’

An anonymous developer said the measures had hurt sentiment a little. ‘If there are 100 buyers, maybe 10 will change their minds. I expect volume to moderate a bit.’

Still, so far the measures appear to have had little or no impact on recent sales. ‘The market is still hot,’ said an industry observer. The 608-unit The Estuary in Yishun, whose preview opened on Wednesday, has sold over 200 units.

The average price for the 99-year leasehold condo is $750 per sq ft, with units facing the Lower Seletar reservoir costing around $800 psf on average.

Separately, City Developments boss Kwek Leng Beng said at a results briefing for CDL yesterday that sentiment would remain strong among genuine buyers, despite the government measures.

Mr Cheong addressed guest of honour Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, saying developers were disappointed at being left out of the Budget.

But they were happy at the productivity push given the long-term gains. Redas called this ‘a deferred payment hongbao’.

Looming launches include the 151-unit Seascape in Sentosa Cove and Cheung Kong Holdings’ 295-unit The Vision. Far East Organization and Frasers Centrepoint plan to release Waterfront Gold in Bedok Reservoir soon. Allgreen may launch RV Residences in River Valley and unsold units at Cascadia in Bukit Timah.

Source : Straits Times – 26 Feb 2010