Tag Archives: residential property

5 tips when navigating Singapore’s property market in 2016

Developers are bracing for a tougher market ahead as many unsold units remain, while tenants are calling the shots amid a weakening rental market.

By Khalil Adis

The Singapore property market faces a lacklustre year ahead as the various cooling measures, interest rate hikes and more unsold units continue to put pressure on rentals, while developers are faced with hefty extension fines.

According to fourth quarter data from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), prices of condominiums in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) declined the most by 0.3 percent, followed by those in the Core Central Region (CCR) by 0.2 percent.

Meanwhile, the Outside Central Region (OCR) remains unaffected.

The government has so far made no indications on whether it will remove the cooling measures, which include the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD), Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) and Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR), which have had a significant impact on local and foreign property investors.

As a result, developers may have to pay $238 million for unsold units this year, up from the $90 million incurred in 2015.

Since 2014, the Real Estate Developers’ Association of Singapore (Redas) has been calling on the government to lift the cooling measures which have severely impacted sales of new units.

According to the URA, as of the fourth quarter, 23,271 private housing units remain unsold out of the total supply of 55,638 units.

Including executive condominiums (ECs), the total supply in the pipeline is 67,765 units.

Of this, 6,744 EC units remain unsold.

So what does this mean for you as a consumer? We give you the lowdown.

Tip 1: Good time for prospective tenants to look for rental bargains

According to the URA, the stock of completed private residential units (excluding ECs) increased by 5,299 units in the fourth quarter.

Meanwhile, the vacancy rate rose to 8.1 percent in the same period, up from the 7.8 percent in the third quarter.

Figures from the URA show that rental declines were observed across all segments of the private residential market.

The rental market is currently facing three challenges – the tightening of foreign worker quotas and expatriates looking to secure employment passes (EPs), restrictions on the granting of permanent residencies (PRs), and an oversupply of private units.

With landlords outnumbering rental seekers, tenants are calling the shots in an already weak rental market.

Condominiums located in the OCR experienced the steepest decline of 1.8 percent, followed by the RCR and CCR at 1.6 percent and 0.4 percent respectively.

For tenants, this is an opportune time to dictate their terms and conditions and to negotiate for better prices amid the slowdown.

Tip 2: It’s a buyers’ market – bargain hunt for prime properties

New launches and take-up rates remained weak in the fourth quarter with fewer units launched.

According to the URA, 1,333 condominium units were launched in Q4 compared to the 2,435 units in the previous quarter.

Take-up rates also fell sharply, with 1,603 units sold in the fourth quarter compared to the 2,410 units in the previous quarter.

In view of the large supply coming onstream, sellers must be realistic in their asking prices and may have to sell at a loss, especially for those who had purchased properties in prime areas.

For buyers, this presents a good time to start their property hunt in the secondary market.

Tip 3: Buyers/tenants spoilt for choice in the HDB market

In November 2015, the HDB launched 12,000 new flats to meet the housing needs of Singaporeans.

This has taken some pressure off from the resale market as many buyers opt to buy directly from the HDB as it is significantly cheaper.

Still, transactions in the resale HDB market increased by two percent in the fourth quarter to 4,992 transactions, up from 4,893 transactions previously.

For the whole of 2015, the number of resale transactions reached 19,306 units. This was an increase of 11.5 percent compared to 2014.

Woodlands recorded the lowest median quantum price for three-room resale flat transactions at $273,000, while the central area (Queenstown, Redhill and Tanjong Pagar) recorded a median price of $425,000.

Moving forward, the HDB plans to launch four Build-To-Order (BTO) exercises in 2016 that will bring the total supply to about 18,000 flats. The February BTO exercise saw 4,170 flats offered in Bidadari, Bukit Batok and Sengkang.

This presents good news for buyers as they will be spoilt for choice with significant cost savings when they buy directly from the HDB, inclusive of the various grants that they could be eligible for.

For buyers who cannot wait, this means they will be able to purchase their flats at a good price from the resale market.

Tenants will rule the HDB market in 2016.

Tip 4: HDB sellers must be more realistic in their asking prices

The public housing market recorded an increase in the Resale Price Index (RPI) in the last three months of 2015, up 0.1 percent from 134.6 points in the quarter before.

In comparison, the RPI registered a decline of 0.3 percent in the previous quarter.

For sellers, the new supply coming onstream in 2016 on top of the BTO launches announced by the HDB means they need to be more realistic in their asking prices.

Buyers are now spoilt for choice and will have the upper hand.

Tip 5: HDB landlords – be prepared to drop asking prices

Landlords will need to drop their asking prices in view of the higher number of units coming onstream this year.

As mentioned, the HDB plans to launch four BTO exercises in 2016 that will bring the total supply to about 18,000 flats.

This upcoming supply of new and existing HDB flats will weaken demand in the rental market.

This article was first published on khaliladis.com.

An opportune time to ease cooling measures

With the residential market stabilising, analysts believe that this could be an opportune time to tweak the property cooling measures.

Private resale home prices have fallen by around eight percent, while HDB resale prices have dropped by about 10 percent from their 2013 highs, reported Channel NewsAsia.

In fact, one analyst feels that a slowing economy could offer the best environment to ease some of the curbs without fear of market spikes.

“If the Government’s main concern or restrictions against removing or lessening some of the cooling measures are fears that once the measures are reduced, prices will again rebound and grow quite rapidly, then perhaps the best environment for the Government to ease off on some of the cooling measures is when the economy is in the slow state of growth or even maybe in a recession,” noted Nicholas Mak, Executive Director of Research and Consultancy at SLP International.

“In such a situation, housing demand will naturally be weaker if the Government were to remove any of the cooling measures in such an environment, then the chances of prices growing strongly are minimised,” he added.

Although potential home buyers are concerned about the normalisation of interest rates, one observer believes that the market has already factored this in.

“The only kind of risk is maybe interest rates increasing in the coming year. However the market would have already factored that in, because loan approvals are based on a 3.5 percent interest rate calculation, whereas current housing rates are at two percent, or if even there was any increase, it would possibly be quite less than 2.5 percent in total,” said ERA Realty Key Executive Officer Eugene Lim.

“So you’d still be paying less than what your approval was based on. There’s still quite some buffer. There is no danger of people being priced out of the market because of interest rate increase.”

Looking ahead, another consultant expects 2016 to pick up where the market has left off this year, with transaction volumes continuing to improve as “50-50” buyers could come back into the market.

“In 2016, we’ll see buyers starting to come back into the market because in the new sale market, prices will remain pretty firm. And it has been remaining pretty firm for areas like the RCR (Rest of Central Region) and OCR (Outside Central Region), the mid-tier and mass market for new sales, because land costs have not really fallen that much. In fact it’s gone up for some recent tenders,” said Alan Cheong, Research Head at Savills.

“It’s only in the resale market that transaction volumes may start to pick up (as) the number of buyers who’ve been sitting on the sidelines start to see value emerge in the resale market.”