Tag Archives: Singapore Property Market

More options for property buyers, owners please

Reviewing some of the rules would help to rein in runaway prices in the private property market

HALF-a-million dollars is a lot of money for the average young couple, but even this was not sufficient for a new five-room Design, Build and Sell flat at a recent launch. And if one aspires to a private condominium, the amount is easily doubled, resulting in a monthly loan repayment of several thousand dollars for a long time.

Along with the rising tide, prices of resale private and HDB apartments have gone up too. And new entrants hoping to get into the market via the resale route face larger cash-over-valuation demands.

Those who have a roof over their heads are at a slight advantage, as price rises may increase their ability to move if they wish. But even this is not without risk – moving up to a more expensive home could mean a steep drop should times change.

In Parliament yesterday, Minister for National Development Mah Bow Tan mentioned that we are currently seeing signs of heightened speculative activity though not extreme. The proportion of sub-sellers has increased and developers sold 10,000 units in the first seven months of this year against 4,300 for the whole of 2008. Private housing prices have also significantly increased since June.

He added that it is in everyone’s interest to have a steady property market where prices move in line with economic fundamentals. If a property bubble develops, a severe correction must take place with serious consequences for the economy and the property market. Continue reading

Govt takes fizz out of nascent property bubble

Cooling measures to curb speculation; move likely to hit sales, dampen prices

After two recent warnings that it was keeping a close eye on things heating up in the private housing sector, the government yesterday announced cooling measures to ‘temper the exuberance in the market and pre-empt any speculative bubble from forming’.

The Confirmed List land sales will be reintroduced from the first half of next year. The interest absorption scheme (IAS) that helped revive home sales earlier this year after the global financial crash has been scrapped with immediate effect.

While some of the measures had already been anticipated by major developers, property veterans were still a bit taken aback by the speed of the response. In particular, the demand-side measures – disallowing the IAS and the similar interest-only housing loans (IOL) with immediate effect – were expected only later. In addition, the property business has visibly quietened down at showflats over the past two weekends – indicating that buyer fatigue was setting in.

The Ministry of National Development (MND) said that ‘the government has introduced these measures now, because there are signs of increased speculative activity and private housing prices have also increased significantly since June 2009’.

MND added that a sample survey of recently launched projects showed that the take-up rate of the IAS was about 20-25 per cent.

Announcing the measures in Parliament yesterday, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan warned that the government would continue to monitor the property market closely and would introduce additional measures if required. Continue reading