Tag Archives: Singapore Property Market

Property launches here see sustained interest

Property launches again attracted strong interest at the weekend – days after the government warned buyers against over-committing themselves.

‘Our ground checks last weekend revealed that buyers continued to throng showflats,’ DMG & Partners Securities analyst Brandon Lee said in a note yesterday.

TID – a joint venture between Hong Leong Group and Japan-listed developer Mitsui Fudosan – has sold all 297 units at Optima@Tanah Merah since the public preview began on Thursday last week. Buyers include HDB flat owners and private property owners, who took up the units at an average price of about $810 per sq ft.

In response to the huge turnout at the showflat, TID held two rounds of balloting for apartments at the 99-year leasehold project. Some 600 ballots were cast.

The ‘showflat was filled to the brim, with over 200 people at any one point, and insufficient agents to tend to all visitors’, Mr Lee said in his note.

Far East Organization reported good sales for Centro Residences at Ang Mo Kio. About 65 per cent – or 93 of 144 units released in the first phase – have been sold at prices from $1,100 psf.

According to the group’s executive director and property sales chief operating officer Chia Boon Kuah, most buyers took up units for their own occupation or as investments for their children. Half of them are HDB upgraders, while the other half are private housing owners.

Seeing potential for property values in the Ang Mo Kio area to rise, Far East plans to market the 329-unit Centro Residences in phases until it obtains its temporary occupation permit (TOP). Phase two sales will begin next year and phase three the year after next. ‘We are confident that Centro Residences will be fully sold before TOP,’ Mr Chia said.

National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said last Wednesday that signs of speculation are re-emerging in the property market. The government is watching the situation closely, he stressed. Industry views are mixed as to whether his comments will cool buying sentiment.

Source : Business Times – 4 August 2009

Some firms may expand as rents fall and the economy stabilises

A plunge in Grade A office rents has raised Singapore’s competitive edge somewhat. According to Colliers International, office occupancy costs here were the fourth-highest among 26 Asia-Pacific cities in Q2 this year – down a notch from a quarter ago.

As rents stay weak while the economy stabilises, property consultants also expect some companies to take advantage of the situation to expand.

Colliers noted that monthly gross rents for Grade A offices in Singapore’s central business district (CBD) posted the sharpest fall in Q2, compared with other major cities in the region. Rents slid 26.2 per cent quarter-on-quarter, averaging at $6.73 psf per month in Q2.

As a result, Singapore fell from third to fourth place in a ranking of office occupancy costs. Tokyo remained the most expensive place in the Asia-Pacific to rent an office – average Grade A CBD office rents there were 2.2 times that of Singapore’s, up from 1.6 times in Q1. Continue reading