Tag Archives: Singapore Property

How Minister Mah will manage the affordability of BTO flats

If the income ceiling for Build-To-Order (BTO) flats is raised, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan will be watching closely one set of figures: The average incomes of applicants for each flat type.

Based on those numbers, he will price the flats within a range they can afford. And in the long term, it will be a price range equivalent to a monthly mortgage within one-third of household income.

That is how he will manage affordability for the future, Mr Mah told Today in a one-to-one interview, two days after the surprise announcement that the income ceiling for BTO flats may be raised to S$10,000, from S$8,000.

News of the six-month review has come both as a relief to some middle-income Singaporeans and a concern to others.

Apart from the worry that BTO prices may creep up further, the question is whether the queues will get longer.

Speaking at a PAP Community Foundation kindergarten in Tampines, Mr Mah made his second promise: He will bump up supply to meet any increased demand if the income ceiling is raised.

One way to gauge demand is to look at the application numbers of current BTO launches, although it may not be a “perfect indicator”, as there are various queues for different flat types in different areas, he said.

The income ceiling review comes after a lot of feedback from the sandwiched class, Mr Mah said, and also on the back of strong economic growth and the National Wages Council’s call for higher wages.

And as he shared more on what homebuyers can expect, he also gave his take on the big housing debate at these elections. To the minister, much of the current debate is on whether a 30-year loan is too long.

“But if you want to take a 20-year loan, you can do so … whatever loan you take, the rule of thumb is don’t spend more than one-third of your salary on housing. And that, in the final analysis, is what people consider to be affordable,” he said.

The Housing and Development Board now prices new flats such that buyers spend less than 25 per cent of their household income for monthly mortgages on the 30-year loan.

In the last two years, though, property prices have risen sharply. And this is what Mr Mah wants to stress: Singaporeans should not take the “very abnormal situation” now as a gauge of price increases in the future.

Noting that property prices fluctuate in cycles, he said: “It’s very important for people to realise that things don’t just keep going in a straight line. And to base our assumptions and to base our approach on this basis, I think, would be a bit dangerous.”

The anxiety about affordability and availability of flats was not there four years ago, he said, and what the Government is trying to do is to stabilise the market.

Opposition parties have taken on Mr Mah over the housing issue and with the latest BTO review, National Solidarity Party secretary-general Goh Meng Seng has said the income ceiling should be lifted entirely “to provide a mechanism to re-adjust the private property prices when it’s too hot”.

Asked for his comments, Mr Mah said he “doesn’t see” how that will work and that, without a ceiling, even the high-income group will get a share of housing subsidies.

Still, Mr Mah had this to say about his NSP opponents in Tampines Group Representation Constituency: “We treat them as respectable people because they’ve come forward to offer themselves as alternatives. It’s much better than hiding behind anonymity and criticising.”

Asked if he felt that the criticisms against him over housing issues were fair, he said without hesitation: “Of course.”

“Anybody who doesn’t get a house the first or second time, they’ll be unhappy,” he said. “Anybody who … looks at the house price his friend bought three years ago, he’ll be unhappy.

“(But) can we sell a house in today’s market at a price three years ago? Will that be fair? I think that’s the issue.”

Source : Today – 5 May 2011

Rafflesia Condo unit achieves $988 psf

A record bid by CapitaLand for a plot of land in Bishan has put the spotlight on homes in the area such as Rafflesia Condo and Bishan 8. In February, CapitaLand’s bid of $550 million, or $869 psf per plot ratio, for the 99-year leasehold site at Bishan Street 14 came out tops among 19 bids. CapitaLand has partnered Mitsubishi Estate Asia to develop a 600-unit condo on the 129,137 sq ft site and is expected to launch the new homes in 1H2012, according to a press release dated March 31.

Sunny Wong, a property agent with Global Property Strategic Alliance, believes the new project could be priced as high as $1,500 psf a unit and that the launch next year will give another boost to prices of condos in the area.

The site is a short walk to the Bishan MRT Station, bus interchange, community centre, library and sports and swimming complex. It is also near the Junction 8 shopping centre, which is under CapitaLand’s retail REIT (real estate investment trust), CapitaMall Trust. There are also several reputable schools in the area: Raffles Institution, Kuo Chuan Presbyterian Secondary School and ITE College Central. The site is also a 10-minute drive to the MacRitchie Reservoir Park and a 15- minute drive to the CBD.

A few streets away from the site is the 230-unit Rafflesia Condo. Located a 10-minute walk from the Bishan MRT Station and across from Raffles Institution, Rafflesia Condo is a 99-year leasehold development by Far East Organization and completed in 2002.

For the period of April 1 to 12, there were three transactions at Rafflesia Condo, at prices ranging from $859 to $988 psf, according to caveats lodged with URA Realis. Prices hit a peak of $1,171 psf when a 1,324 sq ft unit on the 18th floor was sold for $1.55 million last November.

On the first floor, a 1,076 sq ft unit was sold for $925,000 ($859 psf), representing a 35.6% gain for the seller, who purchased the unit for $682,000 ($634 psf) in 2001.

Another 1,076 sq ft unit on the first floor was sold for $940,000 ($873 psf). Before this, the unit changed hands for $707,761 ($658 psf), representing a 32% gain on sale.

On the third floor, a 1,195 sq ft unit was sold for $1.18 million ($988 psf), representing a 37% gain over the last transacted price of $861,390 ($721 psf) in 2000.

Wong notes that demand is strong for units at Rafflesia, given that homes in the city area are increasingly out of reach of some buyers, while prices in the suburban areas are rising rapidly as well. “Since prices of homes in the suburban areas are also quite high, buyers would rather go for central areas such as Bishan, as it is near the city,” he says. Wong adds that a three-bedroom unit can fetch $3,800 a month in rent, owing to its proximity to schools and two MRT stations — Bishan and Marymount.

Another condo in the area is the 11-year old Bishan 8, also developed by Far East Organization. The 200-unit condo is located at a junction on the opposite left of the Bishan MRT Station. The most recent transaction was for a 1,162 sq ft unit on the ninth floor for $1.2 million ($1,032 psf) on April 1.

Meanwhile, in the CBD area, a 1,184 sq ft unit at The Sail @ Marina Bay on the 61st storey was sold for $3.6 million ($3,040 psf) on April 4, the first time prices have breached the $3,000 psf level this year. Before this, the unit was sold for $1.82 million ($1,538 psf), representing a 98% gain for the seller. The other transaction for the period of April 1 to 12 was the sale of a 2,002 sq ft unit on the 29th floor for $5.05 million ($2,522 psf) on April 5.

The 1,111-unit The Sail was developed by City Developments and AIG and completed in 4Q2008, at the height of the global financial crisis. Prices peaked in April 2008 when a 1,033 sq ft unit was sold for $3.5 million ($3,387 psf). Desmond Tan, group director at Dennis Wee Group, says prices at The Sail are expected to trend up. “Buyers are comparing The Sail with One Shenton. Some say the views at One Shenton are not as good as expected. This is supporting prices at The Sail,” he says.

Source : The Edge – 2 May 2011