Tag Archives: Singapore Property

August new home sales slide

Analysts expect sales to remain low for rest of this year

The number of new private homes sold in August 2009 fell sharply to 1,699 as pent-up demand eased and developers raised the prices of some newly launched projects.

The slowdown, which was largely expected, came on the back of a record month – 2,772 new homes were sold in July, the highest figure since the authorities started releasing monthly numbers in mid-2007.

The falling sales, combined with Government measures to cool the private residential property market announced on Monday, means that analysts are now expecting substantially lower monthly sales for the rest of the year.

Citing signs of increased speculative activity and a ‘significant’ rise in private home prices since June 2009, the Government two days ago unveiled a slew of measures including disallowing the interest absorption scheme (IAS) – which helped revive home sales earlier this year after the global financial crash – and the similar interest-only housing loans. The Confirmed List land sales will also be reintroduced from the first half of next year.

‘As the new measures are likely to affect market sentiment in the immediate future, the residential sales momentum is likely to moderate in the fourth quarter and further price increases will be checked,’ said Li Hiaw Ho, executive director of CBRE Research. Continue reading

Good riddance to property froth

THE property trade appears caught off-guard over the intervention measures to tamp down froth in real estate, before a bubble develops. Most developers and consultants put a brave face on the curbs, suggesting that elimination of the two partial mortgage-deferment plans would not interrupt market tempo too much. Their justification: Fewer buyers have gone for these types of loans as premiums charged by developers have been rising, by up to 5 or 6 per cent. But industry and URA sampling showed a quarter of purchasers in select launches chose interest absorption or interest-only loans. In any analyst’s book, a proportion of this size is a market mover. The Government is justified in stopping back-door market churning through the issue of these soft loan terms. Indeed, it should be alert to whatever newfangled payment variations the industry could dream up, if these work against orderly growth of the market.

A more insightful industry view of National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan’s announcement was that the measures were drastic relative to the market recovery, described by some as still tentative. Judgment must wait several months to see how the market will behave. But underlying this lament is the barest hint that, perhaps, developers had been pushing their luck, stoking the sellers’ market by raising launch and relaunch prices by Continue reading