Tag Archives: Singapore Property

Prime office rents declined in the second quarter of this year

The average gross face rents for prime office space in Singapore declined in the second quarter as global economic uncertainties continued to plague occupier sentiment, according to DTZ.

Those in the Raffles Place area declined by 3.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter to S$9.50 (US$7.43) per sq ft per month while rents in the Shenton Way/Robinson Road/Cecil Street areas declined by 2.6 per cent to S$7.55 (US$6) per sq ft per month.

DTZ said rents in the CBD were falling “despite pockets of demand from occupiers who saw the current climate as an opportunity to upgrade to better-quality space.”

“Although occupancy rates in the CBD remain healthy at levels above 90 per cent, most landlords are still prepared to offer competitive terms though they are not rushing to lower their rents significantly. Some landlords are however offering more incentives such as longer rent holidays in anticipation of slowing demand and rising vacancies,” said Cheng Siow Ying, DTZ’s executive director for Business Space.

Meanwhile, the average occupancy rate for office space at Raffles Place fell 0.7 percentage-points in the second quarter to about 92 per cent.

DTZ said, the removal of Chow House from the stock in the Shenton Way/Robinson Road/Cecil Street precincts in the quarter saw occupancy rate rising 1.3 percentage-points to about 95 percent.

Meanwhile, those in the Marina Bay increased the most by 4.5 percentage-points to about 72 per cent as occupiers started to move into Marina Bay Financial Tower 3 which was completed at the end of the previous quarter.

DTZ expects CBD rents to continue facing downward pressure as occupiers brace themselves for the global economic slowdown.

In addition, it warns of the “lower-than-average net increase in supply of 1.1 million sq ft of office space in 2012”.

Source: PropertyReport – 2012 Jun 27

Why encourage rent-seeking?

Mr Conrad Raj suggests, in his commentary “One size does not fit all” (June 18), that “(property cooling) measures should be targeted to impact those (foreigners) we desire less, not all and sundry”.

Who are the undesirable foreigners he thinks should be the target of exorbitant stamp duty?

Mr Raj believes that we should welcome “ultra-rich” foreigners who invest in extremely expensive property. He suggests that modestly priced private property should be the subject of additional stamp duty on foreigners.

This targets middle-class, professional foreigners and their families; foreigners who contribute productively to the economy, foreigners who buy property here because they need a place to live here, not because they need a place to park their money.

It targets foreigners who pay income tax, Goods and Services Tax, Certificates of Entitlement, maid levies and other fees and taxes, which subsidise the “goodies” doled out to citizens in the Budget each year.

If differentiation is to be made in the private property market and among different sorts of foreigners, then Mr Raj’s suggestion is exactly the opposite of what the Government should consider doing.

Money streaming here from the world’s ultra-rich skews the property market, driving up prices across the board. In a market with limited supply, it signals to developers to build housing geared towards investment, such as shoebox units, rather than family home ownership. It also encourages rent-seeking rather than productive investment capitalism.

We should encourage the ultra-rich to invest productively in Singapore, such as in start-up companies, not encourage unproductive rent-seeking.

Recently, I lunched with an intelligent woman in her 20s from China who received a master’s degree from the National University of Singapore. She is keen on pursuing a career in journalism.

She sought a job here over the past year but was consistently turned away because she is neither a citizen nor permanent resident, a status she has little chance of achieving nowadays. After four years here, she left for Guangzhou to build her career there.

Singapore’s housing, transportation, education and other infrastructure have been put under strain by the rapid population expansion through immigration. This is something the Government is properly addressing.

But targeting middle-class professional foreigners as undesirable and driving away talent while encouraging rent-seeking, rather than productive investment capitalism, is not the way to do it.

From Eric Thompson

Source : Today – 2012 Jun 25