Tag Archives: Singapore Real Estate

Developers take on ABSD burden as foreigners ‘push money elsewhere’

Following the imposition of the additional buyer’s stamp duty (ABSD) on foreign buyers in December 2011, property sales to non-Singaporean residents plummeted 75 percent, according to data by Knight Frank in an article by The New York Times.

As a result, some developers are now willing to absorb part of the stamp duty imposed on foreign buyers.

Over at Reflections at Keppel Bay, a luxury waterfront project designed by Daniel Libeskind, developer Keppel Land has offered to pay part of the tax.

“Developers who are willing to partially absorb the duty will be able to continue sales,” said Albert Foo, General Manager of Marketing at Keppel Land.

The stamp duty was introduced by the government to control sales of homes to overseas investors, in response to concerns that housing is becoming too expensive for Singaporeans.

Government leaders “clearly are saying as a policy we need to keep control of escalation in prices”, said Chris Fossick, Managing Director for Singapore and Southeast Asia, Jones Lang LaSalle.

Fossick added that the latest measures only aggravated an already quiet international sales market due to the global economic situation.

Even with the additional taxes, home values rose 0.4 percent in Q1 2012 while prices in the Core Central Region (CCR) alone grew by 0.6 percent.

However, Nicholas Holt, Research Director for Asia-Pacific at Knight Frank, expects private home prices to fall this year and added that the cooling measures will likely “push money elsewhere”.

Meanwhile, DTZ reported a 17 percent rise of international buyers in the overall market for 2011, up from 11 percent in 2005.

Source : PropertyGuru – 2012 Jul 6

Private property owners benefit from property rebound

Since 2009, private homeowners in Singapore have greatly benefitted from the recovery in the property market.

A report by Square Foot Research revealed that owners received at least S$20.3 billion in gross profit since late 2009 based on caveats data. This explains the strong sales figure of S$60.1 billion recorded during the period, noted the report.

Square Foot added that actual figures could be a lot higher if gains from collective sales were factored into the research.

But overall profitability slid to S$2.7 billion in the first half 2012 compared to the S$3.2 billion and S$4 billion in 2H2011 and 1H2011 respectively.

At the same time, the percentage of unprofitable transactions in the secondary market rose to two percent in 1H2012, from one percent in 2H2011.

On the upside, average profitability per transaction in the secondary market hit a new high of S$522,056 in 1H2012, nearly double the S$288,991 in H22009.

The top five most profitable secondary market projects in the first six months of this year comprised the likes of Serangoon Garden Estate (most profitable with $59 million in profit realised), The Quintet, Frankel Estate, Seletar Hills Estate and Trevista.

On the flip side, the five most unprofitable projects in the same period included developments such as Reflections at Keppel Bay (the most unprofitable project, where a total loss of $7.4 million was realised), St Regis Residences, Latitude, CityVista Residences and Duchess Residences.