Tag Archives: Singapore Residential Property

Home prices to remain depressed in 2016

While no major correction is expected next year, analysts believe that several factors from oversupply to lending curbs will keep prices of executive condominiums (ECs) and private homes depressed, reported The Straits Times.

Knight Frank Singapore research head Alice Tan expects new home prices to drop by three to five percent in 2016, while projects with many unsold units may lower prices even more.

ECs have seen average prices fall from a high of more than $800 psf in H1 2015 to $780 psf in H2 2015, noted R’ST research director Ong Kah Seng, adding that average prices of ECs could drop next year to $750 to $780 psf.

With around 24,000 new unsold units in the market, remnant stock is a major issue plaguing the private residential market. Aside from this, developers are also under increasing pressure to move units due to the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) and Qualifying Certificate penalties, he said.

Developers have been slashing prices all year as market realities start to bite. The Panorama, for instance, saw median prices fall to $1,226 psf in October from $1,343 psf during its initial launch in January last year, revealed OrangeTee research manager Wong Xian Yang.

Prices at Sims Urban Oasis also slipped to $1,285 psf in October from $1,397 psf during its February launch.

Clearly, buyers affected by both the ABSD and Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) have become more selective nowadays.

But while new private home sales were lower this year, the unsold stock has also been decreasing. Knight Frank’s Tan said there were 24,149 unsold units in Q3 this year, down 18 percent from Q3 2014 and 25 percent lower than in Q3 2013.

“The adjustment of prices, albeit at a moderate level from about two to three percent discount, coupled with pent-up demand, especially from local home buyers, has helped improve take-up rates in the last two quarters,” she said.

Over in the resale market, the year’s top five projects saw prices drop by six to 11 percent from 2013, though prices increased at one of the developments, said OrangeTee.

Despite the rise in resale volumes, Wong expects rentals to remain soft due to the limited growth in foreign labour and many completions expected next year.

Century 21 chief executive officer Ku Swee Yong said EC developers may become more desperate to move units in projects where there are over 300 unsold units, like at The Criterion, The Terrace and Sol Acres.

“The raised income ceiling of $14,000 (earlier this year) does not seem to have brought in many buyers,” he said.

S’pore home prices may continue slide amid rising rates

A weaker currency and rising borrowing costs do not bode well for Singapore’s home prices amid its longest drop in over 10 years, reported Bloomberg.

Notably, the three-month Singapore interbank offered rate (SIBOR) more than doubled within a year to its highest level since 2008. The main benchmark for home loans was seen rising further and narrowing the gap with the swap offer rate (SOR), a measure of borrowing costs mainly influenced by exchange rate expectations.

The spread was the greatest since 2009, as the Singapore dollar fell seven percent this year. Vishnu Varathan, a Singapore-based economist at Mizuho Bank Ltd, said: “If the SIBOR catches up with the SOR in the next three to six months, that premium may be eroded, and we will get further softening in property prices. Buyers are going to factor in rate increases, so a further price correction is difficult to avoid.”

Knight Frank LLP said home prices may decline by as much as five percent this year, the biggest drop since 2001. Property developers are already struggling with lower sales and falling values after the government introduced curbs on residential transactions, as demand from foreigners, alongside low rates, prompted concerns of an overheating property market.

The curbs included higher stamp duties on home purchases, an increase in real estate taxes, and a cap on debt repayment costs at over half the borrower’s monthly income. This saw property prices fall for the seventh consecutive quarter in the three months ending in June, its longest losing streak in 13 years. Private homes sales also plunged to a six-year low last year.

In August, the three-month SOR increased 41 basis points to 1.405 percent as the Singapore dollar fell to its lowest level in over five years. The corresponding SIBOR increased 13 basis points to 1.008 percent in August, with its discount to the SOR reaching 49 basis points on Tuesday. At the same time, the three-month SIBOR stood at 1.074 percent, its highest level since November 2008. Mizuho’s Varathan expects it to increase to 1.5 percent by end-2015.

Meanwhile, the Singapore dollar is set for its largest annual loss since 1998. The currency stood at S$1.4296 against the US dollar on Tuesday, its weakest since September 2009. This came amid concern that the Federal Reserve will begin raising interest rates, and as the devaluation of China’s yuan triggered weakness in Asian exchange rates.

The city-state’s export-driven economy has been dampened by China’s slowdown, a commodities slump and uneven recoveries in Europe and the US. In Q2 2015, the economy contracted the most since 2012, while annual growth slowed following a record high in 2010.

“The outlook for the Singapore economy is very weak,” noted Hee-Eun Lee, a rates strategist at Standard Chartered Plc. As such, investors “think the currency will keep on depreciating,” she said.

With this, Alice Tan, Singapore-based head of consultancy and research at Knight Frank, expects this year’s home sales to range between 6,500 and 7,500 units, compared with 2014’s 7,316 units.

“The impact of rising rates would exert a downward pressure on prices for homes,” said Tan. “If the rate of increase is faster, then a recovery may not be in sight next year.”