Tag Archives: URA

Keeping cool over property measures

Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said the property market will unlikely crash since the government took action quick enough, reported the media.

“I don’t think the industry will crash, because we moved early enough, and we moved each step of the game, knowing full well that what we do may not be enough, but knowing too well that if we did too much, it may engineer a crash,” said Mr Tharman, who is also Finance Minister, at the DBS Asian Insights Conference.

“So we moved step by step, but we started early, so we avoided a huge bubble. That’s why we won’t see a crash. But I think further correction would not be unexpected,” he added.

Mr Tharman also said market players will determine where the cycle goes.

The government has introduced several rounds of cooling measures to the property market since 2009, including buyer’s and seller’s stamp duties and loan limits such as the Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework. It has also increased the supply of new public housing to meet demand.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA)’s latest flash estimates showed private residential prices dropped 1.1 percent in Q2 2014 – it’s third consecutive quarterly decline.

It should have come as no surprise that on the first anniversary of the most significant measures aimed at underpinning principles of prudent borrowing and lending, a fresh call should come from the property industry for a review of measures that have left the market here listless and lacklustre.

The Total Debt Servicing Ratio framework, which took effect on June 29 last year, was not articulated nor specifically designed as a property cooling measure but was billed as a means of ensuring that borrowers do not overstretch themselves and accumulate too much debt.

It has nevertheless been in the property market where the measure’s reach and impact have been felt most significantly. Its stipulation that banks must factor in a borrower’s total debt obligations before a new property loan can be granted – coupled with other new measures such as additional stamp duties – had multiple hits: on market sentiment, transaction volumes and prices.

It is perhaps fair, one year on, to ask for a reassessment of the usefulness and validity of the cooling measures. Industry veteran Kwek Leng Beng’s argument is that Singapore could lose its edge as an investment destination as foreigners opt instead for property markets elsewhere. Property players assert that speculators have been weeded out, prices have dipped and a cooler, more stable market has been established. There is also the fear of a systemic downward spiral.

But the reality is that underlying concerns remain, including whether prices are currently at levels which home buyers believe are realistic and, importantly, affordable. Given that private home prices surged 60 per cent during the most recent market upswing that began in mid-2009, the decline in prices since the introduction of the cooling curbs is anything but significant. This, in part, underpins the conviction of the authorities that it is too early to consider a rollback of the measures.

Many buyers remain on the sidelines in the hope of a more substantial price correction. Developers are clearly not unaware of how to respond to a buyers market. They have recognised, for instance, that they can move existing stock at discounted re-launches, especially if their new units are reasonably priced.

Hard as the year of cooling measures might have been on certain groups of people, the steps must be viewed, however, for what they have forced on those making financial decisions about property. It has provided the time and space for all to pause and take stock of their expectations, recalibrate their finances, and weigh the outlays required for what is, without doubt, the single most significant physical asset and stake that they will have in the country – and the responsibilities that go with it.

Such determinations are more likely to be sound in a calm, unfrenzied and stable market. If the cooling measures have and continue to enable people to make such important decisions pragmatically, they have a value which must be acknowledged. Market stability, which is a boon to developers and individuals alike, is better achieved when market behaviour, too, can be characterised as both sober and stable.

Slump in June new home sales

Sales of new private homes in Singapore including executive condominiums declined by more than 65 percent to 531 units after reaching 1,528 units in May, according to data published today by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA).

The best-selling project by number of units sold in June – for the second-month running – was Coco Palms which sold 55 units at a median average price of $1,014 per sq ft.

The most expensive property sold in June based on median per sq ft pricing came from The Laurels in Cairnhill Road which transacted one units at $2,810 per sq ft.

Singapore witnessed an almost doubling of private new home sales during May, recording 1,528 units versus a mere 797 units during April – including executive condominiums.

A total of 4,798 new private homes, including executive condominiums, have been sold during the first six months of the year, according to data from URA. The first six months of last year saw a total of 11,868 units transacted according to the same data source.

Also in contrast to this month’s figures June 2013 saw a total of 2,119 private homes sold, including executive condominiums.

Last week Singapore’s Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam expressed his opinion that there will not be a property market crash although he added that a further correction would not be unexpected.

In recent months various government spokespeople have said it’s too early to relax any of the cooling measures that it began to implement In 2009 to control the red-hot real estate market in the city-state.

According to URA, prices as well as the number of units sold during the month are based on the Option to Purchase (OTP) issued by developers to buyers.

An OTP is a right or option given by the vendor to an intending purchaser to buy the property at a specified price within a specified period of time – the validity period of the option. The intending purchaser must pay a booking fee of between 5 – 10 percent of the agreed price for this right or option. The purchaser has to exercise the OTP within its validity period if he decides to buy the property.