Tag Archives: Urban Redevelopment Authority

Waning property demand ‘could damage economy’

Cooling measures may depress consumer sentiments excessively.

DEVELOPERS are keeping close tabs on the residential market, as waning property demand could pose a danger to the wider economy.

“The fear is that when consumer sentiment declines too much as a result of measures designed to cool the market, there could be a broader impact on the economy,” said Mr Chia Boon Kuah, president of the Real Estate Developers’ Association of Singapore (Redas).

He was speaking yesterday at the annual Mid-Autumn Festival lunch at the Grand Copthorne Waterfront Hotel.

Mr Desmond Lee, Minister of State for National Development, and City Developments chief Kwek Leng Beng also attended.

Mr Chia called for more dialogue between developers and the Government as the industry goes through “challenging times”.

He pointed to the swelling stock of unsold units sitting on developers’ balance sheets. Banks, which give out loans to developers and home buyers, are increasingly concerned, too.

A recent report from investment bank UBS said household balance sheets have been underpinned by high home prices and debt, and that a 10 per cent to 15 per cent dip in prices would badly affect consumer spending.

“This shows that even when a small segment of mortgages sours, it can have a negative impact on the broader market,” Mr Chia said.

So far, in the first half of the year, prices of private condominiums have eased 2.3 per cent while prices of Housing Board resale flats are down 3 per cent, Urban Redevelopment Authority figures showed.

To prevent a destabilising economic slowdown, said Mr Chia, Redas “stands ready” for more collaboration with the authorities.

However, Mr Donald Han, managing director of Chestertons, noted that developers may be hit by thinning margins, but most have built up strong balance sheets during the bull run in the property market over the past three years. Banks are also in a much stronger state now, compared with the period of the global financial crisis.

Mr Alan Cheong, research head at Savills Singapore, said that while developers are concerned about how a slowing property market could affect the economy, the Government’s primary concern is to ensure financial prudence among borrowers. But this seems to be at the expense of the growth in deposits, even as consumer loan levels have eased.

In July, deposits growth rose by just 0.1 per cent, down from 10 per cent a year ago – before the total debt servicing ratio kicked in, said Mr Cheong. In comparison, consumer loans grew at about 10.5 per cent in July, down from about 20 per cent a year earlier.

“The measures could have been calibrated at too high a level,” noted Mr Cheong. “Singaporeans are put off by the total debt servicing ratio and foreigners are not bringing in the money because of the additional buyer’s stamp duty. Money is flowing out.”

Private home prices in Singapore continue to fall in Q2: URA

URBAN Redevelopment Authority’s official private home price index fell one per cent in the second quarter of this year compared with the first quarter.

This is a smaller drop than the 1.3 per cent decline in the previous quarter. It is also the third straight quarter of price decline.

Giving a geographical split of non-landed private home prices, URA said prices in Core Central Region (CCR) fell 1.5 per cent in Q2, a bigger drop than the 1.1 per cent decline in Q1.

CCR covers the Downtown Core planning area, Sentosa and the traditional districts 9, 10 and 11.

In the city-fringe, or Rest of Central Region, prices eased 0.4 per cent, a smaller decline compared with the 3.3 per cent drop in Q1.

In suburban locations, or the Outside Central Region, prices decreased 0.9 per cent in Q2. In the first quarter, they had dipped 0.1 per cent.

Prices of landed properties fell 1.7 per cent in Q2, higher than the 0.7 per cent decline in the previous quarter.

Rentals of private residential properties fell by 0.6 per cent in Q2 – compared with the 0.7 per cent decline in Q1.

Developers launched 2,843 uncompleted private residential units (excluding executive condominiums or ECs) for sale in Q2 compared to 1,964 units in Q1. They sold 2,665 private homes in Q2 excluding ECs – an increase from the 1,744 units they sold in the first three months of this year.

No new EC units were launched for sale in Q2, but developers sold 154 EC units in Q2, compared to the 149 units sold in Q1.

There were 1,314 resale transactions in the April-June quarter of this year, up from 941 transactions in the first three months.

There were 139 subsale transactions in Q2 compared to 128 transactions in Q1.