Kalpana Rashiwala
Tue, Oct 02, 2012
The Business Times
SINGAPORE - The jury is out on just how private home prices will fare next year, after the Urban Redevelopment Authority's third-quarter flash estimate shows a return to firmness in private home prices, with much of the gain coming from the suburban condo market.
Two new suburban condos released last week saw pretty brisk sales. Hoi Hup moved close to 370 units or 94 per cent of its 393-unit Kovan Regency over the weekend. The average price of the 99-year project at Simon Road/Kovan Rise is $1,250 psf. Allgreen Properties has sold slightly over 200 units at Riversails at Upper Serangoon View since Friday. The average price is $827 psf. The 99-year project has 920 units.
Property consultants say developers are expected to end the year with record sales of 20,000 to 22,000 private homes (excluding executive condos) - up from last year's 15,904 units and busting the previous record of 16,292 units in 2010.
URA's flash estimate shows its widely watched overall private home price index rose 0.5 per cent in Q3 over the preceding quarter. This is slightly better than the 0.4 per cent quarter-on-quarter increase for Q2. In Q1 the index dipped 0.1 per cent.
The authority's split of regional performances in price indices of non-landed private homes reflects a 1 per cent quarter-on-quarter gain in Outside Central Region (where suburban homes are located) in Q3, compared with a 0.5 per cent rise in Q2. In city-fringe locations, or what URA terms Rest of Central Region, the price index was up 0.7 per cent in Q3, again a stronger showing than Q2's 0.4 per cent increase.
The index for Core Central Region (which includes the traditional prime districts 9, 10 and 11 as well as the financial district and Sentosa Cove) edged up 0.2 per cent in Q3, a smaller rise than Q2's 0.6 per cent gain.
URA's overall private home price index has appreciated just 0.9 per cent year-to-date and analysts expect a further marginal increase in Q4. Jones Lang LaSalle's national director (research and consultancy) Ong Teck Hui estimates a full-year increase of 1.5 to 2 per cent. Savills Singapore's research head Alan Cheong, too, reckons the rise will be 2 per cent at most.
The index climbed 5.9 per cent in 2011 and 17.6 per cent in 2010.
Colliers International director Chia Siew Chuin reasons that marginal price increases posted in recent quarters are evidence that "although developers may not be able to adopt an aggressive pricing strategy compared with one or two years ago as a result of growing price resistance from home buyers, neither do they need to resort to a price-to-sell strategy to move sales".
Views diverge on the outlook for next year.
Savills' Mr Cheong suggests "2012 may be a year of quiescence for private home prices before they come roaring back in 2013". He points to an "inflationary bias" in the market arising from Government Land Sale (GLS) sites fetching higher prices. He also cites specific instances of land parcels sold over the past 18 months in Pasir Ris, Bedok, Farrer/Jervois Road and Alexandra Road which have seen winning land bids rise 15-27 per cent.
"Given that land price is like 60 per cent of total development cost, if there is full cost transfer to the market, prices in these locations may rise 9-16 per cent in 2013," he estimates.
He elaborates on a dilemma facing the market today.
"Given that demand is chasing supply in the short run, if you want to cool demand, you should supply less land. This may dampen new home sales. On the flip side, if the GLS supply is moderated, given the copious amount of liquidity within the system, particularly in the hands of corporates and high-net-worth individuals, any let-up in GLS supply would cause intense competition, pushing up land prices significantly. That would in turn lead to prices being passed onto the market. A vicious cycle may have set in within the property market."
Mr Cheong forecasts URA's private home price index could rise 10 per cent next year.
Others project a more modest increase. JLL's Mr Ong says this will be 2-4 per cent, "assuming there are no calamities". Colliers' Ms Chia expects prices to edge up only 2-3 per cent in the next 12 months. She points to an 18.5 per cent estimated increase in the island's private housing stock over the next three years, growing buyer resistance to prices that are already at record levels, and the likelihood of more cooling measures if there are excessive price hikes. "As a result, the impact of QE3 on the Singapore housing market is likely to be short term."
On the launch front, CBRE executive director residential Joseph Tan expects more activity this quarter "in anticipation of a fresh wave of capital inflow resulting from QE3 to spur demand". These include Skies Miltonia in Yishun (420 units), The Sennett (338 units) next to Potong Pasir MRT Station, projects at Jalan Lempeng (755 units) and Alexandra Road (560 units). Three or four EC projects may also be launched, including Waterbay and The Topiary.
Singapore’s residential market remains busy, despite a less than rosy economic forecast with GDP growth trimmed to 2.4 percent this year, according to the latest report from Savills.
Savills noted that the US government’s fresh round of quantitative easing (QE3) will likely push Singapore property prices up further.
“The bulkheads of Singapore’s housing market are still firm, at a time when global economies are being serially depth-charged by crisis after crisis, and we may in fact benefit from QE3,” said Alan Cheong, Director at Savills Research.
According to the report, the first eight months of 2012 witnessed strong sales volumes, with approximately 15,300 new homes sold, almost hitting the full-year total for 2011.
Moreover, the median price of resale condos grew 4.0 percent quarter-on-quarter in Q3 while median prices of new non-landed homes fell 11 percent. As for luxury units tracked by Savills, prices grew two percent quarter-on-quarter.
Many new launches are expected to be unveiled from large Government Land Sales (GLS) sites, with developers expected to release more residential units for sale within the next six months. For instance, there is the 383-unit Waterbay executive condominium (EC) project by Qingjian Realty Pte Ltd and The Topiary, a 700-unit EC project by Kheng Leong Group.
Moving forward, Savills is “cautiously optimistic that property prices may be poised to trend higher, possibly rising up to 10 percent in the coming months”, buoyed by low interest rates and increased capital flows following QE3.
In addition, savvy overseas buyers are likely to look for good deals in the mid- to high-end segments.
“The influx of such hot money usually precipitates into the formation of property bubbles. For Singapore, which has no capital controls, more cooling measures may be in store if the authorities wish to sterilise the excess liquidity entering the real estate sector and prevent a property bubble from forming,” the report added.