Thursday, 29 January 2015

Tenants go for shorter leases as rents drop - AsiaOne

SINGAPORE - More tenants are opting for shorter leases in hopes of scoring a better deal as rentals continue to slide.

Property agents and analysts said the trend started to pick up last year, as the rental market started to soften.

The rental index for private homes fell by 3 per cent for the whole of last year, while that of public flats dropped by 2.1 per cent. The vacancy rate for private homes hit 7.8 per cent at the end of last year, the highest in nearly a decade.

With more residential units to be completed in the next two years, the rental scene has become a "tenants' market", said experts.

Horizon Real Estates' key executive officer Lena Low said that, while nine in 10 of rental inquiries she received used to be for two-year leases, half are now asking for one-year leases instead.

"They say prices may go further south. Or maybe they can upgrade to a bigger place for the same price. They are very shrewd," said Ms Low.

ERA Realty, the country's largest real-estate agency, said that one-year leases used to form just 36 per cent of private housing rentals in 2013. But this went up to 39 per cent last year.

Similarly for public housing, one-year leases accounted for about 87 per cent of all rental transactions in 2013, but climbed to 90 per cent last year.

"It is a tenants' market due to a supply glut, especially in the private residential market," said ERA Realty key executive officer Eugene Lim.

"With a shorter (lease), tenants are free to renegotiate terms as the leases near expiration or look for alternatives should the terms be not as favourable."

But OrangeTee agent Derek Teng said that not everyone wants shorter leases. Those who secure good locations will want to hang on to their choice units.

"If it's a great location and good price, they will sign a longer lease," said Mr Teng, noting that most of his clients' tenants still opt for two- or three-year leases.

The softer rental market is also attracting more Singaporeans, said agents.

"When the resale market started to decline (in 2013), some sold off their place before prices crashed further," said DWG agent Felix Mui.

"They want to purchase a new home, but opt to rent first and monitor the market as resale prices are falling."

OrangeTee agent Tan Zhi Wei, who markets private units in the central region, said about two in 10 tenants he sees now are locals, up from one in 20 before last year.

"Many are renting to reposition their portfolio. They are (waiting for) prices (to) go even lower before buying," said Mr Tan.

A native of France who gave her name only as Ms Loise is one foreign tenant who is increasingly conscious of falling market prices.

The 31-year-old and a friend fork out $2,100 monthly for a three-room Housing Board flat in Commonwealth. But she plans to negotiate for a lower price or move elsewhere when their two-year lease expires in August.

"I would consider a shorter lease, but the main factor is my job, not the rent amount," said the associate with a foreign law firm here. "I don't want to be stuck with a two-year lease if I'm no longer working in Singapore."

Thursday, Jan 29, 2015
My Paper

Source: AsiaOne

Saturday, 24 January 2015

Sengkang 4 Room HDB For Sale - Blk 408A @ Fernvale Road (D19 Property For Sale)

Viewing on Sat and Sun by appointment only

Text to 98532213 to arrange viewing

4 Room Flat @ Blk 408A Fernvale Road
- 95sqm
- nice layout
- original & move in condition
- mid floor
- partial furnished
- nice unblocked view from mater bedroom & common room
- mins walk to Seletar Mall
- mins walk to Fernvale Point (NTUC & Koufu Foodcourt)
- mins walk to Fernvale LRT
- mins walk to Fernvale Primary & Pei Hwa Secondary School 
- Bus No.: 50, 163, 550 nearby
- Can sell to any buyer, regardless of their ethnic group and citizenship. (The information is applicable for resale applications submitted in Mar 2015.)

Asking: S$465,000 (Nego)

Click link below to view details:
ST Property: 4 Room HDB For Sale - Blk 408A @ Fernvale Road (D19)

Pinnacle@Duxton 5-room flat sold for $1.03 million - Straits Times

SINGAPORE - A five-room unit at the premium Pinnacle@Duxton public housing project has broken the $1 million mark in the resale market, according to SRX Property.
The unit located above the 40th floor went for $1,028,000 this week, the most that any Pinnacle unit has been resold for thus far.
At least nine other Pinnacle@Duxton flats have been resold since this became possible in December, when owners began meeting the five-year minimum occupation period.
Their prices ranged from $835,000 for a four-roomer to $980,000 for a five-roomer.

Source: The Straits Times (23 Jan 2015)

URA may step up action against short-term stays - AsiaOne

SINGAPORE - Possibilities include acquiring powers to enter premises using force, and requiring suspected offenders to give statements and produce the necessary documents for investigation purposes.

The move comes amid public calls for greater enforcement against residential subletting violations, such as short-term stays, the URA said yesterday.

To help with the review, a public consultation was launched yesterday to get feedback on short- term rentals in private homes.

The consultation comprises a public online survey and talks with stakeholders like grassroots leaders, the Singapore Hotel Association and the Sharing Economy Association (Singapore) or Seas.

Through this, the URA will also review the need to adjust current guidelines, which do not permit rentals shorter than six months. The review will be completed later this year.

National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan wrote on his blog yesterday that while sharing resources like cars via mobile apps such as Uber can benefit consumers, commodities like homes are "harder to share".

"While it earns extra income for the home owners, their neighbours would not like to see their quiet neighbourhood becoming a hotel district," he wrote. "I myself think it's not a good idea. We certainly do not allow such arrangements in HDB towns."

Mr Khaw added that while some private home owners enjoy the international friendships and cultural exchanges, others are uncomfortable with the presence of transient visitors.
The URA said some residents have raised concerns over noise, loss of privacy, security and the misuse of common facilities.
Last year, it received 375 complaints about short-term stays, up from 231 in 2013.
In response to the consultation, a spokesman for home rental site Airbnb said: "We encourage the URA to create fair, clear and progressive rules that allow individuals to occasionally rent out their primary residences."
Seas treasurer and chief executive officer of home rental site PandaBed, Mr James Chua, said: "There is a lot of misunderstanding about short-term rentals. We hope to provide market information, statistics and facts about home owners that can lead to a more informed decision."
Retiree Yeo Hock Yew, 66, who lives in a condominium near Chinatown, supports stepping up enforcement powers.
"Many of my neighbours and I are unhappy with some of the foreigners who stay here," he said of short-term tenants. "They litter, make a lot of noise and crowd the gym and multi-purpose rooms. If the owners are irresponsible, the law has to come in."

This article was first published on January 22, 2015. 

Saturday, Jan 24, 2015
The Straits Times

Source: AsiaOne

Singapore private home prices fall 4 per cent in 2014 - AsiaOne

SINGAPORE - Prices of private residential properties have decreased by 1.1 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2014, higher than the 0.7 per cent decline in the previous quarter.


This is the fifth straight quarter of gradual price decline, said a Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) release on real estate statistics for the fourth quarter of 2014.
As a whole, 2014 saw a 4 per cent decreased in prices of private residential properties, compared with an increase of 1.1 per cent in 2013.
This is the first year of an overall price decline since 2008.
Price decline was observed across all segments of the private residential property market.
Prices of non-landed properties in the Core Central Region (CCR) - comprising of districts 9, 10, 11, downtown core planning area and Sentosa - declined by 0.9 per cent, more than the 0.8 per cent decline in the previous quarter.

Prices in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) declined by 1.4 per cent, significantly more than the 0.4 per cent decline as in the previous quarter.
In the Outside Central Region (OCR), prices declined by 0.8 per cent, significantly more than the 0.3 per cent decline in the previous quarter.

For the whole of 2014, prices in CCR, RCR and OCR have fallen by 4.1 per cent, 5.3 per cent and 2.2 per cent respectively.

Prices of landed properties declined by 1.3 per cent, compared to the decrease of 1.8 per cent in the previous quarter. For the whole of 2014, prices of landed properties declined by 5.3 per cent.
Rentals of private residential properties fell by 1 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2014, higher than the 0.8 per cent decline in the third quarter of 2014.
For the year 2014 as a whole, rentals of private residential properties fell by 3 per cent, compared to the 0.9 per cent increase in 2013.
Developers launched 1,592 uncompleted private residential units (excluding Executive Condominiums (ECs)) for sale in the fourth quarter of 2014, higher than the 1,294 units in third quarter of 2014.
For the whole of 2014, developers launched 7,693 units for sale, significantly lower than the 15,885 units launched for sale in 2013.
Developers sold 1,376 private residential units (excluding ECs) in the fourth quarter of 2014, lower than the 1,531 units sold in the third quarter of 2014.
For the whole of 2014, developers sold 7,316 units, significantly lower than the 14,948 units sold in 2013.
Developers launched 2,505 EC units for sale in the fourth quarter of 2014. Developers sold 1,113 EC units in fourth quarter 2014, compared to 162 units in the third quarter of 2014. For the whole of 2014, developers launched 2,505 EC units for sale, selling 1,578 units.

There were 1,151 resale transactions in fourth quarter 2014, lower than the 1,377 transactions in third quarter of 2014. Resale transactions accounted for 43.7 per cent of all sale transactions in the fourth quarter of 2014, compared to 45.0 per cent in the third quarter of 2014.

For the whole of 2014, 4,860 units were sold in resale transactions, significantly lower than the 6,671 units in 2013.

At the end of the fourth quarter of 2014, there were a total supply of 68,960 uncompleted private residential units (excluding ECs) in the pipeline, lower than the 74,496 units in the third quarter of 2014. Of this number, 26,742 units remained unsold as at the fourth quarter of 2014. After adding the supply of 14,220 EC units, there were 83,180 units in the pipeline.

Based on expected completion dates reported by developers, 24,796 units (including ECs) will be completed in 2015. Another 25,717 units (including ECs) are expected to be completed in 2016. In comparison, 23,298 units (including ECs) were completed in 2014.


Source: AsiaOne (23 Jan 2015)

Saturday, 17 January 2015

Fitch sees Singapore home prices dipping 3% each in 2015, 2016 - SRX

FITCH Ratings on Thursday said that Singapore property prices will likely continue to fall in 2015-2016 by around 3 per cent per annum for both public and private homes, which are highly correlated with each other.

In tandem with Singapore's benchmark rates, mortgage rate indices will also increase slightly this year, albeit still reaching low levels of around 2 per cent, from current levels of less than 1.5 per cent.
In part, abundant liquidity will help to keep funding costs low, and cheap funding should also limit downside risks to house prices, it said.
And as mortgage costs increase, delinquency rates for the three local banks too will likely rise by 0.3 percentage points to 0.8-0.9 per cent this year.
This is still "comfortably low", thanks to Singapore's strong labour market and manageable debt burdens. Debt burdens have been contained by a rule since mid-2013 that borrowers' monthly debt repayments cannot exceed 60 per cent of their gross monthly income.
Fitch said that it "expects Singapore's macro-prudential policies to be successful in cooling the property market by trimming access to finance by borrowers at the margins".
"Mortgage demand will most probably stem from property purchases for owner-occupation purposes rather than investment ... Fitch expects new lending volumes to grow modestly at around 3-5 per cent."
It added that Singapore, itself being a small and open economy, may face global market risks such as uncertainties in long-term foreign interest-rate movements.
For now, gradual rate rises are expected in the US and the UK, and Singapore, Australia and Hong Kong are markets that have shown themselves to be quite sensitive to rates.
This was from Fitch's Global Housing and Mortgage Outlook report, which includes forecasts and comparative analysis of house prices, arrears, and mortgage lending volumes for 22 of the world's major housing markets, including Australia, Japan, Korea, and for the first time, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Singapore.
A Citi report last week said that a huge projected supply of completed homes for the next 2-3 years coupled with the US normalisation of rates and the government's firm stance on limiting immigration (thus weakening rental demand) all contribute to further cool the property market this year.
More speculatively, the banking sector may also play a deeper role in unwinding the property market further. This has to do with the "risk weights" afforded to mortgages from the viewpoint of computing banks' capital adequacy in Singapore. These average just 6-13 per cent - among the lowest globally. According to Citi, banks elsewhere in the world are moving to place risk weight "floors" on mortgages of 15-20 per cent.
"Should such a floor be applied to Singapore banks' mortgages, it would have negative consequences for banks' capital ratios, and in turn the provision of mortgage loans could fall, and mortgage pricing rise, which would be another reason that the property cycle could remain subdued," it noted.
To this, Mizuho economist Vishnu Varathan said that the reason why Singapore banks' risk weights on mortgages are low could be tied to the banks' fairly resilient loan-to-value ratios and loan curbs already in place.
"So we probably don't have the same extent of sub-prime mortgages in our overall mortgage portfolio compared to other countries. The credit standards here are rather exacting. The leeway allowed for more marginal borrowers is less."
He gauges the odds of the central bank raising mortgage risk weights to be quite low.
Rather, banks would probably adjust interest rates to reflect the risks, and bolster their capital by taking more deposits, he added.
posted on 16 Jan 2015
By Lee Meixian
Business Times
Source: SRX (16 Jan 2015)

Singapore property investments more than halved in Q4: DTZ - SRX

SINGAPORE - Real estate investments continued to head south in the fourth quarter of last year, plummeting more than half to $2.38 billion, according to property consultancy DTZ.

The quarter-on-quarter decline in investments was likely due to a 52 per cent fall in Government Land Sales and the slowdown in investments in office space, which plunged by 92 per cent to $152 million.
"Although investors were attracted by the expected rental appreciation, investment activity was constrained by limited stock and yield gap in pricing expectations between sellers and buyers," said DTZ.
On the other hand, investments for residential, retail and industrial properties in the private market grew.
The residential sector saw the largest quarter-on-quarter increase at 102 per cent. One of the notable deals during the quarter was developer Hiap Hoe's sale of 48 units in Treasure on Balmoral to its controlling shareholder Hiap Hoe Holdings for $185 million in the face of a cooling market for luxury homes.
Chinese developers also continued to support investment activities via the Government Land Sales programme.
Nanshan Group Singapore was awarded the private residential site near Upper Thomson Road for $173.6 million, while Qingjian (Realty) Residential was awarded Sembawang executive condominium site for $229.4 million - a sum that was $21 million more than the next bid.
On the whole, real estate investments for 2014 dropped 38 per cent to $17.7 billion.
DTZ expects the office market to continue garnering interest among investors and space users due to the expected rent appreciation for office space this year.
"Firms with expiring leasing contract may consider purchasing space for their own occupation to hedge rising rents," said DTZ regional head (South-east Asia) of consulting and research Ong Choon Fah.
posted on 15 Jan 2015
BY JACQUELINE WOO
Straits Times
Source: SRX (15 Jan 2015)

Condo rents fall for 11th month - AsiaOne

Private condominium rentals continued to be hammered last month as weak leasing demand and a mounting supply of new apartments weighed on the market.

Rents of non-landed private apartments slid for the 11th month in a row, falling 0.8 per cent in December last year compared with the preceding month, SRX Property's flash estimates showed yesterday.

Compared with December 2013, rents were down 5.3 per cent last month, said SRX, which compiles its property price index with data from property agencies.

Rents have been falling since last February and have declined 10.1 per cent since their peak in January 2013.

Fewer leases were inked last month as well, with an estimated 2,968 units let out - down a slight 2 per cent from 3,026 in November. However, 14.1 per cent more leases were signed last month compared with the 2,601 units rented the same period a year earlier.

Apartments in prime central areas dragged overall rents down with the steepest drop at 1.2 per cent, compared with a 0.4 per cent slip in November, while those in the city-fringe areas fell by 0.6 per cent over a 1.1 per cent drop for the same period.

Suburban units held up better with a 0.3 per cent dip, after easing 0.9 per cent in November.
Ms Christine Li, research head at OrangeTee, said a sizeable number of shoebox units launched in 2010 are now being completed in city-fringe and central areas, while luxury units are facing high vacancy levels.

Of the 12,097 shoebox units sold since 2009, about 47 per cent were in city fringe areas and around 37 per cent in the suburbs.

"In the city centre, supply is abundant but demand is not as high as before because expatriates are not getting enough housing budgets," said Ms Li.

Demand for homes with rents in excess of $10,000 is "really bad", she said, such that the gap between rents in the city centre and city fringe is slowly narrowing.

But a looming supply glut is set to hit the suburbs this year, with more than half an estimated 25,000 new homes expected to be completed in the suburbs by the end of the year.

Owners at projects such as Parc Rosewood in Woodlands and Eight Courtyards in Yishun have recently been given the keys to their new homes, for instance.

"Owners of newly completed condominiums are expected to cut rents significantly to attract tenants, so there will be some flight to quality, (especially) within the same locality, said Mr Ong Kah Seng, director of R'ST Research.

"As there will be even more substantial private residential properties completed in 2015, it is expected that non-landed private residential rents will fall by up to 8 per cent for the whole of 2015."

This article was first published on January 15, 2015.
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.

Saturday, Jan 17, 2015
The Straits Times

Source: AsiaOne (17 Jan 2015)

Singapore Dec private home sales down 11 per cent year on year - AsiaOne

SINGAPORE - Sales of private homes by developers in Singapore fell 11 per cent in December from a year earlier, government data showed on Thursday.

Developers sold 230 units last month, compared with 259 units in December 2013, according to data compiled by the Urban Redevelopment Authority.

The level of sales was nearly 46 per cent lower than the 423 units sold in November 2014.

A series of measures to cool the property market have dampened activity in the housing sector in Singapore. Private home prices fell 1 per cent in the October-December period, declining for the fifth consecutive quarter.

For more details, visit www.ura.gov.sg.

Thursday, Jan 15, 2015
Reuters

Source: AsiaOne (15 Jan 2015)

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

CCR homes to see biggest price decline in Q1 2015 - PropertyGuru

Private homes within the Core Central Region (CCR) (pictured) is likely to fall by one to two percent quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q), according to Knight Frank Singapore.

In a report, the consultancy said luxury homes would continue to see slow demand in the coming two quarters, as prospective High Net Worth individual (HNWI) buyers are either waiting at the sidelines or are exploring other overseas markets.
“It would take at least another nine months for this market segment to recover with a gradual reduction of unsold inventory, before HNWI relook at Singapore high-end homes.” Alice Tan, Head of Research at Knight Frank Singapore, said.
Against the backdrop of on-going competition among developers, home prices within the Rest of Central Region (RCR) are expected to fall by 0.8 to 1.0 percent q-o-q, with anticipated slowing decline in the first quarter. The reported added developers are also less likely to further reduce prices due to high development costs.
Price decline of mass market homes in the Outside Central Region (OCR) could accelerate in the first three months this year, considering the high unsold inventory. The anticipated weakness in the HDB resale market, which will influence the HDB owners’ decisions to upgrade to private property, will also contribute to an expected decline of 0.8 to 1.2 per cent q-o-q.
Tan said, “Assuming that the existing policies remain in force till the end of this year, overall private home prices is envisaged to decline by four to six per cent in Q4 2015 year-on-year.”
Image source: URA






Muneerah Bee, Senior Journalist at PropertyGuru, wrote this story. To contact her about this or other stories email muneerah@propertyguru.com.sg
 Source: PropertyGuru (12 Jan 2015)

Private Resale Flats End Year FLAT - SRX

Observations:
  1. Non-landed Private Residential Resale prices inched up 0.1%. Non-landed Private Residential Resale prices increased 0.1% in December compared to November 2014.  This increase is driven by transactions in OCR where prices went up 0.5%. On the other hand, prices dropped in CCR and RCR by 1.1%, and 1.2%, respectively.

      According to the SRX Non-landed Private Residential Price Index:
  • Year-on-year, prices have dropped 4.2% from December 2013;
  • Prices have declined 6.1% since the recent peak in Jan 2014.

  1. Resale volume remained flat. According to Non-landed Private Residential Resale data compiled by SRX Property, an estimated 371 Non-landed Private Residential units were resold in December, levelled with 371 units resold in November.
  • Year-on-year, resale volume was 13.1% higher compared with 328 units resold in December 2013;
  • Resale volume is down 81.9% compared to its peak of 2,050 units resold in April 2010.
  1. Overall median Transaction Over X-Value (T-O-X) dropped to NEGATIVE 10,000. According to SRX Property, Non-landed Private Residential prices continue to face downward pressure and negative market sentiment. The  median T-O-X for Non-landed Private Residential measures whether people are overpaying or underpaying the SRX Property X-Value estimated market value.
  • The median T-O-X was NEGATIVE $10,000 in December 2014, down from $0 in November;
  1. Districts 25 (Kranji, Woodgrove) and 15 (Katong, Joo Chiat, Amber Rd) posted high median T-O-X. For districts with more than 10 resale transactions in December 2014, district 25 (Kranji, Woodgrove) had the highest median T-O-X of  $25,000, followed by $24,000 in district 15 (Katong, Joo Chiat, Amber Rd).
      This means that majority of the buyers in these districts has purchased units above the computer-generated market value. 

5.  Among relatively active districts, District 10 (Bukit Timah, Holland, Tanglin) posts the most Negative median T-O-X. Among districts  with more than 10 resale transactions, the lowest median T-O-X was in district 10  (Bukit Timah, Holland, Tanglin) with T-O-X of NEGATIVE $80,000, followed by NEGATIVE $41,000 in district 23 (Bukit Panjang, Choa Chu Kang), and NEGATIVE $32,000 in district 5 (Pasir Panjang, Clementi). 
        This means that majority of the buyers in these districts has purchased units below the computer-generated market value.
Source: SRX (13 Jan 2015)

What to do about home loan as interest rates rise - AsiaOne

Home owners were caught by surprise last week when a key interest rate benchmark suddenly shot up after years of slumber.

It was a reality check for many and a sign of things to come as the era of cheap money begins to draw to a close.

Not that we are at sky-high rates yet or even that we are heading that way, but the trend is up.

The Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (Sibor), a key rate used to price most home loans, went up from 0.457 per cent a week ago to as high as 0.639 per cent.

The three-month Sibor had been limping along the 0.4 per cent mark since late 2010 as the United States kept short-term interest rates - to which the Sibor is highly correlated - low to get money flowing in its economy.

Now volatility in the global markets has reduced liquidity, and gone are the days when any day was a good day to refinance your home loan.

The Sibor's climb signals tighter lending conditions to come, warns Mr Kumar Rachapudi, senior rates strategist at ANZ Asia.

The Sibor is fixed daily by the Association of Banks in Singapore based on quotes from banks on what they expect to pay for interbank loans that day. In short, it is affected by liquidity in the banking sector.

"Bank deposit growth has been sluggish relative to loan growth," says Mr Rachapudi, noting that last November, bank loans grew 7.5 per cent from the same month a year ago, whereas bank deposits rose a meagre 2 per cent. "This has taken the loan-to-deposit ratio for Singapore banks to 111 per cent and is getting reflected in tight money-market conditions."

Mr Rachapudi adds that he expects liquidity to stay tight in the near term, as accumulating deposits and reducing bank loans happen only slowly.

The consensus is that we are entering a new era of rising interest rates. Credit Suisse tips the three-month Sibor to rise to 0.8 per cent by the end of the year while United Overseas Bank (UOB) tips 1 per cent.

"We had expected the bullish move in the SOR and Sibor since last year," says UOB economist Francis Tan.

"If the euro zone announces full-fledged quantitative easing, we will see an even stronger US dollar against the Singdollar, and the Sibor will move even higher."

But Barclays economist Leong Wai Ho believes the Sibor's spike will fade when the "bout of currency weaknesses and general risk aversion start to normalise".

The three-month Swap Offer Rate (SOR) - another key interest rate that is determined by markets rather than fixed by banks and more responsive to the state of the US economy - fell last Wednesday from the peaks recorded earlier.

"If the drop continues in the coming days, Sibor should start retracing as well," says Mr Leong.

Nevertheless, analysts agree that the Sibor will not be retreating too far back any time soon.

The market expects the US Federal Reserve to start raising rates in June, signalling that the party is over.

This sounds like a lot of doom and gloom but take a step back and you will see that the sub-1 per cent Sibor that home owners and property speculators have enjoyed over the past six years was more of an exception than the rule.

In fact, if you go back to before the 2008 financial crisis, a Sibor of 3.5 per cent was quite the norm.

As Credit Suisse economist Michael Wan puts it: "Low rates over the past few years were anomalous, driven by extremely loose monetary policy by major central banks around the world. This jump shouldn't be a surprise - at current rates, Sibor is still at very low levels."
While we know where the Sibor is headed, what we really want to know is whether refinancing a home loan amid rising interest rates can still save money.

Conventional wisdom has it that you should review your loan package every two to three years, or before the promotional period ends and your bank raises its premium on the interest you pay, which increases your monthly instalments.

Mortgage advisers report that a volatile Sibor and SOR have sent more Sibor-pegged home owners to them inquiring about a switch to a fixed-rate loan, but the choice is hardly that binary.

Here are a few things to watch out for when picking a loan package.
Thereafter rates
Most fixed-rate loans stay fixed for two to three years so you get some budgeting certainty. But after that, like any other package, higher "thereafter rates" kick in.

"The thereafter rate may be a very high board rate or a Sibor rate that has a very high spread," says Mr Vinod Nair, chief executive of personal finance comparison site, MoneySmart.sg

"This puts you in a situation where you would have to consider refinancing again in another three to four years, when rates may have increased further."
If you want to save yourself the hassle of refinancing your loan every three years, lock in a low thereafter rate.

Prepayment penalties
If interest rates go up at a crazy pace and you have some money just sitting around, it makes sense for you to pay down as much of your loan quantum as you can.
That is, unless your bank imposes a penalty on early payments or prepayments.
Some banks like OCBC allow "flexible customisation of instalment payments to ease cash flow on a case-by-case basis".

The bespoke home loan
Banks offer a wide array of mortgages, from fixed-rate loans to variable rates (pegged to Sibor or SOR), to hybrids.

DBS lets clients allocate their loan between fixed-rate and floating-rate packages to hedge their bets, while Citibank customers get unlimited switches on their Sibor-linked loan to the one-, three-, six- or 12-month Sibor, which could be useful if interest rates rise or fall.
But perhaps the biggest act of customisation banks exercise is price discrimination, where different customers get different rates based on their credit profiles or relationship with the bank.

"Home loan packages and interest rates vary according to the depth of the customers' relationships with Citibank, among other factors," says Mr Peng Chun Hsien, head of secured finance and e-business at Citibank Singapore.

But the catch is that unlike Sibor and SOR, these factors are qualitative, and thus negotiable. If you threaten to refinance to a more affordable package with a different bank, your bank might well show you some options for a repricing - a switch to a different package, but with the same bank.

Know your options
In the competitive home-loan financing sector, it's not unlikely every now and then for a bank to roll out some sweet deals or teaser rates to gain market share.
"In fact, in a dynamic environment, all packages are subject to changes," says Mr Sean Lim, founder of FindAHomeLoan.co.

Even for fixed-rate loans, banks can change their offerings every three to six months, sometimes even quarterly, say mortgage advisers.

That said, as interest rates are set to rise, you should not try to time the market for promotions, says Mr Lim. But there is no harm looking, and since you are required to give your bank advance notice if you intend to reprice or refinance your loan, you could make some inquiries while you are at it.

Think long-term
Tempting as it may be to switch loan packages based on upswings and downswings in interest rates, a housing loan is a long-term commitment of 15 to 20 years, says Mr Alfred Chia, chief executive of financial advisory firm SingCapital, which specialises in mortgage refinancing.

"You can't make a decision based on the short term - the savings may be only temporary."
For this reason, Mr Chia advises homeowners who are on the Housing Board's concessionary loan plan with an interest rate of 2.6 per cent to stay put, as it is probably one of the cheapest financing options available.


Tuesday, Jan 13, 2015
The Straits Times

Source: AsiaOne  (12 Jan 2015)

S'pore, HK impose highest property tax on foreigners - AsiaOne

SINGAPORE - When investors buy an overseas property, they look not just at total returns but also at liabilities - especially taxes on acquisition, holding, and exiting.


A Knight Frank analysis report released on Friday has found that the more mature and open markets of Hong Kong and Singapore have some of the highest tax burdens on foreign investors, on top of their already significantly more expensive homes in both land-scarce markets.

Conversely, South Korea, Thailand and Malaysia have more benign tax regimes, while Cambodia has some of the lowest tax burdens on residential property investments in the region.
New taxes are introduced not just to help the government balance its books, but also as a macro-prudential tool to cool residential markets which have been buoyed by stimulus measures and historically low interest rates, said Nicholas Holt, Knight Frank's head of research for Asia Pacific.

"The strong price growth in a number of these markets has led to numerous rounds of interventions by policymakers as they look to address the issues of affordability and household debt, with tax being one of the key tools at their disposal," he said.

In Singapore, the effect of such cooling measures have started to kick in. Private residential property prices fell about 4 per cent last year, coming dangerously close to 2008's 4.7 per cent price decline.

But Hong Kong's cooling measures have been less successful in engineering a market slowdown. Home prices still surged to a record last year, advancing 12 per cent for the first 11 months, led by smaller-sized units.

An expected interest rate hike in 2015 and strong supply in coming years may limit further increases in their capital values, however.

Foreigners buying a property in Singapore and Hong Kong both face higher buyer's stamp duty (at 15 per cent) compared to locals.

Foreign buyers in Singapore also pay a higher rental income tax.
Interestingly, Japan is the only country that bills locals more, as its local inhabitant tax is levied only on residents.

Some markets also charge an "investment premium" - essentially an additional tax that a buyer pays on the property as an investor instead of as an owner-occupier.
The premium varies between foreign and local buyers. Other markets such as Cambodia, Japan, Malaysia and South Korea do not impose such an investment premium on either local or foreign buyers.

Looking ahead, Mr Holt said he is not ruling out future changes to fiscal policy.
"In November 2014, we saw the Chinese authorities try to stimulate the market with monetary policy . . . Elsewhere, a market slowdown could see policymakers tweak some of the taxes brought in over the last few years," he said.

The full research report is available on BTInvest (http://www.btinvest.com.sg/ property/).

This article was first published on January 10, 2015.
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Monday, Jan 12, 2015
The Business Times

Source: AsiaOne (12 Jan 2015)

Friday, 9 January 2015

Non-mature estates see bigger fall in resale prices - SRX

Resale prices in non-mature Housing Board estates were hit harder in last year's cooling market, falling more than twice as hard as those of flats in mature estates.

Flat prices in non-mature estates such as Punggol and Sengkang fell 8.3 per cent over the year compared to a 3.1 per cent fall in mature estates like Queenstown and Bishan.
This made for an overall fall of 6.1 per cent in HDB resale prices last year, according to SRX Property flash figures yesterday.
But more flats changed hands, with 15,914 deals last year, up from a low of 14,220 in 2013.
Experts are expecting transaction volume to stabilise or even pick up this year, amid another year of gradual price falls.
Resale prices edged down 0.4 per cent last month for the 11th straight month, reaching a 41-month low.
This was driven by four- and five-room flats, with prices falling 0.7 and 0.3 per cent respectively.
Three-room prices stayed flat while executive flat prices were up 1.8 per cent.
Non-mature estates performed worse, according to SRX Property's new price sub-indexes.
Last month, prices fell 0.9 per cent in non-mature estates but rose 0.2 per cent in mature ones.
Experts said it was unsurprising that flats in mature estates were better able to weather the sluggish market conditions.
"In a market with falling prices, the focus is back on market fundamentals... Buyers are willing to pay for flats with good location attributes," said OrangeTee director of research Christine Li.
A good location is why housewife Eileen Teo, 50, is not worried about selling her five-room flat in Serangoon, a mature estate.
"People are interested," she added. Her flat has been up for sale for only a week or so, but she has already received inquiries.
During the traditionally slow end-of-year period, 1,295 flats changed hands last month, down from 1,350 in November.
"We could possibly expect similar transaction levels for January and February 2015 and the pace may pick up only from March, after the Chinese New Year festivities," said ERA Realty key executive officer Eugene Lim.
Although low due to seasonal factors, last month's transaction figures were still higher than the 1,012 deals in December 2013.
As prices continue to slide this year, more buyers are likely to return, said experts.
"Most buyers will be 'opportunity buyers' who will buy a flat after a long wait," said R'ST Research director Ong Kah Seng.
ERA Realty and OrangeTee expect resale prices to fall by 5 per cent to 8 per cent for the whole of this year.
Mr Ong expects prices to fall 4 per cent in the first half of this year, then stagnate if cooling measures are not relaxed.
Straits Times
Source: SRX (9 Jan 2015)

$20 million budget to upgrade nine private estates - AsiaOne

SINGAPORE - Nine private estates will be upgraded at $20 million under The Ministry of National Development's (MND) Estate Upgrading Programme (EUP).


The selected estates are, Clover Estate, Lentor Estate, Thomson Faber Island Gardens, Toh Tuck Estate, Meng Suan/Springleaf Estates, Happy Gardens, Sea Breeze Garden, Toh Estate, Jalaln Merbok, Jalan Layang-Layang, Jalan Kakatua, Jalan Selating, Jalan Rajawali and Shamah Terrace Estate.

These nine selected estates were developed more than 30 years ago and over 4,800 households will benefit from the improved facilities when the construction is underway in three to four years' time.

The new upgrading works will include footpath lightings and safety railings, covered drains for more footpaths, more barrier free access and improved landscaping and parks.

Before the project is implemented, residents will be able to offer their views and suggestions on the upgrading works during dialogues with their respective neighbourhood committees.

EUP chairman, Dr Mohamad Maliki Osman, said, "This is truly a collaborative effort, with residents taking ownership and playing an active role in deciding what improvements they hope to see in their estates to make the living environment better for all."


Source: AsiaOne (9 Jan 2015)