Monday 24 July 2017

Albracca condo at East Coast sold for S$69.1m - SRX

THE latest to join a recent spate of successful collective sales is The Albracca, a 10-storey residential development along Meyer Road at East Coast. It was sold on Thursday to Sustained Land for S$69.1 million by marketing agent JLL.

The Albracca EastCoast
Karamjit Singh, senior consultant at JLL, said this works out to S$1,409 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr), inclusive of development charges of S$115,000 for intensifying the gross plot ratio to 2.1 from 2.09.
This is the first time that the 11-unit strata-titled development was offered for sale collectively. The owners' guide price during the tender was S$62 million to S$65 million.
When contacted, director of Sustained Land, Douglas Ong, said that his company plans to develop a 65-unit apartment on the site.
This is also the maximum number of units, assuming an average size of 70 square metres each, allowed under the 2014 Master Plan. Mr Ong added that while this is not a big project, it will give his company "something to do".
The developer's other ongoing projects include Sturdee Residences near Farrer Park MRT, TRE Residences in Geylang (jointly with MCC Land), Poiz Residences at Potong Pasir, and a building at 3 Cuscaden Walk.
Mr Ong said he was drawn to the site because of its location near an upcoming station called Katong Park station, which is part of the Thomson-East Coast Line slated to be ready in 2023.
The development will be sea-fronting with unblocked views across Katong Park and the sea, he added. He hopes to launch the units of the completed development at S$2,300 to S$2,500 psf.
The launch of this tender exercise came shortly after four collective sales were successfully concluded in May 2017 for about S$1.5 billion, surpassing the total number of en bloc deals completed in 2016.
Mr Singh said: "The Albracca's tender response was strong with over a dozen bids received from developers of all sizes - from large to boutique developers, contractors and a fund manager.
"Clearly, there is an increasing convergence of views amongst developers that the down cycle, which lasted over four years, has turned a corner, and that it's time to be back . . .As for en bloc sellers, this also comes as a relief as many have been waiting for such an opportunity for years."
Source: SRX (21 July 2017)

Property-bound Singapore capital now prefers home turf - SRX

THE capital flight to greener pastures abroad from Singapore has slowed to a trickle, amid a turnaround in the property market at home.

Marina Promenadejpg
Data compiled by Real Capital Analytics and Knight Frank Research shows that the number of outbound investment deals dwindled to 34 in the first half of 2017. The figure was 144 for last year, and 503 in 2015.
The transaction value of deals done in the first half of the year also slid - to S$6.7 billion, from S$14.6 billion last year and S$37.7 billion in 2015.
In 2015, there was an exodus of capital abroad from a poorly-performing domestic property market, as capital values of Singapore homes and commercial properties fell steadily in reaction to the government's measures to cool the market.
Ian Loh, Knight Frank's executive director and head of investment and capital markets, said at the launch of the property consultancy's inaugural "Active Capital" report on Wednesday: "Two years ago, when Singapore was relatively quiet, locally listed players were rethinking what to do with the money, which was why they ventured offshore to look into recurring income assets.
"But since then, capital values in these markets have appreciated, and somehow, in many major cities, some sort of protection and stamp duties against foreigners have been introduced. Some of these investors have chosen to take profit in these overseas destinations. What then to do with the money? Meanwhile, Singapore is looking good."
Indeed, there are initial signs that the residential property market in Singapore is bottoming out. In the primary market, developers sold 6,388 private homes in the first six months of this year - just 20 per cent shy of the 7,972 units they moved in the whole of last year.
Private home prices also appear to be close to their trough, with the 0.3 per cent fall in the official benchmark price index in Q2 being the smallest of the 15 quarters since the peak in Q3 2013.
There has also been a pick-up in collective sale activity. Four deals have been done this year - One Tree Hill Gardens, Goh & Goh Building, Rio Casa and Eunosville - for about S$1.5 billion. The latest to be put on the market is Villa D'Este condominium in Dalvey Road, for S$96 million. The en bloc sale of two more condominiums, Dunearn Court and Normanton Park, are in the pipeline.
As for the increase in foreign investors' tax burdens, Australia in July introduced a capital-gains tax for foreigners, at 12.5 per cent for properties worth more than A$750,000. States such as New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland have also raised the stamp duty for foreign property buyers.
London has also in recent years imposed a capital-gains tax on foreigners, and raised the stamp duty for buy-to-let properties.
The change in investment sentiment in Singapore's property market has caused other countries to sit up; in recent months, many have started to pump money into the sector.
Inbound investment data shows that in the first half of this year, the number of deals closed that involved foreign entities buying Singapore land or properties was 14, compared to 21 for the whole of last year.
Transactions in the first half of this year were worth a total of S$5.5 billion, against S$8.9 billion in 2016.
Much of this capital came from China and Hong Kong (see chart), and went into purchases of development sites in particular. This drove up bids and prodded local developers into raising their stakes in their bids.
Many of these foreign bidders succeeded in clinching the sites. For instance, in May, Hong Kong-listed developer Logan Property, with Chinese conglomerate Nanshan Group, placed a S$1.003 billion bid for a housing site near Queenstown MRT station in Stirling Road.
In June, Fantasia Investment (Singapore), a subsidiary of Chinese property developer Fantasia Holdings, won a residential land parcel in Hougang for S$75.8 million.
Knight Frank's Asia-Pacific research head Nicholas Holt said Chinese companies have been able to invest overseas despite the country's curbs on capital outflows because they likely have overseas capital, either in foreign currency reserves or in offshore entities, including in Hong Kong.
Guanxi, or connections with the authorities, also helps big institutions to get approval for their investments more easily.
Late last year, Malaysia's IOI Properties Group also shook the market with an aggressive S$2.57 billion bid in a hotly contested tender for a mixed-use Marina Bay site at Central Boulevard.
Source: SRX (20 July 2017)

Wednesday 12 July 2017

SRX: Condo rents rise 0.5% in June, HDB rents fall 0.6% - SRX

lwx 120717condo


SINGAPORE - Private residential and HDB reversed course last month, according to SRX Property flash estimates released on Wednesday (July 12).

Rents of condominiums and apartments rose 0.5 per cent month-on-month in June, swinging from a revised 0.6 per cent decline in May, though the number of units leased dropped

After a sustained slide last year, private rents have fluctuated monthly this year. But after June's increase they are now down just 0.3 per cent to date this year. They are still 19.1 per cent off their peaks in January 2013.

privaterent 0

The number of units rented out in June fell 8.8 per cent to 4,250 from 4,661 in May. Year-on-year, rental volume last month was 7.3 per cent lower than the 4,587 units rented in June 2016.

HDB rents meanwhile, dropped 0.6 per cent, after rising a revised 0.8 per cent in May.

Compared to private rentals, HDB rents have declined by a bigger 1 per cent margin to date this year, said SRX Property.

Year-on-year, HDB rents last month are down by 4 per cent from June 2016. They are 13.5 per cent lower compared to their peak in August 2013.
hdbrent

The number of flats rented out fell 5.5 per cent in June to 1,704 from 1,804 in May. Year-on-year, rental volume last month was 11.5 per cent lower than in June 2016.

The Straits Times

Source: SRX (12 Jul 2017)

SRX: Condo resale prices rise 0.9% in June amid fall in sales volume - SRX

Resale prices of non-landed private homes in Singapore rose by 0.9 per cent in June from the previous month, led by the prime and suburban areas, according to flash estimates from SRX Property on Tuesday (July 11).

Singapore condo
This was an improvement from the revised 0.5 per cent month-on-month price increase in May.
Despite the uptick, SRX said June's resale prices were still down by 4.4 per cent from its last peak in January 2014.
Condo resales prices in June rose by 2.2 per cent from the same month a year ago, it added.
June's price growth was driven mainly by the core central region, which saw a resale values rise by 1.3 per cent from May, and the suburbs which recorded a 1.1 per cent increase.
Resale prices in the city fringe remained unchanged in June, SRX said.
Its estimates showed that resale transaction volumes fell by 12.5 per cent to 1,065 units last month from the 1,217 shifted in May. But compared with a year ago, sales were up by a hefty 51.1 per cent from 705 units sold in June 2016.
SRX's median transaction over X-value (TOX) - which measures if buyers are overpaying or underpaying its computer-generated market value - came in at S$1,000 last month, down from S$2,000 in May.
The Newton and Novena areas posted the highest median TOX at S$40,000, while the Harbourfront and Telok Blangah districts recorded a negative TOX of S$120,000, which meant that most buyers in that district bought units below SRX's computer-generated value.
Source: SRX (11 Jul 2017)

Saturday 8 July 2017

MAS: Singapore property cooling measures remain necessary - asiaone

Singapore's property cooling measures, which have dampened residential sales and prices since their introduction in 2009, remain necessary, the city-state's central bank said on Thursday.
"Our key property market measures remain necessary for a stable and sustainable residential property market and to encourage household financial prudence," the central bank, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), said in its annual report published on Thursday.
The government had appeared to be taking a more sanguine view of the need for cooling measures, scaling back some of the curbs in March, including lowering the seller's stamp duty and shortening the minimum holding period to avoid it.
But Ravi Menon, managing director of MAS, discouraged the idea that the government was relenting on the measures, which investors have criticised.
"The calibrated adjustments by the government earlier this year do not signal the start of an unwinding of the property cooling measures, as some commentators have suggested," Menon said in prepared comments on Thursday.
Menon added that with many countries tightening their property cooling measures, it would send a "very wrong signal" if Singapore were to ease its measures.
While the MAS noted that the property market was continuing to moderate, with prices gradually falling, it pointed to rising transaction figures in 2016 and the first quarter of this year, compared with 2015.
Developers sold 2,962 units in the first quarter, excluding executive condominiums, which are a unique hybrid of public and private housing for Singaporeans with incomes exceeding public housing limits.
That was the highest take-up rate since 2013 and was up nearly 28 per cent from 2,316 units sold in the fourth quarter, while there were 2,170 resale transactions in the first quarter, up nearly 12 per cent from 1,944 in the fourth quarter, government data showed.
Mortgage loan applications climbed 20 per cent in the first quarter of this year from the previous quarter, according to data from the Credit Bureau Singapore this week.
"The property market has substantially stabilized over the last three years," Menon said, but he added, "The risk of a renewed unsustainable surge in property prices is not trivial."
The city-state's housing prices surged more than 60 per cent from 2009 through 2013, propelled by rock-bottom global interest rates and quantitative easing in developed economies, even as the government enacted a series of cooling measures to prevent a bubble from forming.
The measures, including an Additional Buyer's Stamp Duty which could add as much as an additional 15 per cent to the price, appeared to have eventually met with some success, with the property price index falling around 11 per cent from the peak in the third quarter of 2013 through the end of 2016, according to data from Deutsche Bank in January.
Singapore residential property prices rose 0.4 per cent on-month in May, according to the flash NUS Singapore Residential Price Index, which tracks the non-landed private residential market. That was after falling 0.8 per cent on-month in April, the revised data showed.




Source: asiaone

Singapore's residential property market is sending mixed signals: This is what they mean - asiaone


You'd be forgiven for being confused by Singapore's residential property market.
Home prices are still falling, rents are tumbling, there's a substantial pipeline of new units in the works and vacancies are near a record high.
At the same time, developers are ponying up record prices in hotly contested land sales and this year, en bloc deals - where a developer buys an existing building with plans to demolish and redevelop - have already exceeded 2016's level.
So what gives?
Winston Lee, regional head of special projects for property website PropertyGuru and a Singapore landlord, said recently that the market was humming toward an inflection point, just with some notes out of sync.
For one, he noted transaction volumes were rising, with some new launches meeting with strong demand.
"Usually in a property cycle, in a down-cycle, the indicator of a bounce back does not start with price. It actually starts with the volume," Lee said. "So that volume bounce back sent a certain signal and also gives a confidence booster to the property developers that the market in Singapore might have a bottomed out."
Developers sold 2,962 units in the first quarter, excluding executive condominiums, which are a unique hybrid of public and private housing for Singaporeans with incomes exceeding public housing limits.
That total was up nearly 28 per cent from 2,316 units sold in the fourth quarter, the highest take-up rate since 2013, while there were 2,170 resale transactions in the first quarter, up nearly 12 per cent from 1,944 in the fourth quarter, government data showed.
One recent launch, Park Place Residences, sold its entire phase one, initially set at 40 per cent of the 429-unit total before being raised to 50 per cent, within a day.
Buyers on the sidelines get antsy
Tay Kah Poh, head of residential services at real-estate consultancy Knight Frank, said last week that after three to four years of slow property sales, potential buyers likely were just tired of waiting on the sidelines.
Once the government moved in March to scale back some cooling measures, people jumped on the news, he said.
To an extent, that mirrors the experience of Singaporean Denis Gan, a chef, who picked up the keys to his public housing flat in January.
"Prices are quite reasonable and I found a place I liked," he said, noting that one key driver of his decision was that he just turned 35 years old, the age at which unmarried people are allowed to buy public housing flats on the secondary market.
While he still expected prices would fall further ahead, he didn't think it mattered for him because he would be living in the apartment and because he wanted to lock in a lower interest rate on a mortgage. Interest rates in Singapore are likely to rise in tandem with the US Federal Reserve's expected interest rate increases.
In May, re-sale prices of public-housing apartments, which are restricted to Singaporeans and some permanent residents, subject to income caps, fell 0.1 per cent on month, but the number of units sold in the secondary market climbed 8.1 per cent over the same period, according to data from property website SRX Property.
Analysts have noted that many of the new buyers in the market appeared to be end-users, rather than investors.
At the same time that sales are rising however, prices continue to flounder.
In the first quarter, overall private home prices fell 0.4 per cent on-quarter, the 14th straight quarter of declines, government data showed. This time around, however, the bulk of the decline was in relatively small landed property segment, while non-landed prices were steady.
In tiny, land-starved Singapore, there are relatively few single-family houses, with most housing units in multi-story buildings.
PropertyGuru's Lee said stagnant prices were a sign developers are pricing to sell in hopes of attracting buyers on the sidelines.
Developers will need to do a lot of attracting: At the end of the first quarter, there were nearly 37,000 of uncompleted private units in the pipeline and nearly 16,000 of those haven't been sold yet, government data showed.
The vacancy rate for completed units remained high at 8.1 per cent at the end of the first quarter, although it had improved from the 16-year high of 8.9 per cent touched in the second quarter of last year.
Those are figures that would seem to argue against developers plonking down high amounts for new sites.
Instead, land prices were hitting highs, suggesting developers were betting on a price recovery ahead, although some analysts weren't sure how well that gamble would play out.
In May, a joint venture between Hong Kong-listed Chinese developer Logan Property and China-based Nanshan Group Singapore put in the top bid, out of 13 offers, of 1.003 billion Singapore dollars ($724.8 million) for a site at Stirling Road, marking the first time a purely residential government land sale topped the S$1 billion mark. Nanshan Group didn't immediately return an emailed request for comment.
Suzie Mok, senior director for investment sales at real-estate services provider Savills, said that's because developers have largely refrained from buying land since the government introduced cooling measures on the sector, starting from 2011.
Land-hungry developers
"Developers are very land hungry," with very little land-banking and very few government land sales set for this year, she said.
But Mok also noted that developers were likely to see thin margins, potentially falling below 10 per cent, compared with the previously typical double-digit rates.
Analysts at Citi estimated that the net margin for the Stirling Road site at around 5 per cent.
"Such risk-reward could only be justified on an assumption of higher selling prices. However, this assumption may be called into question should the government ramp up land supply in the second half of 2017," the Citi analysts said in a note last month.
However, a representative of Logan Property disputed Citi's margin estimate, pointing to an alternate analysis suggesting a 20 per cent net margin.
"We reckon our bid is reasonable given the excellent location and the quality land site," the representative said via email.
Citi expected the government would increase the land supply later this year, given the "ferocity of bidding," which would also pressure development margins.
Analysts noted that some of developers' recent land-banking efforts suggested they were betting on significant price jumps by the time the developments were completed in several years.
For example, last week, Savills Singapore brokered an en bloc deal for a 1 Draycott Park, a building near the tony Orchard shopping area, for buyer Champsworth Development, a unit of Malaysian company Selangor Dredging.
The break-even price for the new development was expected to be around S$2,700-S$2,800 per square foot, Savills Singapore said. Selangor Dredging didn't immediately return an emailed request for comment.
The average per square foot price for Singapore units sold in May came in at S$1,281, with the upscale Orchard area seeing transactions for uncompleted units at around S$1,967-S$2,283 per square foot, according to data from Squarefoot Research.
For another recent en bloc sale, the Rio Casa development was purchased last month by a consortium of developers for S$575 million, which analysts at DBS noted was around 27 per cent above the reported asking price.
In a note last month, the DBS analysts estimated that the breakeven price was around S$1,100 per square foot, with the sales price potentially above S$1,300 a square foot, compared with units in surrounding developments trading at S$700-S$1,030 a square foot in the first quarter.
Knight Frank's Tay said investors may expect higher land prices will re-rate the prices of existing properties in the vicinity higher.
"Will the market tolerate [the higher prices]? Time will tell," Tay said.
There are some nascent signs that prices could begin to recover, after falling more than 10 per cent from their peak in the third quarter of 2013, but that doesn't guarantee the magnitude of gains that developers may be counting on.
SRX Research, part of SRX Property, a property website under the umbrella of Singapore Press Holdings, said on Wednesday that its preliminary data for May showed prices for private non-landed residential properties rose 1.5 per cent on-year and 0.4 per cent on-month.
Those price gains were concentrated in central areas, with prices in other areas still falling, the data showed.
That came along with a surge in resale volumes, with 1,235 non-landed private units changing hands in the secondary market in May, up 17.4 per cent on-month and nearly 58 per cent higher on-year, SRX Research's preliminary data showed.
In the public housing market, resale prices fell 0.1 per cent on-month in May, but sales volumes rose 8.1 per cent on-month, SRX Research data showed.
Knight Frank's Tay noted that one of the reasons for the high land and en bloc prices was the presence of foreign developers in the market.
He said foreign players are considering Singapore land prices in comparison with other global cities, such as London, Shanghai, Hong Kong and New York, which makes the city-state look relatively cheap, even as land prices rise.
Tay also pointed to Singapore's currency, which has remained fairly strong, making it an attractive bet for Chinese developers facing a declining yuan at home.
A similar dynamic may be playing out with Malaysian developers, as the ringgit has also taken a hit over the past three years.
Eli Lee, an analyst at Singapore-based OCBC Bank, said the entire en bloc process may help to bolster prices.
"Under a typical en-bloc sale, homes are taken out of the physical supply for an extended period (as the old development gets demolished and redeveloped over four to seven years) while previous home owners, flush with cash and credit headroom, often re-enter the market rapidly to re-establish their exposure," he said in a note on Wednesday. "The general dynamics of collective sale transactions are systemically positive for the market."
He expected home prices would reach an inflection by 2018.
Tenant's market
But even with improved property sales, analysts expected the ball would remain with tenants, not landlords for some time to come.
"As a landlord, I had my good run where I just raised rental every interval, but now I'm getting my payback by having to reduce the rental every renewal," PropertyGuru's Lee said, noting that rental yields in the city-state were likely less than 2 per cent.
"I still do not see the end of the tunnel," he said, noting that the government hasn't been allowing as much immigration into the city-state as it had previously, with the segment of the market's renters who are Singaporean "definitely not big."

Jun 16, 2017

Source: asiaone


SRX: HDB resale volume slips 11.6% in June - SRX

TRANSACTION volume and prices of Housing and Development Board (HDB) resale flats fell in June from the previous month, with both indicators clocking a noticeable dip from recent peaks, flash data issued by SRX Property on Thursday showed.

HDB Flats 2
In June, 1,753 HDB resale flats were sold, an 11.6 per cent drop from the 1,984 transacted units in May, which itself was an 8.1 per cent rise from April's volume.
Year on year, resale volume decreased by 5 per cent.
June's volume was down by 52 per cent from the peak of 3,649 units in May 2010.
As for HDB resale prices, there was a headline decrease of 0.1 per cent in June compared with that of May, which also dipped 0.1 per cent from April.
Year on year, prices have decreased by 0.2 per cent from June 2016.
June's data indicates that prices have declined by 11.7 per cent since the peak in April 2013.
The resale prices of HDB executive units rose by 1.7 per cent in June, while those of HDB three-room, four-room and five-room units decreased by 0.2 per cent, 0.3 per cent and 1.5 per cent respectively.

Find out more about SRX HDB Flash Report on SRX Research.

Source: SRX (07 Jul 2017)

Monday 3 July 2017

URA releases flash estimate of 2nd Quarter 2017 private residential property price index - URA

Published Date: 03 Jul 2017

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) released the flash estimate of the price index for private residential property for 2nd Quarter 2017 today.

Overall, the private residential property index fell 0.4 point from 136.7 points in 1st Quarter 2017 to 136.3 points in 2nd Quarter 2017. This represents a decline of 0.3%, compared with the 0.4% decline in the previous quarter (see Annex A [PDF, 165kb] and Annex B [PDF, 11kb]).

Prices of non-landed private residential properties fell by 0.9% in Core Central Region (CCR), compared to the 0.4% fall in the previous quarter. Prices in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) increased by 0.5%, after registering an increase of 0.3% in the previous quarter. Prices in Outside Central Region (OCR) decreased by 0.4%, after registering a 0.1% increase in the previous quarter (see Annex C [PDF, 12kb]). Meanwhile, prices of landed residential properties fell by 0.4%, compared to the 1.8% decrease in the previous quarter.

The flash estimates are compiled based on transaction prices given in contracts submitted for stamp duty payment and data on units sold by developers up till mid-June. The statistics will be updated on 28 July when URA releases the full real estate statistics for 2nd Quarter 2017. Past data have shown that the difference between the quarterly price changes indicated by the flash estimate and the actual price changes could be significant when the change is small. The public is advised to interpret the flash estimates with caution.
Source: URA



Flash Estimate of 2nd Quarter 2017 Resale Price Index - HDB

Published Date: 03 Jul 2017

             HDB’s flash estimate of the 2nd Quarter 2017 Resale Price Index (RPI) is 133.7, a decline of 0.1% over 1st Quarter 2017 (see Annexes A1 and A2).  

2          The RPI provides information on the general price movements in the resale public housing market. The transacted prices of individual flats (by block and flat type) can be found via the e-services available on HDB’s InfoWEB.

3          The RPI for the full quarter, together with more detailed public housing data, will be released on 28 July 2017.

Upcoming Sales Launch


4          In August 2017, HDB will offer about 3,850 Build-To-Order (BTO) flats in Bukit Batok and Sengkang. More information on this BTO exercise is available on the HDB InfoWEB.

Source: HDB

Saturday 1 July 2017

HDB Resale Prices inch down 0.1%; Volume increase by 8.1%. - SRX

1. HDB resale prices decrease in May 2017. There was a decrease of 0.1% in HDB Resale prices in May 2017 compared to that of April 2017. The resale prices of 5 Rooms and HDB Executive increased by 0.5% and 0.3% respectively, while HDB 3 Rooms remain unchanged and HDB 4 Rooms decreased by 0.1%.

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2

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According to the SRX Property Price Index for HDB Resale:
  • Year-on-year, prices have decreased by 0.7% from May 2016;
  • Prices have declined by 11.6% since the peak in April 2013;
  • There is no price revision to the -0.3% change in April 2017.

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According to the SRX Property Price Sub-Indices for HDB Resale:
  • In May 2017, HDB resale prices in mature estates increased by 0.2%, while non-mature estates decreased by 0.4%;
  • Year-on-year, prices in mature estates have increased by 0.1% from May 2016;
  • Year-on-year, prices in non-mature estates have decreased by 1.3% from May 2016;

2. Resale volume increases in May 2017. According to HDB resale data compiled by SRX Property, 1,983 HDB resale flats were sold in May 2017, an 8.1% increase from 1,834 transacted units in April 2017.

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  • Year-on-year, resale volume increased by 7.5% compared to 1,844 units resold in May 2016.
  • Resale volume was down by 45.7% compared to its peak of 3,649 units in May 2010.

3. Overall median Transaction Over X-Value (T-O-X) is NEGATIVE $2,000 in May 2017. According to SRX Property, the median T-O-X for HDB was NEGATIVE $2,000 in May 2017. The median T-O-X for HDB measures whether people are overpaying or underpaying the SRX Property X-Value estimated market value.

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  • Overall Median T-O-X was NEGATIVE $2,000 in May 2017, decreased by $1,000 compared to the figure in April 2017;
  • Median T-O-X for HDB 3 Room, 4 Room, 5 Room and Executive flats in May 2017 were NEGATIVE $3,000, ZERO, NEGATIVE $3,000 and NEGATIVE $1,500 respectively.

4. Bishan posts the highest median T-O-X. For HDB towns having more than 10 resale transactions with T-O-X in May 2017, Bishan reported the highest median TOX of POSITIVE $10,000 followed by POSITIVE $3,500 in Jurong East.
This means that majority of the buyers in these towns have purchased units above the computer-generated market value.

5. Among relatively active towns, Toa Payoh and Sembawang post the most negative median T-O-X.Among HDB towns having more than 10 resale transactions with T-O-X in May 2017, the lowest median T-O-X was in Toa Payoh at NEGATIVE $16,000, followed by Sembawang at NEGATIVE $10,000.
This means that majority of the buyers in these towns have purchased units below the computer generated market value.

Source: SRX (8 Jun 2017)

Private Resale Non-Landed Prices Increase 0.4% in May; Volume Increases 17.4% - SRX

1. Non-landed Private Residential Resale Prices increased 0.4% in May 2017. Non-landed Private Residential Resale prices increased 0.4% in May 2017 compared to April 2017. In individual sectors, both CCR and RCR recorded a price increase of 1.1%, while OCR recorded a price decrease by 0.4%.

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According to the SRX Non-Landed Private Residential Price Index:
  • Year-on-year, prices in May 2017 increased by 1.5% from May 2016. In individual sectors, CCR, RCR recorded a year-on-year price increase of 3.5% and 2.3% respectively, while OCR recorded a year-on-year price decrease of 0.2%.
  • May 2017 prices were down by 5.2% from the recent peak in January 2014.
  • Year-to-date, prices increase by 2.1% in comparison to January 2017.
  • Price change in April 2017 was revised from 0.0% to -0.2%.

2. Resale volume increases by 17.4%. According to Non-Landed Private Residential Resale data compiled by SRX Property, an estimated 1,235 Non-landed Private Residential units were resold in May 2017. This is a 17.4% increase compared to 1,052 units resold in April 2017.

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  • Year-on-year, resale volume in May 2017 was 57.7% higher compared to 783 units resold in May 2016;
  • Resale volume was down by 39.8% compared to its peak of 2,050 units resold in April 2010.

3. Overall median Transaction Over X-Value (TOX) is $2,000 in May 2017. 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.

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  • The median T-O-X in May 2017 is $2,000. This is a $3,000 decrease compared to $5,000 in April 2017.
 
4. Districts 4 post highest median T-O-X. For districts with more than 10 resale transactions in May 2017, District 4 (Harbourfront and Telok Blangah) posted the highest median T-O-X at POSITIVE $60,000.
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This means that a majority of the buyers in those districts purchased units above the computer-generated market value.

5. Among relatively active districts, District 17 posts the most negative median T-O-X. District 17 (Changi) posted a T-O-X of NEGATIVE $21,000.

This means that a majority of the buyers in these districts purchased units below the computer-generated market value.

Source: SRX (13 Jun 2017)

Non-Landed Private Rents decrease by 0.8%, HDB Rents increase by 0.7% in May 2017 - SRX

 A. Non-Landed Private Residential Rental Market

1. Private rents decrease by 0.8% in May. According to SRX Property Price Index for Non-landed Private Residential Rentals, rents decreased by 0.8% in May 2017 compared to April 2017. Non-Landed Private Residential units rents in CCR, RCR and OCR decreased by 1.8%, 0.5% and 0.4% respectively.

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According to SRX Property Price Index for Non-landed Private Rentals:
  • Year-on-year, rents in May 2017 were down by 3.9% from May 2016. In individual sectors, CCR, RCR and OCR posted 3.7%, 3.2% and 4.8% year-on-year decrease in price, respectively.
  • Rents in May 2017 were 19.7% down compared to its peak in January 2013.
  • Price index is down 1.1% on year-to-date basis from January 2017.
  • Price change was revised from 0.0% to 0.1% in April 2017.

2. Rental volume increases by 12.5%. According to SRX Property, an estimated 4,650 Non-landed Private Residential units were rented in May 2017. This represented a 12.5% increase from 4,134 units rented in April 2017.

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  • Year-on-year, rental volume in May 2017 was 6.1% higher than 4,381 units rented in May 2016.

B. HDB Rental Market

1. HDB rents increase by 0.7%. 
According to SRX Property Price Index for HDB Rentals, rents increased by 0.7% from April 2017 to May 2017. HDB 3 Rooms, HDB 4 Rooms, HDB 5 Rooms and HDB Executive increased by 1.5%, 0.6%, 0.2% and 0.2% respectively.

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According to SRX Property Price Index for HDB Rentals:
  • Year-on-year, rents in May 2017 were down by 3.7% from May 2016.
  • Rents in May 2017 were down 13.0% compared to its peak in August 2013.
  • Year-to-date, rental price index has declined by 0.4% from January 2017.
  • Price change was revised from 0.1% to 0% in April 2017. 
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According to SRX Property Price Sub-Indices for HDB Rentals in Mature and Non-mature Estates:
  • Rents in Mature Estate and Non-mature Estates increased by 1.2% and 0.1% respectively.
  • Year-on-year, rents of Mature Estates in May 2017 slipped 2.8% from May 2016.
  • Year-on-year, rents of Non-mature Estates in May 2017 dropped 4.5% from May 2016.
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  • Year-on-year, rental volume in May 2017 decreased by 3.5% from May 2016.

Source: SRX (14 Jn 2017)