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Thread: Residential market on the upswing

  1. #1
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    Default Residential market on the upswing

    Residential market on the upswing

    Jul 18, 2017

    820 new homes sold last month a 53% rise from last June, pointing to pick-up: Analysts

    Lee Xin En


    Analysts believe the residential property market is in the pink of health after a substantial jump in new home sales.

    Developers sold 820 new homes last month, a 53 per cent surge from June last year, when only 536 new private homes were bought.

    Although last month's figure was a 21 per cent decline from the 1,039 units sold in May, this is a less significant comparison.

    Analysts said that June, the school holiday month, is usually a lull period for the market, making year-on-year comparisons a more accurate take on sales momentum.

    Still, following three straight months of sales above 1,000 units, June was the first month to see transactions fall below 1,000. However, developers launched just 159 homes - excluding executive condos (EC) - last month, roughly half the 370 homes launched in May.

    Mr Ong Teck Hui, JLL's national director of research and consultancy, noted that on a quarterly basis, the sale of 3,426 units in the second quarter is the strongest quarter since the second quarter of 2013, just before the total debt servicing ratio (TDSR) framework was imposed by the Government.

    He said there was a "significant recovery" in sales volumes. As at mid-year, 6,388 units have been sold by developers, almost 74 per cent more compared with the 3,675 sold in the same period last year. He said: "The analysis points towards a market that has regained confidence and recovered substantially in transaction volume. A pick-up in activity in July is expected with the resumption of new launches, including Martin Modern and Le Quest."

    The top-selling private residential project last month was The Santorini in Tampines - moving 75 units at a median $1,026 psf.

    In the EC segment, 244 units were sold, down 35 per cent from the 370 units sold in May - a healthy figure considering that there was no new EC project launched in the second quarter. The best performer was Sol Acres, which moved 41 units at a median price of $829 psf.

    Mr Desmond Sim, head of research at CBRE, noted that there was an "uplift in sales" at previously launched projects "despite no discernible price adjustments".

    "It seems that the performance of the recent government land sale tenders may have affected buyer sentiment," he said.

    A high land bid of more than $1 billion for a Stirling Road site in May could have lifted sales in the vicinity - projects like Commonwealth Towers sold an impressive 47 units last month, at a median price of $1,899 psf, he added.

    "There are general concerns that higher land prices may eventually be translated into higher unit prices. As such, buyers seem to be motivated by concerns about catching the wrong side of the market."

    While overall private property prices have declined for 15 straight quarters and rents are still soft, Mr Nicholas Mak, head of research and consultancy at ZACD Group, said prices could rise with a looming undersupply situation. There were 4,208 units of launched and unsold private housing units last month, the lowest since January 2011, he said.

    "If the inventory of unsold units were to... dwindle, it could provide some developers with the excuse to increase prices," he said.

  2. #2
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    Developers sold 73% more homes in first half of 2017

    July 18, 2017

    Kalpana Rashiwala



    DEVELOPERS have 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.

    The strong showing came about despite a 21.1 per cent month-on-month decline in the number of units sold in June amid the school holiday lull. Sales are expected to improve this month with the start of bookings later this week at GuocoLand's Martin Modern, a 99-year leasehold condo project in District 9.

    The indicative price was earlier reported to be about S$2,300 per square foot on average but now, word on the ground is that the developer might be prepared to offer an early-bird discount of up to 5 per cent. Units on lower floors of the 30-storey development are below S$2,000 psf, BT understands.

    That said, GuocoLand might not release too many of the 450 units in order to ride on an anticipated recovery in private home prices next year.

    Indeed, observers say that the substantial recovery in transaction volume of new private home sales in Q2 and H1 this year underlies the strengthening belief that Singapore's private housing market is bottoming, spurring those who had been waiting on the sidelines to make a commitment before prices turn around.

    Besides an overall sentiment improvement especially after the tweak to the seller's stamp duty in March, another reason for expecting prices to rise is the bullish land prices paid by developers this year which will translate to higher launch prices when the projects on these sites make their way to the market from next year, say property consultants.

    Based on preliminary figures released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority on Monday, developers moved 3,426 private homes in Q2, up 15.7 per cent from 2,962 in Q1 and 51.9 per cent more than the 2,256 in Q2 2016.

    The preliminary tally for the first half of this year is up 73.8 per cent year on year.

    On a quarterly basis, the Q2 2017 figure is the strongest since Q2 2013, just before the total debt servicing ratio (TDSR) framework took effect, JLL noted.

    And the 6,388 units sold in H1 2017 mark a significant recovery from the 2,907 units transacted in H2 2014, although the figure is below the 9,950 units sold in H1 2013 before the TDSR was rolled out.

    "This analysis points towards a market that has regained confidence and recovered substantially in transaction volume," said JLL national director Ong Teck Hui.

    Last month, 820 private homes were transacted in the primary market - down from 1,039 in May but 53 per cent higher than the 536 in June 2016, reflecting the more sanguine mood compared to a year ago.

    "With no major new project launched in June 2017, the primary market sales volume was expected to be low," said ZACD Group head of research and consultancy Nicholas Mak. He noted that June sales were slightly over five times the 159 new units released for the month.

    Just one new project was launched in June: Park 1 Suites in Lorong 40 Geylang, with just two units sold. The bulk of the buying action continued to come from earlier launches.

    June's top-selling private housing project was The Santorini in Tampines, with 75 units sold at a median price of S$1,026 psf, followed by Parc Riviera in West Coast Vale, where 55 units fetched a median price of S$1,218 psf. City Developments sold 47 units at Commonwealth Towers, at S$1,899 psf median price, while Hoi Hup found buyers for 44 units at its Sophia Hills project at a median price of S$1,978 psf.

    In the executive condo market, the top-selling project in June in the primary market was MCL Land's Sol Acres in Choa Chu Kang Grove. Forty-one units were transacted at a median price of S$829 psf, leaving only 88 of the project's 1,327 units available. At The Visionaire in Sembawang, 35 were moved at S$811 psf, while at Signature at Yishun, 30 units fetched S$757 psf.

    In all, developers found buyers for 244 EC units in June, down 35.3 per cent month-on-month but a 5.2 per cent year-on-year increase. No new projects were launched last month.

    This weekend, all eyes will be on Hoi Hup's Hundred Palms Residences EC in Yio Chu Kang Road, with sales bookings scheduled to begin on Saturday. Some observers expect the average price could cross S$800 psf. The 531-unit project has three, four and five-bedroom units.

    In Q2 this year, developers sold 992 EC units - lower than the 1,072 in Q1 2017 and the 1,105 in Q2 2016.

    The H1 tally of 2,064 is slightly over half the 3,999 for full-year 2016. PropNex Realty chief executive Ismail Gafoor predicts this year could end with about 3,500 sold in the primary market. ERA Realty Network key executive officer Eugene Lim predicts 3,000-4,000.

    Excluding ECs, he expects sales of 10,000-12,000 private homes. Mr Ismail believes the number will cross 11,500, given the current positive market sentiment. Mr Ong of JLL, who reckons the figure could reach 12,500, predicts that URA's benchmark private home price index could bottom at year-end or early next year. Based on URA's flash estimate, the Q2 index reflects a quarter-on-quarter drop of 0.3 per cent - the smallest of the 15 quarters of decline since the peak in Q3 2013. In all, the index has shed 11.8 per cent. The final Q2 index will be released later this month.

    Other upcoming launches include Qingjian Realty's Le Quest in Bukit Batok West Avenue 6, which will have 516 units. Sales bookings are scheduled to begin on Aug 5.

    Desmond Sim, CBRE Research head of South-east Asia, said: "Developers may want to hasten their launches in the second half to ride on the current momentum."

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