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DaytonaSS
30-09-11, 23:35
The S’porean buyer and the S$1m OCR home

Posted by luxuryasiahome (http://lushhomemedia.com/author/luxuryasiahome/) ⋅ September 30, 2011 ⋅ Leave a Comment (http://lushhomemedia.com/2011/09/30/the-sporean-buyer-and-the-s1m-ocr-home/#respond)
Filed Under Singapore Property (http://lushhomemedia.com/tag/singapore-property/), Singapore Property Market (http://lushhomemedia.com/tag/singapore-property-market/)

Before the Lehman crisis, foreign buyers were widely considered to have helped drive prices of luxury properties in areas such as Orchard Road, Marina Bay and Sentosa Cove to record highs.

In the last two years, interest in the Core Central Region (CCR) that is home to the affluent postal codes has been lacklustre. On the other hand, transaction volumes in the mass market, or Outside Central Region (OCR), have remained strong and new record-high psf prices are regularly set, with a stunning S$1,600 psf being achieved. Then in 2Q11, the average price of a residential unit in the OCR surpassed the psychological hurdle of S$1 million.

Following on from the article, “Oversupply risks in Outside Central Region” (Today, Sept 23), we delved deeper into the numbers to examine the issue: Are foreigners ramping up purchases in the OCR and contributing to the oversupply risks or are locals still the main driving force?

http://luxuryasiahome.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/table1.jpg?w=450&h=198

From Table 1, we can see that the proportion of Singaporean buyers in the OCR has remained steady at about 70 to 77 per cent in the last six quarters from 1Q10 to 2Q11.

Over the same period, Singapore Permanent Residents (SPRs) and foreigners made up 22 to 30 per cent of the buyers. If we focus on foreigners alone, the percentage fluctuated between 8 and 15 per cent, with the numbers tied to developers’ launch activities.

For example, in 1Q11, Singaporean buyers were spooked by the strong policy measures introduced in mid-January and the number of transactions attributed to locals plunged to 2,243 from 2,806 in 4Q10. The restraint of Singaporean buyers, coupled with new launch projects where developers conducted overseas sales exhibitions, caused the foreigners’ percentage contribution to rise to 15 per cent.
http://luxuryasiahome.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/table2.jpg?w=450&h=208

Purchase Intentions
Most of the foreigners and SPRs who buy in OCR do so for practical purposes such as proximity to relatives, children’s schooling, commute to jobs, etc. In other words, most foreigners and SPRs purchase in OCR mainly for their own stay and it is a minority who buy OCR properties for pure investment returns.

The percentage contribution by foreigners and SPRs has been more or less steady and there is no clear trend that there is an increasing proportion of foreigners and SPRs buying into OCR. Increasing numbers, yes, but not necessarily increasing proportion. If we also take into account the fact that the proportion of foreigners in the total population is rising, a gradual increase in foreigner participation across all segments of non-landed residential properties is to be expected.

Who drove the average OCR price over the S$1-million mark?

http://luxuryasiahome.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/table3.jpg?w=450&h=205

The numbers in Table 3 show Singaporeans, not foreigners, to be the main driving force. 2Q11 data shows 44 per cent of total OCR transactions went above S$1 million. Of this, about 31 per cent is attributed to Singaporeans, while foreigners and SPRs combined accounted for only 12 per cent. Over the 6 quarters under review, the percentage of Singaporeans who purchased OCR properties priced over $1 million grew from 20 per cent to 31 per cent, while foreigners and SPR combined grew from 7 per cent to 12 per cent in the same period.

Singaporeans have been buying up OCR properties at higher and higher prices, partly due to rising Housing and Development Board (HDB) prices and partly due to the accumulated equity that upgraders have built up in their HDB flats. For those who are selling their HDB flats to move into mass-market private homes, selling into a rising HDB market allows them to afford a higher-priced purchase. After all, it is upgrading for their family enjoyment.

However, should there be a severe downturn in the global economy and unemployment in Singapore shoots up, might it be the locals who end up holding the more expensive OCR properties, and not so much the foreigners and SPRs?

By Ku Swee Yong – founder of real estate agency International Property Advisor. He is the author of Real Estate Riches: Understanding Singapore’s Property Market in a Volatile Economy.

land118
02-10-11, 10:39
Now, if want to own a decent private property of 2+ study or 3 bedder, in OCR, it's becoming a million dollar dream indeed...

$1m is becoming very small le...

DC33_2008
02-10-11, 10:44
Last few years were the time for the top 20% of Singaporean to grow their wealth through property investment. Now the next 20% also join in the race. Do not want to miss the boat. This can be a overcrowded boat in the choppy se with tsunami threat.

phantom_opera
02-10-11, 11:11
IMO, BTO 3y construction and 5y MOP is artificially creating inadequate supply in the market, the system is flawed. They should allow staged MOP e.g. sell within 1y pay back 90% of subsidy, sell in 3y pay back 70%, sell after 5y no need to pay for example.

The primary reason why OCR can sustain the 1m story is exactly because of high resale HDB prices, the ruling about "must sell private if own HDB" only makes the sellers even have more reasons to withdraw resale units from market.

Even Mr Khaw openly admitted that problem needs a few more years to fix ... so the game will go on. Is HDB starting to build ahead of demand?? If this month BTO is only half subscribed, would they go ahead?

DC33_2008
02-10-11, 11:22
But that will make most HDB owners if not all unhappy. Can KBW/ruling party afford to do that? Their trump card will become suicidal card. :scared-1:
IMO, BTO 3y construction and 5y MOP is artificially creating inadequate supply in the market, the system is flawed. They should allow staged MOP e.g. sell within 1y pay back 90% of subsidy, sell in 3y pay back 70%, sell after 5y no need to pay for example.

The primary reason why OCR can sustain the 1m story is exactly because of high resale HDB prices, the ruling about "must sell private if own HDB" only makes the sellers even have more reasons to withdraw resale units from market.

Even Mr Khaw openly admitted that problem needs a few more years to fix ... so the game will go on. Is HDB starting to build ahead of demand?? If this month BTO is only half subscribed, would they go ahead?

phantom_opera
02-10-11, 11:26
But that will make most HDB owners if not all unhappy. Can KBW/ruling party afford to do that? Their trump card will become suicidal card. :scared-1:

Not necessary, price may soften rather than crash, those who under 5y MOP may choose to upgrade sooner by paying back some subsidies happily, what is 30k to some professional couples anyway? This will ensure HDB resale market has sufficient supply immediately