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reporter2
04-10-13, 18:28
http://www.straitstimes.com/archive/thursday/premium/top-the-news

Home prices could dip 20% by end-2015

Analysts point to oversupply, loan curbs and rising interest rates

Published on Oct 03, 2013

By Cheryl Ong


HOME prices could fall by as much as 20 per cent by the end of 2015 in the wake of oversupply, tougher loan rules and rising interest rates, say analysts.

One warning comes from a Barclays report which noted that risks from a number of directions are putting pressure on residential values and hitting demand at new launches. "We expect developer sales to fall by 30 per cent in 2013, as the latest sets of measures bite," it said.

In a separate report, CIMB said that a large supply of new homes set to hit the market could cause prices to correct by 10 to 15 per cent by 2015.

Affordability has become more of an issue since new loan curbs were introduced in June. These cap a borrower's total monthly debt payments at no more than 60 per cent of his gross monthly income.

Developers sold 11,174 new units in the eight months to Aug31 - 27 per cent down on the same period a year ago, said Barclays in its report out last week.

Transactions could fall to a monthly average of 1,000 to 1,100 homes by the end of this year, bringing the total number of sales expected this year to 15,500 - 30 per cent below the 22,179 recorded a year ago.

The impending supply of new homes could also place downward pressure on home prices, added CIMB analyst Donald Chua.

Barclays estimates that this "total housing supply could average 40,000 units per annum, and peak at 47,000 in 2015... significantly above the historical average annual supply of 12,300".

Its analyst, Ms Tricia Song, said a supply glut would cause vacancy rates of private homes to rise from 5.6 per cent this year to 9.9 per cent in 2016.

"Historically, when vacancy hits 8 per cent, rents and prices tend to start declining," said Ms Song.

Barclays added that several rounds of cooling measures introduced by the Government have also caused demand in the resale market to slow down.

Since the additional buyer's stamp duty was introduced in December 2011, a measure that affected permanent residents and foreigners buying property, resales have slumped 54 per cent to around 2,000 units per quarter, it estimated.

This weakening in the secondary market means home prices could slide further if interest rates spike and many owners start trying to sell up at the same time, said Ms Song.

Property consultants largely agreed with the warnings contained in the two reports, adding to The Straits Times that prices could fall by as much as 20 per cent in the next two years in the event of an economic recession.

International Property Advisor chief executive Ku Swee Yong added that if property prices dropped by 5 to 8 per cent over two quarters, the Government could remove some buying restrictions or introduce market stimulus.

Third-quarter flash estimates of private home prices released on Tuesday showed a 0.4 per cent rise.

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minority
05-10-13, 16:36
So technically speaking. 2 yrs later drop 20%. So Wats the option sell now n buy back when 20% drop happen? But worth bo?

Say yield is 4% rental per yr. 2 yrs 8%.

So sell now loogy 8% rental yield for 2 yrs.

Then buy bsvk 2 yrs later. Skool Kana absd of 7% or 10%.

Add standard buyers tax 3%

8+7+3 or 8 +10+3

Lppl. At most save 2%. That's not factoring lawyer fees .


So it's it worth for people today to sell n buy back later? My thought is not if it's ur 2nd or 3rd prop. 1 home still ok. But 1 home sell liao still must go rent n wait for 20% drop.

Frankly Wat if drop only 10%?

Then really LB kiap by wood. Ouch.

onglai
05-10-13, 16:49
as long as rental ok and absd still there, no one will sell one la..

DKSG
06-10-13, 01:16
as long as rental ok and absd still there, no one will sell one la..

Price Elasticity of Properties.

Property prices are elastic on the way up, but much more inelastic on the way down.

DKSG

walkthetiger
06-10-13, 01:40
as long as rental ok and absd still there, no one will sell one la..

Imagine if interest rate get back, I see many will do some damage control, some may even let it goes to stop the bleeding.

DKSG
06-10-13, 01:54
Imagine if interest rate get back, I see many will do some damage control, some may even let it goes to stop the bleeding.

In the last few years, those who bought investment properties, paid hefty downpayment, thus reducing their montly instalments.

Many properties, excluding those bought at super high prices, are getting very decent net profit. Many owners are silently laughing their way to the banks!

So when interest rates go up 1-2%, most owners can still stomach it.

DKSG

leesg123
06-10-13, 02:05
In the last few years, those who bought investment properties, paid hefty downpayment, thus reducing their montly instalments.

Many properties, excluding those bought at super high prices, are getting very decent net profit. Many owners are silently laughing their way to the banks!

So when interest rates go up 1-2%, most owners can still stomach it.

DKSG

Good observation! True indeed. My mm downpayment is big. Mthly installment $1k+ rental $3k+

DKSG
06-10-13, 02:41
Good observation! True indeed. My mm downpayment is big. Mthly installment $1k+ rental $3k+

What is the instalment if interest up 2%?

DKSG

henryhk
06-10-13, 09:03
In the last few years, those who bought investment properties, paid hefty downpayment, thus reducing their montly instalments.

Many properties, excluding those bought at super high prices, are getting very decent net profit. Many owners are silently laughing their way to the banks!

So when interest rates go up 1-2%, most owners can still stomach it.

DKSG

Quite true , the two units tat I bought in 2011 and 2012 all require 40% cash/cpf payment....thank you garment foresight...... And my own unit tat I bought 10 years ago and hdb in 2009, all left little loans , so even if interest rate is 6%, I won't be stress........as the current household income more than enough to take out 1.5k for interest......tose people who talk property down, forget tat many buyers paid 40% since 2011.......and with current rentalsss, i will be able to beat the market to accumulate one more unit for my daughter wen she turn 21,

flagship74
06-10-13, 09:09
Quite true , the two units tat I bought in 2011 and 2012 all require 40% cash/cpf payment....thank you garment foresight...... And my own unit tat I bought 10 years ago and hdb in 2009, all left little loans , so even if interest rate is 6%, I won't be stress........as the current household income more than enough to take out 1.5k for interest......tose people who talk property down, forget tat many buyers paid 40% since 2011.......and with current rentalsss, i will be able to beat the market to accumulate one more unit for my daughter wen she turn 21,

Me 2..i had 5 children, if property price drops further 1-2%..i would no hesitation to buy 5 more units for my children.:scared-5:

lajia
06-10-13, 09:47
The chances of 20% drop, or even only 10% drop is very unlikely...

Here's my take.
1) formation of AEC should support rental. And if rental is supported, price will be supported, but, it could be location based as to where the job creations are.
2) someone will be sacked if CM is not lifted on time to prevent the wipe out of national wealth by even 10%.....as they keep preaching soft landing and stabilization.

So, stay cool, be prudent!:2cents:

henryhk
06-10-13, 09:58
The chances of 20% drop, or even only 10% drop is very unlikely...

Here's my take.
1) formation of AEC should support rental. And if rental is supported, price will be supported, but, it could be location based as to where the job creations are.
2) someone will be sacked if CM is not lifted on time to prevent the wipe out of national wealth by even 10%.....as they keep preaching soft landing and stabilization.

So, stay cool, be prudent!:2cents:
on hindside, drop 10% is good for people like us to buy cheap, just wait patiently.

amk
06-10-13, 10:06
The bank was talking about new sale.
Nothing wrong for a new sale to moderate. 2000psf down to 1800 psf is completely normal. Similar scale already happened to CAPL projects.
Even at 10% down, it's still 10% higher at least compared to resales.

Bank analysts just go along with the crowd/trend. Mkt is peaking, moderation is a matter of course. Thomson 3 new launch price today is same as thomson grand 2yrs ago, this is practically a "drop" if u consider 2ys of growth.

DKSG
06-10-13, 10:17
The bank was talking about new sale.
Nothing wrong for a new sale to moderate. 2000psf down to 1800 psf is completely normal. Similar scale already happened to CAPL projects.
Even at 10% down, it's still 10% higher at least compared to resales.

Bank analysts just go along with the crowd/trend. Mkt is peaking, moderation is a matter of course. Thomson 3 new launch price today is same as thomson grand 2yrs ago, this is practically a "drop" if u consider 2ys of growth.

Very good analysis!

Market is finding some resting price point before deciding what to do next.

The main thing to watch is the underlying demand and price differrential across the country.

Now market got some good buys here and there already!

Happy shopping !

DKSG

DKSG
06-10-13, 10:18
on hindside, drop 10% is good for people like us to buy cheap, just wait patiently.

If you looking at 10% drop, it is already happening, just look hard!
But use the right benchmark to measure 10% drop la.

If you measure against those Jurong MM sold for $1,7xx, then many things already dropped! Hahaaa !

DKSG