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vip
13-12-17, 23:32
https://www.propertysoul.com/2017/12/14/singapores-demographics-means-for-housing/ (https://www.propertysoul.com/2017/12/14/singapores-demographics-means-for-housing/?utm_source=condosingapore&utm_medium=wlink&utm_term=0&utm_content=0&utm_campaign=std
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Singapore’s latest demographics: what it means for housing

December 14, 2017

https://i1.wp.com/www.propertysoul.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/SG_population.jpg?resize=650%2C400&ssl=1

The best property analysis released these days is not about the red-hot en bloc fever, or the optimistic projection of possible growth for the property market in 2018.

The only recent piece of analysis that leaves much food for thought is Ku Swee Yong’s three-part articles on “Big Singapore Market Upgrade – Hype or Reality?” where he questions Morgan Stanley’s remarks about “property prices on track to double by 2030”.

In particular, Mr Ku provides his personal data and analyses to highlight three important facts which I can’t agree with him more:

1. Low population growth;

2. Home ownership rate has peaked; and

3. An aging population.


Slowdown in population growth

Still remember back in January 2013 when the government released the controversial Population White Paper (人口白皮书) and predicted Singapore’s population to reach 6 million by 2020 and 6.9 million by 2030?

What is the latest update? Well, the Population Trends 2017 published this September by the Singapore Department of Statistics shows that our total population grew 0.1 percent to 5.61 million. It is the slowest annual growth rate since the year SARS hit our shores in 2003.

If we continue to inch 0.1 percent every year, Singapore’s total population will only reach 5.69 million by 2030 – a far cry from the government’s ambitious target of 6.9 million.

If we need to have 6 million population by 2020, from now on we must have an annual growth rate of at least 2.2 percent, or add 126,000 more residents and foreigners every year to this Little Red Dot.

In 2016, there are 41,251 live-births but 20,017 total deaths for the whole year. The net increase in population is only 21,234.

With the next General Election coming in two to three years’ time, do you think there is any chance that the government will import 105,000 foreigners every year to fill up the gap?

Lesson learnt: Next time when the boss sets an ambitious target, instead of challenging him with a heated debate, just give him a neutral “okay let’s see” reply and let the unrealistic goal die a natural death.

https://i0.wp.com/www.propertysoul.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/SG_population_election.jpg?resize=592%2C518&ssl=1

Housing implications: The 2017 Financial Stability Review released by the Monetary Authority of Singapore on November 30 said it best:

“The development of en-bloc and GLS sites should more than double the number of units available for sale in the near term. In the medium term, the stock of private housing will increase. With slower population growth, there is considerable uncertainty as to whether existing vacancies and the new supply coming on-stream can be fully absorbed by the market. Should there be insufficient occupation demand for the completed housing units, a supply imbalance could result and place downward pressure on prices and rentals in the medium term.”


Where have all the foreigners gone?

If we look carefully at the numbers in population size, Singapore’s annual population growth hovers between 1.2 to 2.5 from 2010 to 2016. The exceptionally small increment of 0.1 percent last year is mainly due to the negative increase of -1.6 percent for non-residents.

A Straits Times article explains that this first drop in 14 years is mainly due to a decline in Work Permit holders.

But the reality is: foreigners on employment pass or work permit have to leave Singapore once they lose their jobs or when their contracts are not renewed, so they won’t affect our low unemployment rate and we can have headlines like “unemployment rate falls; incomes rise”.

The current size of permanent residents (PR) stands at 526,600 which hasn’t changed much for four years. This is also the government’s intention to keep the PR population stable after the number peaked at 541,000 in 2010.

https://i0.wp.com/www.propertysoul.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/demographics_chart_1.jpg?resize=945%2C526&ssl=1

Housing implications: Contrary to what Morgan Stanley said, housing demand is not determined by GDP, but unemployment rate. High unemployment rate affects both the sale and rental market. (Read my earlier post on “Why unemployment is the real killer in the property game”.)

It is now more difficult for foreigners to get approval for PR status. Foreigners are leaving the country but companies are not adding more expatriate positions.

The Additional Buyer Stamp Duty imposed on foreign buyers was raised to 15 percent in January 2013. According to the Savills November Residential Sales Briefing citing URA’s 3rd quarter 2017 data, PRs and foreigners purchased 1,315 resale units, representing a 13 percent quarter-on-quarter decline.

In the meantime, Singaporeans is the only hope for increase in housing demand. As Mr Ku has pointed out, Singapore home ownership has peaked at 90 percent and policy makers are pushing for 100 percent home ownership.

Locals don’t need to rent and we don’t have enough foreigners renting. No wonder vacancy rate of private residential properties still remains high at 8.4 percent.

For property buyers and investors, there is some useful advice from MAS’s 2017 Financial Stability Review.

“Households should continue to stay financially prudent. While household debt growth remains in line with income growth over the past year, households should take into account their ability to service their debt in the longer term. Potential property investors should be aware that the subdued rental market and further interest rate hikes could weigh on borrowers’ debt servicing ability.”


Low birth rate and aging population

The 2016 total live-births is 41,251 and Singapore’s resident total fertility rate falls to an alarming rate of 1.2. It really takes a great programme like SG50 and a good dragon year once in 12 years like 2012 to push fertility rate to over 1.25.

The danger is that we have no mood to make babies when times are bad. During 2003 and 2005, Singapore only produced over 37,000 babies each year.

On the contrary, our citizen population continues to age rapidly, with the median age reaching 40.5 in 2017. Singapore citizens aged 65 and above has gone up to 14.4 percent in 2017, compared with 9.4 percent ten years ago, according to an article in Straits Times.

Housing implications: In April, the Ministry of Education announced the merging of 14 primary schools, six secondary schools and eight junior colleges (JCs) in 2019. Enrolment in JCs has declined since 2014 due to falling birth rates, with residents born between 1993 and 2002 falling 20 percent from about 49,000 to 39,000.

With declining birth rate, will “near to good schools” become a less important criterion one day for property buyers?

In Japan, where deaths have outpaced births for several years, toy manufacturers are designing toys for the elderly – a lucrative growing market compared with the shrinking demand from children.

The same applies to housing demand for our population.

According to Mr Ku, the number of “retiree households” has jumped from 54,000 in 2008 to 95,000 in 2016, an increase of 76 percent over 8 years. In ten years’ time, 558,000 Singaporean baby boomers will reach the retirement age of 60. Many are likely to cash out of their homes or prepare to downgrade after retirement.

Kampung Admiralty, with TOP just obtained in August, is the first retirement village in Singapore. The two blocks of HDB flats sold on 30-year lease were all snapped up during the July 2014 Build-to-Order exercise. The 104 studio apartments came with elderly-friendly fittings and a two-level medical centre providing treatment, medical and surgical services for residents.

Minister Khaw Boon Wan commented that “Kampung Admiralty is designed to fight against loneliness, ill-health and depression by encouraging inter-generational bonding, social interactions and active ageing”.

What about private housing? Are developers considering the aging population when building new projects? Have we thought about constructing granny houses and flats for the elderly like Australia? How about adding elderly-friendly home features and common facilities?


With the changing demographics in Singapore, the supply-demand dynamics of the property market will be very different from what we are seeing today. Are the consumers (tenants, homebuyers and property investors) and industry stakeholders (developers, builders, property agents, mortgage brokers, etc.) prepared for the big change?

This blog post first appeared on 99.co (https://www.99.co/blog/singapore/population-demographics-housing/).

Arcachon
14-12-17, 02:57
Got Money still don't buy how many more 10 years do you have.

A Bear Bear will always be a Bear Bear.

Arcachon
14-12-17, 03:10
Was talking to a PRC painter here working since 1997.

He got 2 fully pay property and many got more than 2.

Don't look at the sky from the well.

Talk to a Bear and he will tell you all the Bear story, talk to a Bull he will tell you all the Bull story.

Which one you like to hear decide where you will be staying.

Arcachon
14-12-17, 03:21
1. Low population growth;

One must be crazy to have high population growth when the economic is bad, remember PM Goh once say. If I got 1 million PR and I got no job for them I just don't renew the PR whereas if I got 1 million SC I am in trouble.

2. Home ownership rate has peaked; and

Many are changing their 99 year leasehold to a longer lease, are you still staying in a leasehold counting down to zero.

3. An aging population.

Many parent who know are down sizing to free out their cash to help their children buy private property if you don't know it is still not too late.

Statistic don't lie but the person using it do.

tonymontana
14-12-17, 08:59
1. Low population growth;

One must be crazy to have high population growth when the economic is bad, remember PM Goh once say. If I got 1 million PR and I got no job for them I just don't renew the PR whereas if I got 1 million SC I am in trouble.

you're talking about working permits.

PR no need to renew , did you know that. Once you got PR , it remain there unless you commit some crime, or you migrate to stay other country, then PR can be revoked.

tonymontana
14-12-17, 09:06
Got Money still don't buy how many more 10 years do you have.

A Bear Bear will always be a Bear Bear.

A few things about her "story" which doesn't gel.

We know she just graduated, from overseas (Malaysia I guess), came to singapore in 2000 to work.

By 2005 she bought 3-4 properties,some in CCR?

Where she got all that money?

Remember , this was in the dot com and SARS period. People were jobless left and right. Salaries were cut. Expats were being sent home faster than you could say "speeding bullet".

Experienced property investors were calling it quits in 2003, prices were plummeting. Rents followed the same route.

Yet, in spite of all this, she went and grabbed 3-4 properties?

Now she's hoping prices drop back to 2003 level before buying again? Fat hope.

vip
14-12-17, 10:04
https://www.propertysoul.com/2017/12/14/singapores-demographics-means-for-housing/#comments

Kelonguni
14-12-17, 10:56
Carefully read this table from the same stats source.

The number of households have increased from 1,225,300 to 1,263,600 (by 2.1%) in the year. Each household size has dipped roughly to 3.35 from 3.39 persons.

The total number of residents (in households) over the period has increased from 4,153,767 (previous year) to 4,233,060, an increase of 79,293 residents or 1.92% (citizens and PRs).

Also, dipping household sizes means we need more or lesser living units?

lhk001
14-12-17, 10:57
Good article with detailed analyses

As a user, SG properties are not cheap and they are very expensive based on my affordability.

If the price can drop by 20%, it will be perfect!

PropVestor
14-12-17, 11:16
There is truth in what she says. No population growth, there is little to count on for an aging population Singapore. Despite our wealth, CMs (though temporary) stops us from owning too many properties.

BUT

http://www.straitstimes.com/business/economy/singapore-will-reach-critical-demographic-crossroad-in-2018-says-uob-economist
The indicators of flood gate opening are coming.

1) Economic upswing, though tapered is happening globally. ~3+% for 2018 is higher than 2.5% (2017). We might even hit close to 4%.
2) Election is coming and old guards heading out. Progressive ideas in economics and politics are happening here. New PM who is younger will have trade protectionism mindset? I seriously doubt so for a country with no natural resource and low population count. I will get out if thats the case as my business will die a slow death.
3) Property prices cannot be depressed for too long, small upswing happening already. Its the longest price depression in history.
4) No one is happy when property prices are down for too long, angry voters are bad for PAP
5) No one wants to raise GST when economic indicators are down. I see it as good news for upbeat times ahead which creates more jobs for foreigners who come.
6) There is nearly enough housing to go around for locals and foreigners so much so that supply has to be curbed 2020 onwards. Early 2010s we are not ready, it is not the same picture 7-8 years later. Trains ($20billion additional till 2030) and buses ($1.1 billion spent on this alone) have increased by alot. Why spent so many billions when Singaporeans are getting older and travel lesser due to immobility? Really?
7) No one removed the population white paper (PWP, Jan 2013). Have you read it recently? I did. No amendment footnotes were made. Zero.
8) Do we need Terminal 5 (will take Changi to 140 million passengers load in 10 years time, 50 million on its own) for such a population as ours? Sure we want tourist money but new wave of new SG citizens/PRs are global ones too.

How all these will affect property prices is still a WIP as there are alot more factors to consider like jobs creation, inflation, GDP, interests rates etc.

2 cents,
PropVestor

PropVestor
14-12-17, 11:27
"We will continue to welcome immigrants who can contribute to Singapore, share our values and
integrate into our society. To stop our citizen population from shrinking, we will take in between
15,000 and 25,000 new citizens each year. We will review this immigration rate from time to time,
depending on the quality of applicants, our birth rates, and our needs.

We plan to take in about 30,000 new PRs each year. This will maintain a stable PR population of
between 0.5 and 0.6 million, to ensure a pool of suitable potential citizens.
We will continue to encourage and help new citizens to integrate into our society. We would like
them to adapt to our way of life, while enriching our society with their diverse experiences, skills, and
capabilities.

Together with a citizen population of between 3.6 and 3.8 million, our resident population (comprising
citizens and PRs) is projected to be between 4.2 and 4.4 million in 2030, depending on birth rates,
immigration and life expectancy."

https://www.strategygroup.gov.sg/docs/default-source/Population/population-white-paper.pdf

We may be bad at making babies, but we have plenty of good economists and analysts.

PWP, Jan 2013

PropVestor

Kelonguni
17-12-17, 15:06
So the number of household have been increasing at around 38,300 each year, although many of these could fit into HDB households (17,000 next year).

Actual rental demand may not fully keep up with buying demands as the number of individuals not forming households as an overall might be dropping due to manpower constraints, which help to explain the two directions.



Carefully read this table from the same stats source.

The number of households have increased from 1,225,300 to 1,263,600 (by 2.1%) in the year. Each household size has dipped roughly to 3.35 from 3.39 persons.

The total number of residents (in households) over the period has increased from 4,153,767 (previous year) to 4,233,060, an increase of 79,293 residents or 1.92% (citizens and PRs).

Also, dipping household sizes means we need more or lesser living units?

Kelonguni
30-12-18, 16:30
Still awaiting demographics and population conclusion.

Which way did things actually move?

Arcachon
30-12-18, 17:18
Still awaiting demographics and population conclusion.

Which way did things actually move?

Just look at the number of MRT station you will know.

https://landtransportguru.net/web/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/MRT_NetworkMap_Sep18.jpg

Arcachon
30-12-18, 17:23
https://www.sgtrains.com/

https://www.sgtrains.com/network.html

More than 228km of track span across the island, connecting 157 stations on 5 MRT and 3 LRT lines.

Mother of MRT line coming soon.

https://www.sgtrains.com/network-crl.html#ccnr

Arcachon
30-12-18, 17:27
https://scontent-sin2-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/48926321_10214824364615600_7328200546215526400_n.jpg?_nc_cat=105&_nc_ht=scontent-sin2-2.xx&oh=33e5ff3a11b6bacdc7238962fb2731b5&oe=5C95CF1A

Arcachon
30-12-18, 17:29
Almost forget 7(-1) years later we will have another District, District 29.

Johor Bahru-Singapore RTS Link
Rapid Transit System Link connecting Bukit Chagar (Johor Bahru, Malaysia) and TE1 Woodlands North (Singapore)

Expected to be completed by December 2024

They already build a lot of unit waiting for us to buy, so kind of them.

Arcachon
30-12-18, 17:43
https://www.edgeprop.sg/property-news/13b-sgd-worth-unsold-properties-johor?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=article&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR3-HqffGdUtnbmFib6MMy2rxVlQRxg4pjO5418tD81f_L9_xowI-3KpgLc#Echobox=1545282219

1.24b SGD worth of unsold properties in Johor