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Thread: New private home sales remain sluggish

  1. #1
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    Default New private home sales remain sluggish

    http://www.straitstimes.com/business...emain-sluggish

    New private home sales remain sluggish

    Mar 16, 2016

    Fewer launches in Feb the key factor, say experts; Q1 volumes look set to hit 3-year low

    Rennie Whang


    New homes sales last month were sluggish, with first-quarter volumes now expected to be the lowest in the past three years.

    However, the key factor was fewer launches in February, rather than any further drop-off in buying sentiment, industry observers said.

    Developers sold 301 units last month, a 6.8 per cent fall from January and 22.8 per cent weaker than a year back, new Urban Redevelopment Authority figures show.

    Last month's tally was the lowest in over a year - after 230 new homes were sold in December 2014.

    No major new launches were held in the first two months of this year, as developers held back due to the stock market volatility and Chinese New Year festivities.

    Only the 40-unit 183 Longhaus in Upper Thomson Road was launched last month, with 11 units moved at a median price of $1,659 per sq ft (psf). In contrast, the 1,024-unit Sims Urban Oasis was launched in February last year.

    Sales numbers for March should pick up, given the decent take-up seen at new launches Cairnhill Nine and The Wisteria last weekend.

    Still, volumes for the first quarter could come in at 1,000 to 1,200 units, or 10 per cent to 15 per cent lower than that of the same period last year, said PropNex Realty chief executive Mohd Ismail Gafoor.

    Sentiment is not poorer on the ground, said ERA senior division director Alex Lim. "It is based on the launches - when there are launches and they are priced correctly, units move. People have the cash and are looking to invest," he said.

    Experts also noted a silver lining to the lower volumes. The take-up rate or ratio of units sold to those launched was 144 per cent last month and 203 per cent in January, said SLP International executive director Nicholas Mak. And 129 executive condominium units were sold last month, even in the fourth straight month without a launch.

    The best-selling private projects were suburban condominiums The Panorama in Ang Mo Kio and Kingsford Waterbay in Upper Serangoon, both of which sold 18 units each. On the exec condo front, The Terrace was top with 23 units sold at a median price of $782 psf.

    "At this pace, the market should see a steady reduction of the unsold inventory of both private homes and exec condos," said Mr Desmond Sim, CBRE research head for Singapore and South-east Asia.

    Across regions, developers sold 25 units in the core central region, 82 units in the city fringes and 194 units in the suburbs. Including exec condos, a total of 430 homes were sold, down 10.2 per cent from January and 5.5 per cent lower than February last year.

    More buying activity should occur in coming months with more launches, noted ERA Realty key executive officer Eugene Lim. Sturdee Residences in Beatty Road should be launched next month or in May, as well as a condo in Toa Payoh Lorong 4, while exec condos The Visionaire and Parc Life, both in Sembawang, should be launching in these months as well.


  2. #2
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    Default New private home sales in Feb at 14-month low

    http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/real...t-14-month-low

    New private home sales in Feb at 14-month low

    Market observers put this down to the slow Chinese New Year month and weak sentiment, but expect figures to perk up this month. More launches are ahead in April

    By Kalpana Rashiwala

    [email protected]@KalpanaBT

    Mar 16, 2016


    THE 301 private homes (excluding executive condominiums) that developers moved last month represented a 6.8 per cent fall month on month and a 22. 8 per cent fall year on year.

    It was also the lowest in the 14 months since the 230-unit figure in December 2014.

    This was not surprising, as developers generally held off releasing new projects last month, due to the Chinese New Year festivities and overall weak sentiment amid the continued volatility in the stock market.

    But this month's numbers are expected to perk up. Already, three launches racked up impressive sales in the first weekend of their launches: Cairnhill Nine off Orchard Road moved 134 units, The Wisteria in Yishun sold 116, and Wandervale, an executive condominium (EC) in Choa Chu Kang, 262 units.

    But market watchers, including JLL national director Ong Teck Hui, said these projects did well because of their attractive attributes, location and pricing - rather than because of a market recovery.

    OrangeTee.com senior manager Wong Xian Yang predicts that developers will move between 500 and 800 private homes this month, taking the tally for the first quarter of this year to between 1,124 and 1,424 units - similar to the 1,311 units moved in Q1 last year.

    More launches are expected from next month. E-applications for Qingjian Realty's 632-unit EC project in Sembawang, The Visionaire, are scheduled to begin on April 8.

    Sustained Land is slated to roll out a 305-unit condo, Sturdee Residences, in Jalan Besar, in April.

    However, plans by Evia Real Estate (7), Gamuda and Maxdin to launch their 578-unit condo along Lorong 5 Toa Payoh, originally slated for late March, have been delayed following two rejections by the authorities of the proposed name for the project, said Evia Real Estate managing director Vincent Ong. "We are now targeting to launch this project just before the June school holidays, or in July."

    The market is also awaiting news of the launch of Cheung Kong's Stars of Kovan, a development of nearly 400 units.

    Urban Redevelopment Authority data released on Tuesday showed that only one new private residential project was launched last month. This was 183 Longhaus, a 40-unit development along Upper Thomson Road, which sold 11 of the 20 released units at a median price of S$1,659 per square foot (psf).

    Given the paucity of new launches, February's "best-selling" private residential projects were Kingsford Waterbay along Upper Serangoon View and The Panorama in Ang Mo Kio. Both were launched some time ago and moved just 18 units each last month; the median price for Kingsford Waterbay was S$1,127 psf, and for The Panorama, S$1,211 psf.

    UOL Group found buyers for 16 units at Principal Garden along Prince Charles Crescent; the median price there was S$1,612 psf.

    In all, developers launched 209 private homes in February, up 31.4 per cent from January's 159 units. Besides 183 Longhaus, the 209 figure included new units released in projects that were already on the market.

    No new projects were launched among ECs, the public-private housing hybrid, last month. Neither were new units released in existing EC projects. Still, developers of existing projects on the market managed to find buyers for 129 EC units, though this was a 17.3 per cent drop from the 156 such units developers moved in January. February's top-selling EC was The Terrace in Punggol (23 units sold at a S$782 psf median price) and The Vales in Sengkang (17 units at a median price of S$798 psf).

    Desmond Sim, head of Singapore and South-east Asia at CBRE Research, described the 129-unit EC sales in February as encouraging, given that four consecutive months have passed without launches of EC units. "At this pace, the market should see a steady reduction of the unsold inventory . . .," he added.

    For the year, Mr Wong of OrangeTee.com expects developers to sell 6,000 to 7,000 private homes (excluding ECs) - down from the 7,440 units last year.

    JLL's Mr Ong's forecast for this year is 7,500 to 8,500 units. "Lower prices are likely to draw buyers into the market, but the number of units developers sell would depend on how buyers' sentiments are affected by the economic slowdown," he added.

    PropNex Realty chief executive Ismail Gafoor puts the figure at around 8,000 units. "Given challenging market conditions, upcoming new projects will likely be more competitively priced."

    At the same time, developers will also be adjusting their pricing strategy to move units in their projects which are already on the market - as has been borne out by all five best-selling projects in February being previously launched, he added.

    SLP International executive director Nicholas Mak, who expects the full-year number to be nearly 7,000 units, said that developers' inventory of launched-but-unsold private housing units fell steadily from 7,549 units in April 2015 to 6,002 units last month. "Developers have been selling more units than they have been releasing; the reduction in the number of units launched is due not just to weak sentiment but a gradual slowdown in the Government Land Sales Programme, which is leading to fewer new projects available for launch."

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