FEATUREPublished: 02 Nov 09
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Property’s double actThe great financial recession may have knocked the economy for six, but the residential property market has seemingly defied all logic and staged a dramatic comeback. The question for investors is why, and will it last? 2008 was certainly a terrible year for property developers and the market, with just 4,264 units bought from developers, the lowest since 1991. The absolute bottom was January, which saw just 107 units sold in the month, the lowest since records began. But then, as the great stock market collapse was nearing its peak, something strange began to happen. The mass market residential properties, mainly in the east coast, started to take off as developers cut prices by up to 30 % off launch prices and offer other incentives such as absorbing stamp duty.
One real estate agent told Singapore Business Review: “The month of August really heated up. In the east coast there was a new launch at Tanah Merah and it was all sold, and people are flipping these units for a ten to 20 percent profit. It is mainly local buying and a lot of those who bought are also Malaysians. The brisk level of sales has been reflected in official figures. By June over 6000 units had been sold, eclipsing the full figure for 2008. Well, prices are down on average 21 % off the peak, with the prime districts down 24 % but mass residential faring better with just a 14 % fall. Or looked at another way, the market is back to where it was in late 2006. But make no mistake, this property double act is still mainly taking place in the mass residential projects with Singaporeans and the usual slew of Malaysians, Indonesians and Chinese among the top buyers. There has still not been a return of the top end luxury buyers from Hong Kong and most all transactions have taken place in properties costing below $1.5 million.
No foreigner exodus Not all the bankers were sent home, and many non bankers actually came to Singapore over the last 12 months. Where some of the direst predictions by economists had forecast up to 240,000 job losses and an exodus of both foreign workers and talent of up to 200,000, the actual numbers have hardly shifted. “As a chamber we have increased our membership three fold over the last 3 years and now have over 1,200 members. There are a lot of bank members, but the next biggest industry after banking is petroleum and aerospace, and then the professional services like lawyers and accountants.” AmCham Singapore conducted its own survey of five large moing companies from March to April at the height of the crisis and found that, perhaps surprisingly, the net inflow was still higher than the outflow. “ The moving firms also estimated the netflow into SIngapore in 2009 would be 1600 people,” said Amcham executive director Laura Deal, who pointed out that Amcham had grown its executive membership base from 2663 to 3400 from August 2008 through July 2009. So far from an exodus, it seems more foreigners are coming to Singapore, although some of those here did have to take pay cuts. Indeed, pay cuts rather than job cuts seem to have been the order of the day. Anecdotally many people took a 15 % or more pay cut. Officially, 21,000 people were put on a shorter work week in the first three months of the year, and 43,000 people were put on job training schemes. The public sector also went on a hiring binge, adding 10,000 people over the same time.
And again, anecdotally, many expats who were laid off chose to take up the new Personal Employment Pass which gives them 6 months to find a new job rather than 30 days to pack the bags and clear off out of Changi. The net result of the government assistance to corporations and labour market flexibility has been to keep people in, and working in, Singapore. And that has been a great help to the property market.
Limited HDB supply In fact, notes Song, housing supply in total including HDB’s will be 24,000 units a year until 2012, compared with the ten year average of 43,000. So is it all up, up and away? Not so fast, perhaps, with one major problem still in the way of a resurgent property market. And that problem is rents, which continue to fall especially in prime districts. One suspects that the future of Singapore’s prime property prices rests as much on the stock market as it does on property fundamentals. But all in all it will be an interesting next few months to watch. Do you know more about this story? Contact us anonymously through this link. Click here to learn about advertising, content sponsorship, events & rountables, custom media solutions, whitepaper writing, sales leads or eDM opportunities with us. |