Wednesday 12 July 2017

SRX: Condo rents rise 0.5% in June, HDB rents fall 0.6% - SRX

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SINGAPORE - Private residential and HDB reversed course last month, according to SRX Property flash estimates released on Wednesday (July 12).

Rents of condominiums and apartments rose 0.5 per cent month-on-month in June, swinging from a revised 0.6 per cent decline in May, though the number of units leased dropped

After a sustained slide last year, private rents have fluctuated monthly this year. But after June's increase they are now down just 0.3 per cent to date this year. They are still 19.1 per cent off their peaks in January 2013.

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The number of units rented out in June fell 8.8 per cent to 4,250 from 4,661 in May. Year-on-year, rental volume last month was 7.3 per cent lower than the 4,587 units rented in June 2016.

HDB rents meanwhile, dropped 0.6 per cent, after rising a revised 0.8 per cent in May.

Compared to private rentals, HDB rents have declined by a bigger 1 per cent margin to date this year, said SRX Property.

Year-on-year, HDB rents last month are down by 4 per cent from June 2016. They are 13.5 per cent lower compared to their peak in August 2013.
hdbrent

The number of flats rented out fell 5.5 per cent in June to 1,704 from 1,804 in May. Year-on-year, rental volume last month was 11.5 per cent lower than in June 2016.

The Straits Times

Source: SRX (12 Jul 2017)

SRX: Condo resale prices rise 0.9% in June amid fall in sales volume - SRX

Resale prices of non-landed private homes in Singapore rose by 0.9 per cent in June from the previous month, led by the prime and suburban areas, according to flash estimates from SRX Property on Tuesday (July 11).

Singapore condo
This was an improvement from the revised 0.5 per cent month-on-month price increase in May.
Despite the uptick, SRX said June's resale prices were still down by 4.4 per cent from its last peak in January 2014.
Condo resales prices in June rose by 2.2 per cent from the same month a year ago, it added.
June's price growth was driven mainly by the core central region, which saw a resale values rise by 1.3 per cent from May, and the suburbs which recorded a 1.1 per cent increase.
Resale prices in the city fringe remained unchanged in June, SRX said.
Its estimates showed that resale transaction volumes fell by 12.5 per cent to 1,065 units last month from the 1,217 shifted in May. But compared with a year ago, sales were up by a hefty 51.1 per cent from 705 units sold in June 2016.
SRX's median transaction over X-value (TOX) - which measures if buyers are overpaying or underpaying its computer-generated market value - came in at S$1,000 last month, down from S$2,000 in May.
The Newton and Novena areas posted the highest median TOX at S$40,000, while the Harbourfront and Telok Blangah districts recorded a negative TOX of S$120,000, which meant that most buyers in that district bought units below SRX's computer-generated value.
Source: SRX (11 Jul 2017)

Saturday 8 July 2017

SRX: HDB resale volume slips 11.6% in June - SRX

TRANSACTION volume and prices of Housing and Development Board (HDB) resale flats fell in June from the previous month, with both indicators clocking a noticeable dip from recent peaks, flash data issued by SRX Property on Thursday showed.

HDB Flats 2
In June, 1,753 HDB resale flats were sold, an 11.6 per cent drop from the 1,984 transacted units in May, which itself was an 8.1 per cent rise from April's volume.
Year on year, resale volume decreased by 5 per cent.
June's volume was down by 52 per cent from the peak of 3,649 units in May 2010.
As for HDB resale prices, there was a headline decrease of 0.1 per cent in June compared with that of May, which also dipped 0.1 per cent from April.
Year on year, prices have decreased by 0.2 per cent from June 2016.
June's data indicates that prices have declined by 11.7 per cent since the peak in April 2013.
The resale prices of HDB executive units rose by 1.7 per cent in June, while those of HDB three-room, four-room and five-room units decreased by 0.2 per cent, 0.3 per cent and 1.5 per cent respectively.

Find out more about SRX HDB Flash Report on SRX Research.

Source: SRX (07 Jul 2017)

Friday 7 July 2017

Good class bungalow market tepid - SRX

The market for good class bungalows (GCBs), the most prestigious segment of landed property in Singapore, is lukewarm although smaller bungalows in these GCB areas are catching on.

Chatsworth Park Good Class Bungalow
The tepid market contrasts with another upmarket landed segment, Sentosa Cove. Sales at the exclusive waterfront precinct have jumped to seven this year, compared with just four for the same period last year.
On the GCB front, a caveat was lodged on June 12 for the most expensive one sold this year.
But overall, the number of bungalows in GCB areas with a minimum plot size of 1,400 sq m - the technical definition of a GCB - sold in the first half of this year was 10, down from the 11 sold in the same period last year, according to caveats filed.
The latest GCB sold was a $46 million bungalow in Queen Astrid Park on a 29,709 sq ft site, reportedly purchased by the family who controls oil trading group Hin Leong.
The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) designates 39 areas as "good class bungalow areas", including parts of prime districts such as Bukit Timah and Tanglin but also those farther afield in Bukit Panjang and Binjai Park.
While GCB sales are down a little, smaller bungalows in GCB areas are proving more popular this year.
According to CBRE's analysis of caveats filed with URA, 20 sales have taken place in GCB areas so far this year, worth a total of $432.2 million. These include properties with a plot size of less than 1,400 sq m.
This is markedly more than the 14 transactions in the same period last year, which totalled $298.36 million.
Mr Douglas Wong, CBRE Realty Associates' head of luxury homes, said the market this year has been driven by "multiple small-sized deals".
He noted prices in the first half of this year have come down by about 5 per cent from the same period last year, at $1,242 per sq ft (psf) compared with $1,318 psf.
However, the profile of buyers remains consistent, he added. Buyers this year include corporates and entrepreneurs in their 40s, with interest from new citizens, particularly those originally from China.
Mr Wong said he does not expect this year's sales to top last year's total of 37 transactions.
"We expect 30 to 35 GCB transactions this year as sellers are more motivated to preserve capital and wait for market sentiment to improve. Prices are likely to be flat."
Mr Alan Cheong, senior director of research and consultancy at Savills, said that the GCB transactions this year were of a lower dollar psf basis, reflecting poorer location, and/ or site characteristics.
"The slowdown in GCB transactions could be attributed to the lack of available good stocks of GCBs for sale," he said.
"What is holding the market back is that the 'creme de la creme' sites are still hard to come by with owners either refusing to sell at all costs or (selling) at exorbitant prices. Therefore, what gets transacted will be for GCBs that are in the normal rather than the superior grade in terms of location and land dimensions."
Overall, the number of landed homes sold has increased, driven by falling prices and limited supply of landed homes, said Ms Christine Li, director of research at Cushman and Wakefield.
URA flash estimates released on Monday indicated that prices of landed residential properties fell further by 0.4 per cent for the second quarter, compared with a 1.8 per cent decrease in the previous quarter.
"According to caveats lodged, 538 landed homes were sold in the second quarter - this is the highest quarterly volume since the fourth quarter of 2012, and is a definite sign that interest in landed homes is returning," Ms Li said.
Source: SRX (06 Jul 2017)

Monday 3 July 2017

URA releases flash estimate of 2nd Quarter 2017 private residential property price index - URA

Published Date: 03 Jul 2017

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) released the flash estimate of the price index for private residential property for 2nd Quarter 2017 today.

Overall, the private residential property index fell 0.4 point from 136.7 points in 1st Quarter 2017 to 136.3 points in 2nd Quarter 2017. This represents a decline of 0.3%, compared with the 0.4% decline in the previous quarter (see Annex A [PDF, 165kb] and Annex B [PDF, 11kb]).

Prices of non-landed private residential properties fell by 0.9% in Core Central Region (CCR), compared to the 0.4% fall in the previous quarter. Prices in the Rest of Central Region (RCR) increased by 0.5%, after registering an increase of 0.3% in the previous quarter. Prices in Outside Central Region (OCR) decreased by 0.4%, after registering a 0.1% increase in the previous quarter (see Annex C [PDF, 12kb]). Meanwhile, prices of landed residential properties fell by 0.4%, compared to the 1.8% decrease in the previous quarter.

The flash estimates are compiled based on transaction prices given in contracts submitted for stamp duty payment and data on units sold by developers up till mid-June. The statistics will be updated on 28 July when URA releases the full real estate statistics for 2nd Quarter 2017. Past data have shown that the difference between the quarterly price changes indicated by the flash estimate and the actual price changes could be significant when the change is small. The public is advised to interpret the flash estimates with caution.
Source: URA

Flash Estimate of 2nd Quarter 2017 Resale Price Index - HDB

Published Date: 03 Jul 2017

             HDB’s flash estimate of the 2nd Quarter 2017 Resale Price Index (RPI) is 133.7, a decline of 0.1% over 1st Quarter 2017 (see Annexes A1 and A2).  

2          The RPI provides information on the general price movements in the resale public housing market. The transacted prices of individual flats (by block and flat type) can be found via the e-services available on HDB’s InfoWEB.

3          The RPI for the full quarter, together with more detailed public housing data, will be released on 28 July 2017.

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4          In August 2017, HDB will offer about 3,850 Build-To-Order (BTO) flats in Bukit Batok and Sengkang. More information on this BTO exercise is available on the HDB InfoWEB.

Source: HDB