Supply, interest rates frame housing debate

The property market yesterday toasted the sale of a record 5,719 private homes in the third quarter, even though the industry posted a second consecutive month-on-month drop in sales to 1,143 units in September. Despite the high point, the discussion in property circles was marked by circumspection.

The number of homes that developers manage to sell in the fourth quarter as well as next year will be limited by the shrinking stock of launch-ready homes and developers’ fast-depleting landbanks.

While the economic outlook is improving, the accompanying scenario of rising interest rates may cause some to re-evaluate their property investment decisions as mortgage rates rise. If savings rates on bank deposits also increase, this will take some shine off parking money in property, which is what many investors have been doing this year, says DTZ executive director (consulting) Ong Choon Fah.

Urban Redevelopment Authority figures released yesterday showed that developers sold 1,143 private homes (excluding executive condos) in September, down 36.6 per cent from the 1,804 units they sold in August, which in turn was about 35 per cent below the July high of 2,772 units.

The 5,719 units developers sold in Q3 busted the previous record of 5,129 units in Q2 2007. With 12,969 private homes sold in the first nine months of this year, developers will have to sell an average of just 614 units a month from October to December this year to match the full-year record of 14,811 units set in 2007.

The drop in September sales, which was the second consecutive month-on-month decrease, is seen by some property consultants as evidence of price resistance setting in after rapid price hikes in recent months.

Colliers International’s director for research and advisory Tay Huey Ying highlighted an increase in the proportion of transactions at or below $1,000 psf to 54 per cent in September from a 49 per cent share in August. ‘This is a reversal of the downward trend since April 2009,’ she added.

Yet another sign of price-resistance setting in could be the pretty mixed bag of results obtained by analysts who studied URA’s data and compared prices achieved by developers between August and September.

Market watchers say another factor for slower sales last month could be the government’s move on Sept 14 to scrap the interest absorption scheme (IAS), which some blamed for oiling the wheels of property speculation.

Last month’s drop in private housing sales was also supply-led, said Real Estate Developers Association of Singapore CEO Steven Choo. The number of units launched by developers slipped 12.4 per cent from 1,613 units in August to 1,413 units in September.

This drop, however, was much less than the nearly 37 per cent decline in units sold. And that meant the ratio of units sold to units launched fell from 111.8 per cent in August to 80.9 per cent last month – the lowest since February this year – as buyers became more selective, observed DTZ’s South-east Asia research head Chua Chor Hoon.

‘Suburban projects and developments with small units continued to be favoured,’ she added. The Outside Central Region was the only segment which posted an increase in units sold, from 531 in August to 560 in September – against month-on-month decreases of 72 per cent and 40 per cent respectively for the Core Central Region and Rest of Central Region.

September’s top selling projects were Hundred Trees (327 units sold at a median price of $941 psf), followed by The Interlace (243 units transacted at $1,047 psf median price), and Elliot at the East Coast (65 units; $947 psf), CB Richard Ellis noted. Hundred Trees and Interlace made up about half of September’s sales.

Colliers’ analysis showed that whereas the highest price achieved in August was the ‘above $4,000 to $4,500 psf range’ with two transactions, the highest price band in September was the ‘above $3,000 to $3,500 psf range’ with seven units sold.

These comprise six units sold at Seven Palms Sentosa Cove at between $3,091 psf and $3,353 psf and an apartment at Nassim Park Residences that fetched $3,268 psf.

Source : Business Times – 16 Oct 2009

Ho Bee again looks abroad for growth

Developer sniffing for opportunities in China and London

HARD pressed to find land in Singapore, developer Ho Bee Investment again plans to beat a path overseas to places such as China and London to grow.

‘We are still sniffing for opportunities, but our next phase of growth will definitely not just be in Singapore but outside of Singapore,’ Ho Bee chairman and CEO Chua Thian Poh told BT in a recent interview.

Under a joint-venture agreement Ho Bee signed with high-end China residential developer Yanlord last month, the two Singapore-listed developers will join forces for a feasibility study on a project in China.

Ho Bee and Yanlord are also eyeing large sites in China’s second and third-tier cities to build mid and upmarket condos for locals.

Additionally, Ho Bee is scouting for residential development opportunities in Central London. ‘London was badly hurt during the financial turmoil, and the pound has also come down substantially,’ said Mr Chua. ‘Maybe it’s time for us to re-look at London again.’

Ho Bee is no stranger to London, having developed and sold Parliament View, comprising 190 apartments, along the River Thames facing Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament. The project, undertaken jointly with SsangYong Cement – now known as EnGro Corp – was completed in 2002. Ho Bee has retained four apartments in the development.

In China, too, Ho Bee has been involved in projects in Shanghai through joint ventures with Hong Kong partners, and with its new partner Yanlord hopes to secure several large land parcels to do phased development on each site.

‘Hopefully we’ll be be able to do something nice for the first phase and showcase our capabilities. This will help build up value for the remaining phases,’ said Ho Bee executive director Ong Chong Hua.

Through their alliance, Ho Bee and Yanlord will leverage on each other’s expertise and track record. ‘Yanlord is a high-end and reputable developer in China. Ho Bee has also made a name for itself, especially on Sentosa Cove. And I think projects by Singapore developers still command a price premium in China,’ Mr Ong said.

‘In China, you can get a big chunk of land and develop it over, say, a 10-year period. So things are much easier to plan. In Singapore, getting land is quite ad hoc.’

Mr Chua said securing land here through collective sales has become more difficult because of the more rigorous rules governing such sales to protect minority owners.

‘Looking for our raw material is the big challenge in Singapore,’ he said. ‘Every site that comes up (at state tenders) now attracts 12-15 tenderers. The pricing is also very competitive.’

‘Hopefully, when the government restarts the confirmed list next year, it will stabilise the market.’

A more positive note for Ho Bee in Singapore is that it has not exhausted its local land bank. Even after this week’s preview of the 205-unit Trilight condo on Newton Road, Ho Bee has three other Singapore condos that can generate a total of over 600 units. These include the 248-unit Parvis at Holland Hill, which is a joint venture with MCL Land, and two condos at Sentosa Cove – the 151-unit Seascape and a project of about 300 units on the Pinnacle Collection site.

Parvis may be previewed later this month or next, while the two Sentosa projects – to be developed jointly with Malaysia’s IOI Group – are slated for release next year to leverage on the opening of Sentosa’s integrated resort.

Ho Bee has been the predominant residential developer at Sentosa Cove, an upscale waterfront housing district emerging on 117ha of mostly reclaimed land on the east coast of Sentosa island. It clinched eight plots there, five of which it has completed developing. The other three are the two joint-venture sites with IOI and another plot on which Ho Bee is building Turquoise condo, which is about half-sold.

‘Most of our projects are close to nature – whether it’s a hill, nature reserve, river or the sea,’ said Mr Chua, who started Ho Bee in 1987 as a small developer focusing on industrial property. ‘In the 1990s, we became a decent-sized developer when we developed the Southaven I and II condos in Upper Bukit Timah at the foot of Bukit Timah hill,’ the 61-year-old said.

Even before the Singapore property market peaked in 1996, Ho Bee had turned its attention to London. Initially it bought several floors of apartments off-plan from London builders and later bought apartment blocks which it subsequently sold as the market went up.

‘When we understood the market better, we developed this trophy building opposite the Houses of Parliament,’ said Mr Chua, referring to the Parliament View project.

Things panned out well for Ho Bee as it managed to ride the jump in London property prices as well as the appreciation of the pound – in stark contrast to the lean times for Singapore’s property market during the Asian crisis.

‘Then around 2001-2002, we thought it was time to come back to Singapore,’ Mr Chua said. The company developed several projects such as Rio Vista condo at Hougang beside the Serangoon River, jointly with MCL, and Amaninda in Thomson Road, before it turned its attention to clinching sites at Sentosa Cove when these went up for sale from late 2003.

The rest, as they say, is history.

Source : Business Times – 10 Oct 2009

Developer KOP sails into yacht business

PROPERTY developer KOP Group is moving into the yacht business with the launch of a $48 million joint venture that is poised to sell and manage luxury cruisers.

The new business, Princess Yachts Asia, has secured the exclusive distribution rights for British luxury yacht brand Princess Yachts in Singapore and most of China.

KOP and its partner, China conglomerate Reignwood Group, whose businesses include property development, are investing the money over the next 12 months. KOP holds a 40 per cent stake, and Reignwood 60 per cent.

Initially, the business is offering four Princess yachts in Singapore for sale or lease.

KOP has set up yacht management service company Aqua Voyage to work alongside Princess Yachts Asia and offer private cruises to destinations across Asia. It will also help yacht owners lease out their boats on the charter market.

KOP’s chief executive officer, Ms Ong Chih Ching, said yesterday that the group’s foray into the leisure marine sector was based on what it saw as the huge growth potential in Singapore.

‘As Singapore’s status as a luxury lifestyle destination grows… we believe there’s an opportunity for us to elevate Singapore as a global leisure boat and luxury lifestyle hub,’ she said.

The number of marinas in Singapore has grown steadily over the years and now includes the Marina at Keppel Bay, One Degree 15 Marina Club on Sentosa island, the Republic of Singapore Yacht Club on the West Coast and Raffles Marina at Tuas.

KOP group is majority-owned by the Dubai Group and known for innovative residential projects in Singapore, such as the luxury Hamilton Scotts high-rise condominium that features special elevators that carry cars up to the residential units.

The group is currently looking for opportunities to enter Singapore’s mid-market residential segment in city-fringe areas, said Ms Ong. It has set aside some $350 million for international business opportunities in the next 12 to 18 months.

KOP is also in talks with local travel agencies to begin offering customised cruises to destinations in Asia.

Reignwood Group chairman Chanchai Ruayrungruang said: ‘We are confident that this venture will be successful in meeting considerable pent-up demand for the nautical lifestyle here.’

Ms Ong added: ‘We have got a very positive response so far. We believe that yachts will become a mainstream experience in Singapore soon.

Source : Straits Times – 29 Sep 2009

Bungalow brokers pitch in

With market sentiment improving, transaction activity has picked up and bungalow owners, particularly those of GCBs, are readjusting prices upwards. They are turning to top bungalow specialists to achieve their target prices.

WITH THE STOCK market recovering and the benchmark Straits Times Index gaining 17.7% since April 28 and 46% since its low on March 9, sentiment in the property market has also improved markedly. All this has translated into a pick-up in transaction volume in the bungalow segment, and even renewed interest in the Good Class Bungalow segment in the past two weeks.

Marketing agent and bungalow specialist K H Tan, 46, is pushing the envelope on GCB sales. A fortnight ago, he persuaded the owner of an original 1960s bungalow perched on a hilltop with a long, winding driveway at 2 Swettenham Road that his property was worth $1,000 psf. Thus, the single-storey bungalow, which sits on a freehold land area of 33,293 sq ft, has a guide price of $33 million.

A property-title search found that the house belongs to George Quek, founder and chairman of BreadTalk, and his wife, Katherine Lee. A caveat lodged with URA Realis last July showed that the purchase price was $27 million, or $811 psf. Today, the indicative price is $1,000 psf.

Tan, the marketing agent, has been a specialist in the marketing and selling of GCBs for the last five years and brokered many of the high-profile bungalow transactions in the $20 million range. “I’m quite selective about the bungalows I sell,” he says.

The largest GCB transaction Tan has ever done was that of a bungalow at Victoria Park, which has a freehold land area of 32,077 sq ft. It was sold for $29.5 million, or $920 psf, in mid-2007 at the peak of the property boom. That was a record high in the GCB segment in terms of quantum price. He also brokered the sale of niche developer George Lim’s two newly built luxury GCBs — Nos 37 and 39 Leedon Road — which were sold for $25 million and $27.5 million respectively last year. He is now the marketing agent for Lim’s bungalow at 6 Leedon Park, which has an indicative price of $21 million.

Not the typical property agent decked out in a smart suit or shirt and tie, Tan has not worn a tie in 15 years. Instead, he wears a necklace with a jade Kuan Yin pendant.

Tan attributes his success to his intuition, or what he calls his “sixth sense in predicting the property market accurately”. An early riser, he wakes up at 4.30 every morning and, by 5am, he is already at the Botanic Gardens for his one-hour walk. “It’s during these walks that I get some of my best ideas for marketing a property or on bungalow designs for my clients,” he says.

Tan is not opening the sale of the house at 2 Swettenham Road to just anyone who can afford it, but is pre-selecting 30 prospective clients whom he intends to invite to view the property and to participate in a closed tender for the GCB on June 18. His criteria are based on not just a client’s net worth and prominence but also on whether the individual is a philanthropist. Tan, who is also managing director of Newsman Realty, says he has already received a dozen offers from those who have viewed the property.

He wants to link the sale of the bungalow to a charity drive to raise funds for the KK Hospital Health Endowment Fund. He is also looking at charging a $1,000 fee for each tender document, and all proceeds from the sale will go to the fund. On top of that, both the owner and Tan have agreed to a target price, and anything beyond that amount will be donated to the fund. Tan is also pledging a portion of his commission from the sale towards the fund.

The other reason for pre-selecting prospective buyers for the Swettenham Road bungalow is that Tan hopes the new buyer will retain the façade of the original 1960s house. The current property has a total built-up area of just 3,400 sq ft, comprising a main house with three bedrooms, and a study attached to the master bedroom. A separate, smaller building, used as a guest house, has a bedroom and a living room. If the new owner wants to add more bedrooms to the house, there is room for a new extension at the back, which can bring the total built-up area to 5,000 sq ft if maintained as a single-storey bungalow, adds Tan. The idea is to ensure that the façade of the new extension is consistent with the design of the existing property.

TRANSACTIONS UP, ASKING PRICES BACK TO EARLY 2OO7 LEVELS?

Transactions in the GCB market, which had languished for much of the year, have also picked up in recent weeks as sentiment turned more positive. Just last week, Tan handled the sale of a GCB in Binjai Park, with a freehold land area of 22,000 sq ft, for $19.8 million. A GCB in Cluny Hill with a freehold land area of 37,039 sq ft recently received an offer of $30 million, but the owner turned it down as he intends to tear down the existing bungalow and build a mansion on the sprawling site. According to caveats lodged with URA Realis, the property had changed hands three times in the last two years. The first was in January 2007 for $15 million, the second was in June that year for $20.2 million, and the third time was in May last year, when it was resold for $21.5 million. Another bungalow with a 19,000 sq ft freehold area at Cluny Hill was also said to have changed hands a week or two ago for $17.67 million, or $930 psf, according to sources.

At Jervois Road, a GCB with a land area of 15,070 sq ft was reportedly sold for an undisclosed amount. The last time the property changed hands was in 2004, for $8.45 million, or $561 psf. Over at Jalan Bahasa, a row of new three-storey detached homes has also been put on the market. The developer is said to be niche luxury bungalow developer Satinder Garcha of Elevation Developments. One of the bungalows at Jalan Bahasa, with a land area of 4,308 sq ft and built-up area of 5,300 sq ft, was recently sold for $5.8 million and another for $6.5 million. According to market sources, a GCB at Astrid Hill with a land area of 21,119 sq ft and which changed hands last year for $13.8 million was recently sold for $13 million.

Tan is also marketing Elevation’s brand-new GCB at 8E Gallop Road, which has a total builtup area of 9,000 sq ft and freehold land area of 16,000 sq ft. The newly completed bungalow has six bedrooms and an entertainment room. The owner, who has received five offers so far, ranging from $16 million to $18.5 million, is said to be holding to the asking price of $19 million to $20 million.

A new benchmark price for top-end GCBs could be set if Tan successfully concludes the sale of GCBs with price tags above $30 million. Apart from 2 Swettenham, Tan is also the marketing agent for a GCB in Cluny Park. The bungalow has a large freehold land area of 37,000 sq ft and the owner has an indicative price of $39 million. The owner recently received an offer of $33 million, but he has turned it down and is sticking to his asking price.

Other bungalow specialists have also noted a pick-up in sentiment and activity. What is clear is that sellers have also revised their asking prices upwards. “This week, every owner has raised his price,” says Michael French, managing director of Asia Premier Property Consultants. “I’ve an SMS here,” he adds, pointing to his mobile phone. “The owner’s asking price has jumped from $13 million to $17 million. The stock market has risen 300 to 400 points but fundamentals haven’t changed. But suddenly, everyone has this kind of money to buy?”

Sentiment has certainly turned positive, though. French says the landed-home segment — from terraced houses to small bungalows with land parcels of up to 10,000 sq ft — has been buzzing in the past fortnight. “Buyers have been queuing up to give agents cheques,” he says. Why? “Because they are afraid if they don’t buy now, prices will go up further next quarter.”

French reckons that the pick-up in activity is sustainable, but his only fear is that it may get derailed by an unexpected event. So far, the STI has shrugged off fears over the swine flu, and both the stock and property markets have chugged along. “In 4Q1999 to 1Q2000, the market was in a bull run,” recalls French. “But after the tech stock bubble burst in March 2000, the Singapore [property] market sank and never quite recovered [until three years ago]. This could be repeated because fundamentals are absent even as people talk about the ‘green shoots’ of economic recovery.”

Called “the bungalow king” by a newspaper in 2000, French, who was born in Singapore to British parents, has adopted the moniker ever since, and even his website address is BungalowKing.net. He has been specialising in the GCB market since 1995, and started with a small property firm called Challenger Properties before moving to Chesterton International. “There was a joke going around at that time, and they used to say, ‘When Michael French walks into Chesterton, the whole building shakes,’” he says. “I don’t know whether it was the feng shui or market conditions but, at Chesterton, I was closing almost one GCB sale a month and, I would say, I was the No 1 agent in the whole of Chesterton.” He was there from 1998 to 2000, before he left and set up Asia Premier in 2000.

‘DOG-EAT-DOG WORLD’

With the improved market sentiment and pickup in activity, agents are also increasingly seeing other agents jumping in even after the option agreement on a property has been signed and telling the owner that he or she can get a better price for the GCB. “This is a very common practice in the market,” says French. “The property market is a dog-eat-dog world because the stakes are very high. You do one transaction, there can be $100,000 to $500,000 [in commission] on the table. So, when you’re there, you have to close the deal as quickly as possible, even if you have to get the option signed at midnight or 1am. You must get him to sign [the option].

“[Otherwise], as soon as the owner tells another agent he has an offer, the agent will say, ‘I can bring you half a million or another million dollars more,’ and then the owner will suddenly panic, and everything will be on hold. That’s very common. It’s already started. Agents are now coming in, and every owner is now raising prices.”

William Wong, RealStar Premier Property Consultant’s managing director, has also noticed this phenomenon, which he says is very common especially in a rising market. “So, we always talk about a concrete cheque offer,” he says. “Everybody can tell you what price they can get, but can they get a cheque offer? It’s very common practice in the real-estate industry, especially in the high-end bungalow and GCB segment.”

Since 2004, Wong’s RealStar has been specialising in the landed-housing segment and mainly bungalows in the prime districts of 9, 10 and 11, as well as in the east, in Districts 15 and 16, and the GCBs in Binjai Park and Yarwood area in District 21. Last week, it reported a 40% increase in the number of landed- home transactions in April compared with the previous month. This spike comes on the back of the firm’s sale of semi-detached properties on Boscombe and Warehome Roads in the east in early April. “Within three weeks of the launch, we are left with only two units at Wareham Road, with all four units at Boscome sold out,” says Wong. The most recent transacted price was $3.25 million for a semi-detached house at Boscombe Road.

In the last two months, Wong has also seen the asking price for a bungalow in Cluny Park increase to $15.6 million recently, from $12 million. “Surprisingly, [asking prices] have gone up again, and they’ve gone up earlier than expected,” he says. “It’s good because, over the last couple of months, the number of transactions has also gone up.”

IS THIS TREND SUSTAINABLE?

Wong attributes the rise in prices partly to the recovery in the stock markets. Three to four months ago, the entry level for GCBs was $10 million to $11 million, observes Wong. Buyers are realising that the entry level has increased from $10 million previously, and are now prepared to adjust their offer price to between $11 million and $12 million, he notes. “But sellers are not accepting them yet,” he acknowledges. “Prices are back to levels seen in early 2007. And it’s also starting to happen in the smaller-bungalow segment.”

In Holland Grove, for instance, the owner of an 8,000 sq ft bungalow with an asking price of $6.8 million has received an offer of $6.6 million, which normally would have been accepted, but has turned it down. Wong says: “These days, we will convey to buyers that, from what we understand, a few days ago, the seller’s asking price was this much, but now it may have been adjusted. So, we manage the buyers’ expectations in case they get disappointed when they offer a price, and find that the seller has since adjusted it upwards again. It’s almost like chasing a moving target.”

Most recently, RealStar brokered the sale of a bungalow at Dyson Road with a land area of 9,000 sq ft for $6.8 million. Wong is also marketing a GCB in Leedon Park with a land area of 15,500 sq ft and asking price of $13 million. Another GCB, with a land area of 15,000 sq ft on Dalvey Road, has an asking price of $18 million. “These days, the asking price for GCBs is back to about $1,000 psf,” says Wong. For Wong, the good news is that buyers have also upped their offer prices in tandem with owners’ prices. “I foresee the transaction volume should be pretty good for the next few months,” he adds. “It’s partly due to the stock market.”

Wong has also noticed that medium-sized developers are again on the lookout for redevelopment land — for both landed homes as well as apartments and condominiums.

Newsman’s Tan plans to conquer new territory — Sentosa Cove — in the next six months. He says some developers have already invited him to market their bungalows there. Two years ago, the prices of 99-year leasehold Sentosa Cove bungalow parcels had even exceeded those of freehold GCBs in the traditional prime districts, and Tan believes there is “a high possibility” that it will happen again when the integrated resorts are ready, and the market stabilises. “So, I think Sentosa prices will go up in two years,” he says.

He estimates that, by then, seafront bungalows will command $1,500 to $1,800 psf, while non-seafront bungalows will see prices of $1,200 to $1,300 psf. As for bungalows that face golf courses, such as Elevation Golf Villas, Tan thinks that, given the exclusivity and the fairways facing bungalows with basement parking, bungalows there could command up to $2,000 psf. With that optimism, Tan hopes he will also set new benchmark prices at Sentosa Cove, just like he did in the prime GCB market.

Source : The Edge –  May 2009

Sale of private homes to foreigners slips to 24%

As foreigners retreated from the Singapore property market in the face of the global financial meltdown, their share of private home purchases eased to 24 per cent last year from the high of 26 per cent in 2007, according to DTZ’s latest analysis of caveats.

Conversely, Singaporeans’ share of the private home buying pie rose from 67 per cent in 2007 to 73 per cent in 2008, with companies making up the rest of the buying pool.

Giving a breakdown of the foreign buying pool, which includes permanent residents (PRs), DTZ said that non-PR foreigners accounted for 11 per cent of total caveats lodged for private homes last year, down from a 13 per cent share in 2007.

Singapore PRs’ share held steady at 13 per cent, supported by the increase in the number of PRs in recent years.

Projects that drew the most Singapore PR buyers last year were chiefly in the mass-market segment such as Melville Park in Simei, Livia in Pasir Ris, The Lakeshore in Jurong Lake District and Clover by the Park in Bishan.

The most popular projects among non-PR foreigners were The Lakeshore, Citylights, Icon.

Districts 9, 10, 15 and 16 were the most sought-after haunts of foreigners (including PRs) who bought private residential properties in Singapore last year. Districts 15 and 16 cover the East Coast area.

Malaysians pipped Indonesians to account for the lion’s share, or 20 per cent of foreign buyers of private homes in 2008, followed by Indonesians (19 per cent), Indians (12 per cent) and mainland Chinese (11 per cent).

DTZ noted that in the fourth quarter of 2008, homes priced above $1 million accounted for 72 per cent of purchases by Indonesians, higher than a 41 per cent share of purchases by Malaysians.

The property consultancy firm’s senior director (research) Chua Chor Hoon reckons that the proportion of foreign buying will stay low in the next 12 months as Singapore property loses some of its relative shine.

‘Steeper currency declines in markets like Australia and UK have made property prices there look more attractive in comparison with Singapore. And investors will become more cautious as the global financial crisis deepens,’ she said.

DTZ’s analysis of caveats captured by the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s Realis system also showed that the number of private home buyers who had HDB addresses fell in Q4 and the whole of 2008.

However the pace of decline was even faster among those with private addresses. As a result, HDB upgraders’ contribution to private home purchases increased from 22 per cent in 2007 to 36 per cent in 2008 – the highest level in four years.

‘In 2008, few investors and speculators, in particular those with private addresses, entered the market and launches of high-end projects were held back.

‘On the other hand, there was a wider spread of projects in the suburbs launched at $1 million or below per unit, which are more affordable for HDB upgraders,’ said Ms Chua.

In general, private homes in districts 15, 18 and 19 were most popular among HDB upgraders.

Projects with the highest number of developer sales to HDB upgraders in 2008 included Livia and Clover by the Park, while in the secondary market, the top-sellers to HDB upgraders were The Centris in Jurong West, Melville Park and Citylights.

Ms Chua reckons that HDB upgraders will continue to feature prominently in the private home buying pie going ahead. ‘The focus this year will be on buying for own occupation rather than for investment or speculation; most HDB dwellers would fit the bill,’ she said.

Source : Business Times – Mar 2009

The Quayside Isle

 

THE QUAYSIDEISLE

 

 

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ROMANTIC WATERFRONT VILLAGE MEETS TROPICAL PARADISE ..

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Imagine the smooth fluidity of the sea, a lushly undulating landscape and a majestic gliding “seahorse” that anchors the peninsula. This is what visitors can expect at The Quayside Isle on Sentosa Cove. The concept blends elements from our natural environment into its architecture, enhancing the beauty and attraction of nature itself.

 

The grand design comprises a proposed seven-storey, 320-room five-star hotel, a three-storey waterfront commercial site and a six-storey condominium development.

 

Collectively, they represent the epitome of the tropical resort experience..

 

For a Private Prelaunch Preview on The Quayside Isle ,

Please call (65) 9858 0900  or  Click Here

 

For more info, visit Website: www.OneSentosa.com

 

 

More mass market projects to launch

Developers are planning to launch more mass market projects this weekend to take advantage of a recent surge in buying interest.

Hiap Hoe Group, a niche developer, will officially launch its 118-unit The Beverly, located at Toh Tuck Road, this Saturday. The starting selling price is $648 per square foot (psf), which Hiap Hoe says is an ‘attractive starting selling price’.

‘We have designed The Beverly for those looking for affordable, high-quality residential developments in a good location,’ said Teo Ho Beng, the company’s managing director.

The Beverly’s two, three and four-bedroom apartments range from 1,120 sq ft to 4,187 sq ft, while its double-storey penthouses range from 2,099 sq ft to 3,757 sq ft and are each outfitted with a private roof garden and pool.

On the other side of the island at Pasir Ris, Sustained Land Pte Ltd will also officially launch Coastal Breeze Residences come this weekend. Two and three-bedroom units at the 63-unit development will sell for $610-$660 psf.

Sustained Land has sold 13 units in Coastal Breeze Residences since the start of 2008 in a soft launch. The units, which were mostly prime apartments on higher floors, went at an average price of $690 psf.

The remaining units are mostly three-bedders between 1159 sq ft and 1356 sq ft in size and there are also duplex penthouses. In terms of absolute value, for example, the price for a three-room 1159 sq ft unit starts at $712,000.

Meanwhile, the UOL Group is expected to launch its 646-unit Double Bay Residences in Simei sometime next week. Market talk has it that the project could be launched at $650-680 psf.

The three projects are coming hot on the heels of two successful launches earlier this month. Units at Frasers Centrepoint’s Caspian condominium near Jurong Lake and Alexis @ Alexandra, a project by joint venture partners Yi Kai Group and Fission Group, sold quickly upon the projects’ launches.

One market insider said that developers are taking pricing cues from each other, and making sure their newly launched projects are priced to sell. ‘There is a sense that people will only be willing to buy projects in the $600-plus psf range, and also only units that don’t cost too much in total. People don’t really want to pay more than $600,000 or $700,000-plus in these times,’ he said.

Developers are also throwing in more upmarket features into their mass market offerings to entice buyers. Each of The Beverly’s 118 apartments is served by private lifts that open into the lobby of its interior. UOL’s Double Bay Residences will also offer extras such as full-length windows in the kitchen, the company has said.

Source : Business Times – Feb 2009

HK developer ups luxury home prices

 

After selling 150 units in 10 days, they plan a 5% raise

Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd, Hong Kong’s biggest developer by market value, is raising prices for a new luxury residential project by 5 per cent after selling 150 units in 10 days.

‘The response has been so good, we are raising the prices gradually,’ Victor Lui, executive director of Sun Hung Kai Real Estate Agency, said in a phone interview yesterday.

The builder, which released 200 apartments at its Kowloon project in the first launch, sold the 150 units for HK$14,000 to HK$20,000 a square foot, generating HK$3.5 billion (S$689.2 million) revenue, Mr Lui said. It’s now selling three-bedroom units at the project, called The Cullinan, for HK$14,700 to HK$21,000 a square foot, based on Bloomberg calculations using his figures.

The sale may indicate investment in Hong Kong’s luxury homes is picking up, Centaline Property Agency Ltd, one of the city’s biggest real-estate agencies, said. Prices of luxury homes, defined as those worth at least HK$10 million, fell 19.2 per cent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, CB Richard Ellis Group Inc said last week.

‘There’s a bunch of cash-rich people out there who prefer holding real assets such as property, gold as they become more wary of other financial investments,’ said Wong Leung-sing, an associate director at Centaline. ‘Under the current environment, The Cullinan sale has exceeded expectations and it’d be a harbinger of an increasingly active investment luxury market.’

Sun Hung Kai’s shares rose as much as 4.2 per cent on the news, the most since Feb 9. They traded 0.8 per cent higher at HK$60.65 at 3.05pm Hong Kong time, while the Hang Seng Property Index, which tracks the shares of six developers, advanced 2.7 per cent.

The number of units sold and the revenue generated were earlier reported by the South China Morning Post.

Prices fetched at The Cullinan may entice Hang Lung Properties Ltd, Hong Kong’s fourth-biggest developer by value, to sell units at its nearby Harbourside project, analyst Manfred Ho said. Shares of Hang Lung rose as much as 6.9 per cent yesterday, snapping a nine-day losing streak. They traded 4.7 per cent higher at HK$14.30.

Hang Lung has ‘quite a big number of unsold units at The Harbourside, so if The Cullinan is selling well, definitely they will be one of the direct beneficiaries’, said Mr Ho, a Hong Kong-based analyst at BOC International Group.

Hang Lung has about 2,000 homes unsold at its Harbourside and Long Beach developments in Hong Kong, as it held back apartment sales last year after prices fell as much as 25 per cent from last year’s peak.

Sun Hung Kai may start selling the second batch of units next week, Mr Lui said, adding that the developer will decide on the number after wrapping up the first launch. Buyers in the first launch included investors from China, he said.

Sun Hung Kai is also in the final stages of negotiating the sale of four penthouse units, Mr Lui said. One of them, a 4,000 square-foot duplex, is priced at HK$50,000 a square foot while the other three smaller ones at more than HK$30,000, he said.

Standing at 270 metres, The Cullinan will be Hong Kong’s tallest residential project and includes 825 units.

Still, some analysts said prices for The Cullinan are not enough to lift the entire Hong Kong property market, which is weighed down by a recession and rising unemployment.

‘Hong Kong’s economy is really dependent on the financial sector, which is volatile, and trade, where we don’t see any sign of improvement,’ Cusson Leung, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG, said yesterday.

Hong Kong’s economy slid into a recession in the third quarter, its first since 2003, as the global slowdown hurt domestic spending and demand for exports.

Unemployment rose to 4.6 per cent in the three months ended Jan 31, the highest rate since September 2006, the government said on Feb 17.

Home prices on the Peak, Hong Kong’s most-expensive residential area, slumped 30.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008 from a year earlier, the steepest decline since the Asian financial crisis in 1998, CB Richard Ellis said last week. The average price was HK$16,678 a square foot, it said.

Hong Kong’s record price for a luxury home was for a house in Sun Hung Kai’s Severn 8 project on the Peak that sold in the first half of last year for almost HK$56,000 a square foot.

Source : Business Times – Feb 2009

Developers’ home sales top 1,000 units in Feb

 

Developers have achieved an 18-month high in private homes sold in a month, with the 1,000-unit mark having already been breached so far in February.

Most of the developers who are prepared to pare their price expectations to more affordable levels continue to be rewarded. A near 10 per cent price chop was all it took for GuocoLand to sell off almost 90 per cent of the 182 units at The Quartz condo in Buangkok relaunched last week.

The Singapore-listed property arm of Malaysian tycoon Quek Leng Chan has found buyers for about 160 units since last Tuesday’s price cut. This means the 625-unit project is now left with only around 20 units, compared with 182 units prior to the relaunch.

GuocoLand trimmed the 99-year-leasehold project’s average price to $595 per square foot (psf), compared with $650 psf during the height of the market in 2007.

Besides the more competitive pricing, market watchers attributed the successful outcome to the fact that The Quartz will be ready for occupation soon. Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) for the condo is expected in a couple of months.

The bulk of buyers are believed to have bought for their own occupation. About 98 per cent of buyers are Singaporeans, 80 per cent of whom live in the vicinity, mainly with HDB addresses, a GuocoLand spokeswoman said.

‘They like the design, layout and location of the development, which is near Buangkok MRT Station and also accessible by Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway,’ she added.

The bulk of the 182 units were three-bedroom apartments. On average, a typical three-bedder of slightly under 1,100 sq ft costs around $650,000, BT understands.

Over at Jurong Lake District, Frasers Centrepoint found buyers for another 35 units for its Caspian condo over the weekend, raising total sales in the 99-year-leasehold project to 515 units.

The overall average price achieved is just over $600 psf, reflecting the sale of better-facing units in the past week. About 32 per cent of Caspian’s buyers have opted for an interest absorption scheme; they will pay 3 per cent more in exchange for not having to foot beyond the 20 per cent initial payment until the project receives TOP. On average, three-bedroom units at Caspian cost $700,000 to $750,000.

At River Valley Road, Fortune Development found buyers for another six units at RV Suites over the weekend. Half the 96 units in the freehold project have been sold. The project comprises mostly units of 500-550 sq ft, and the average price is about $1,300 psf. East Coast Properties sold another four units over the weekend for its D’Chateau @ Shelford, which is priced at $1,000-$1,100 psf on average.

Market watchers note that over at Livia in Pasir Ris, some of the 30 units released at $620 psf on average on Valentine’s Day weekend are still available. Units are relatively large (a typical three-bedder is about 1,259 sq ft), resulting in a bigger unit price quantum of at least $750,000 for a three-bedroom unit. Potential buyers may also be waiting for new projects to be launched in the area before deciding on their purchase.

Seasoned property consultants say that for mass-market projects to move today, they should be priced at around $600 psf at most, and the unit price should not exceed $700,000, in order for them to be affordable to HDB upgraders.

Source : Business Times -  Feb 2009

Property developers’ earnings sink

 

EARNINGS at property developers here have sunk like a tonne of bricks as confidence in the residential property market continues to take a beating.

Wheelock Properties yesterday reported a 63 per cent drop in full-year net profit for last year, while MCL Land sank deep into the red, reversing a healthy bottom line a year earlier.

In view of the poor market, Wheelock Properties says it is ‘currently reviewing the building plans’ for its proposed luxury project Ardmore 3, while MCL Land is reviewing ‘the carrying value of development properties for sale in Singapore’.

For the year ended Dec 31 last year, Wheelock Properties posted a net profit of $100.9 million, down from $273.5 million, even though revenue rose 19.4 per cent to $454.6 million. The previous period was nine months due to a change in the company’s year-end.

The company attributed the higher revenues to the sale of units at Scotts Square as well as higher rental rates accrued by Wheelock Place, the group’s office and retail property in Orchard Road.

Although the depressed residential market here meant prices of freehold non-landed private prime homes fell 14 per cent in the last quarter, the group sold 13 units in Scotts Square last year for a revenue of $54 million, or $4,028 per sq ft, it said.

Total sales for the project have now reached $903 million, and ‘this revenue will be recognised progressively in the accounts until Scotts Square is completed’ next year.

Wheelock Place was also revalued – from $700 million to $790 million – last year.

Earnings per share were 8.44 cents, down from 22.86 cents the previous year.

Net asset value per share stood at $1.72, down from $1.82 a year earlier.

The board has proposed a final dividend of six cents a share.

MCL Land reported a net loss of US$107.3 million (S$165 million) for the year ended Dec 31 last year, after posting a net profit of US$61.9 million in 2007.

The group recorded full-year revenue of US$343.1 million, a 12 per cent drop. This was mainly attributable to the completion of Mera Springs and The Esta.

The group acknowledged that the residential property markets in Singapore and Malaysia ‘were difficult due to the damaging effects of the global financial crisis’.

It noted that the prices of high-end condominiums in the prime district fell by 20 per cent to 30 per cent last year, while prices of mid-tier homes in the central areas fell by 10 per cent to 15 per cent.

Still, the group believes it is ‘well-placed to weather the difficult economic and market conditions’, with ’strong cash flow’ generated from the sale of three projects – The Fernhill, Tierra Vue and Hillcrest Villa.

Loss per share was 29 US cents, down from earnings per share of 16.73 US cents the previous year.

Net asset value per share stood at US$1.06 as at Dec 31, down from US$1.42 a year earlier.

The board has recommended a final dividend of 10 Singapore cents per share.

Source : Straits Times – Feb 2009