singapore property market

Property prices set for continued growth

This year's Hungry Ghost Festival, which is celebrated on the seventh month of the Chinese lunar calendar, comes at a time when the global economy is also slowing. Traditionally, it means a quieter property market as investors and developers lie low during what they perceive to be an inauspicious occasion. The Singapore property market is no exception, but experts said lower volumes may not be due to...

Solved – the Rental spike mystery

It was caused not by a jump in demand, but by a contraction in supply LAST week, I suggested that the private housing oversupply may have been understated. This is because units that have been bought by investors can still be considered as part of the housing supply until they are resold or are tenanted. If the rental income cannot cover the mortgage payments and if the owners are highly geared, then...

Home-buyers today cautious, but genuine

Applications for Park Central@AMK roll in, but how many will translate into actual sales? SINCE its launch last week, :more than1,000 applications have been received for 578 units at Park Central@AMK, Singapore’s third condominium-style public housing development. With developer United Engineers (UE) pricing its Design, Build and Sell Scheme (DBSS) project at $490 psf to $500 psf, it remains to be seen...

Private property prices slow

PRIVATE home prices rose a slender 0.2 per cent over the second quarter. That’s half the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s earlier flash estimate of 0.4 per cent growth. This was the third consecutive quarter in which prices rose more slowly, after rocketing 31.2 per cent last year. “The continued weakening of the property price index continues to reflect cautious sentiment in view of the slowing US...

Private home prices up 0.2% in Q2, slower than earlier estimate

Prices of private homes in Singapore grew at a slower pace in the second quarter than initially projected - climbing at just 0.2 per cent against an earlier estimate of 0.4 per cent. This is a far cry from the 3.7 per cent growth in the previous three months. Analysts said this is the first time that final numbers have come in lower than flash estimates, suggesting that home prices are finally...

Public housing hots up while private cools

Prices for public housing on the resale market have risen, while those for private property have moderated for the second quarter of 2008. According to latest official figures, there has also been little upward movement in the private property rental market. Data for the HDB resale and rental markets based on transactions in Q2 saw HDB's Resale Price Index (RPI) up 4.5 per cent, compared to the 3.7 per...

Oversupply worse than expected?

There is a distinct possibility of lower prices with so many developments set to be completed at the same time RECENT arguments against earlier predictions of a private housing oversupply are overblown, and cannot be further from the truth. In fact, those predicting an oversupply are probably understating their case. How bad the market fares will depend on the economy. But, leaving the economic factor...

Jones Lang LaSalle says S’pore’s prime property market to ease further

Rents in Singapore's prime residential sector are expected to ease further. According to consultants Jones Lang LaSalle, it's expecting to see a 4.5 per cent contraction for the whole year. It has already weakened by two per cent year to date. In its mid-year review on the Singapore property market, Jones Lang LaSalle also notes an easing in the resale prices of luxury projects in the prime...

The IR effect on housing demand

Up to 75,000 new jobs could help to prop up market HOMES for the masses have always been the backbone of Singapore’s residential market. And, with the two integrated resorts (IRs) expected to employ some 75,000 people, demand for such housing is likely to go up. Both IRs are expected to draw a significant influx of “foreign talent”, simply because Singapore does not have enough people with the...

‘Realistic’ prices drive home sales

FOR nine months over an unfolding global credit crunch, developers here held back from pushing out condominiums and houses into the market. Homebuyers found little variety in the showrooms. But when the supply gate was unlatched in June, interest poured back in — especially into the mass-market segment — resulting in a bumper month for sales despite the recent stock market and economic gloom. In...

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