At long last Prop price is falling!!

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Some analysts have put further price declines for resale Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats on the table, after the resale price index (RPI) fell for the first time in more than four years in the third quarter of the year - PHOTO: SPH
[SINGAPORE] Some analysts have put further price declines for resale Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats on the table, after the resale price index (RPI) fell for the first time in more than four years in the third quarter of the year.

Flash estimates from HDB yesterday put the index at 205.1 in Q3, a 0.7 per cent drop from the previous quarter. This is the first time that the RPI has fallen since the first quarter of 2009, at the outset of the global financial crisis, when it lost 0.8 per cent.

Consultants were not surprised by the drop, as a combination of cooling measures, and new or tweaked government regulations over the year took their toll.

"The decline was to happen sooner or later," said Eugene Lim, key executive officer at ERA Realty, as the resale market continues to show signs of stabilising.

Said Nicholas Mak, executive director for research and consultancy at SLP International: "This contraction is partly contributed by the government's efforts to cool the public housing market, which resulted in the decline of ... cash-over-valuation (COV) in recent transactions, especially for larger HDB flats."

The COV cash premium took a hard dive in the third quarter, figures from estate agencies show. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, ERA said overall median COVs fell 33.3 per cent to $18,000, with the biggest absolute falls in terms of quantum coming from executive flats.

The $18,000 figure overall tallies with PropNex Realty's data, which noted this was a 40 per cent drop from the $32,000 median COV at the start of the year.

Resale volumes did not fare any better. ERA data showed that the number of transactions fell 36.7 per cent quarter-on-quarter to 3,193 units in Q3, with the largest decline of 41.9 per cent coming from the executive flat segment.

Demand in Q3 was hit by factors such as a tighter Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR) on HDB housing loans and a Total Debt Servicing Ratio (TDSR) framework introduced in June.

"Due to a cut off in access to large loans and hence 'easy money', there are very few buyers looking at investing in large or well-located flats," said Ong Kah Seng, director at R'ST Research.

A recently-introduced three-year wait for new Permanent Residents (PRs) before they can buy a resale flat and the loosening of regulations for singles to buy BTO flats has also diverted demand away from the secondary market.

On the supply side, the pipeline remains ample, with HDB on track to launch 25,000 Build-to-Order (BTO) flats this year. Next month, it will offer close to 8,000 units under BTO and Sale of Balance Flats exercises.

Mohd Ismail, CEO of PropNex Realty, said the abundant supply may have created a "re-balancing effect" in the resale market, gradually softening price growth to a more sustainable level.

Sellers are now also less willing to cash out without a sufficiently attractive offer, as they may not have enough to buy another flat with similar attributes due to the tighter MSR terms, said ERA's Mr Lim.

He expects resale transactions to hit a historical low at below 20,000 units this year, and that COVs will fall to around $10,000 by the end of the year.

"With lower COVs, lower resale transaction prices are expected. As we see more lower priced transactions, flat valuations will also come down."

Analysts generally did not see price trends picking up in Q4, as sales are traditionally slower over the festive period, and as new property measures introduced in late August work their way through.

For the year, resale flat price growth could be anywhere from minus 1 per cent to 2 per cent, they predicted. PropNex's Mr Ismail believes resale prices could fall as much as 3 to 5 per cent next year.

R'ST's Mr Ong feels buying interest could pick up in the second half of 2014, when an "equilibrium point" is reached where prices and COVs come down to the point of being more affordable.

"Even (if) demand stabilises or slightly recovers from H2 2014, sellers cannot easily raise prices, since the MSR cap essentially restricts buyers from borrowing excessively to finance the flat," he said.
 
Hee hee happy like fuck over 0.7% dip....not even a technical correction.
How many % has it gone up in recent years?
Next they will be predicting a crash coming soon....
 
Nothing beat interest rate, If interest rate more than 4% we will see price falling much much faster.
 
Nothing beat interest rate, If interest rate more than 4% we will see price falling much much faster.

I also wanna interest rate to go up.. Fucking Cb PAP has been artificially depressing the rate to benefit themselves
 
Hee hee happy like fuck over 0.7% dip....not even a technical correction.
How many % has it gone up in recent years?
Next they will be predicting a crash coming soon....

sure happy. this is just only for 1 quarter and the beginning of the turn of the curve. if you understand the economics of market crash, the next quarter fall would be even bigger. Like I said last week talk is cheap when you and others are trying to talk up the market . put your money down where your talk is instead of just hot air. trying to talk up the market because of vested interests like the bankers or property developers. now the after effects of US garmen shutdown and the debt crises not over yet would exarcerbate the fall for the next few quarters. if interest rates goes up by a few percentage points (expected with US garmen shutdown) expect a crash. of course MAS knows what is coming with all the sensitive data they have. thats why the sudden curbs on all loans , car, property and credit cards 2 months ago.
 
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Y would interest rate go up? The gahmen controls the rates n if economy slowdown which is happening now. To raise rates is stupid.lets say if rates go up n prices drop. Buyers who take loans will not benefit as the cost of servicing goes up. So buyer still lose if prices drop as servicing cost goes up.

Unless u rich enough to pay cash..but i dont think many buyers r in tat position.

So b careful for wat u wish for.



Nothing beat interest rate, If interest rate more than 4% we will see price falling much much faster.
 
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U clearly not a player!! Prop is driven by sentiments. Interest rate r like mosquito bites. Interest rate may go up but not to 4%!!
 
Managing property sector is like driving a million ton tanker. When it comes down and u step on the brakes, it takes a long while to stop. That's why they r in cycles, not sure whether it is still 7-8 year cycles but def the cycle theory still holds!!
 
The only way property price will fall is to kick out 2 million foreign talent from this country. So why don't you just take this?
 
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