Mah consulted developers?

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Saturday December 31, 2011
Developers – the real landlords
Insight Down South
By SEAH CHIANG NEE
Developers – the real landlords

As a group, exclusive and rich, property developers have always wielded strong influence in small cities with rich land banks in a scale that probably rivals the government – until now.

TRADITIONALLY, property developers in cities like Singapore and Hong Kong have enjoyed economic power far beyond their numbers.

We were politely reminded of this when Singapore’s developers told the government they were disappointed at not being consulted before it announced recent measures to cool the market.

This was tantamount to a right to be informed in advance of any policy or price affecting their interests.

The developers’ reaction stirred public ire, with people considering it an audacity its demand to be consulted over changes.

Yet there is a tradition behind the demand.

As a group, exclusive and rich, developers have always wielded strong influence in small cities with rich land banks in a scale that probably only rivals the government.

After all it controls the city’s most precious asset.

My first lesson of this fact of life came in the 1970s when I arrived to take up the post as news editor of The Hong Kong Standard. A colleague asked who I thought were the colony’s most powerful people.

“The chief editor of New China News Agency” I ventured, regurgitating what I had often read.

“No, my friend, not even the Chinese mainlanders, and not the colonials,” he exclaimed, “It is the Hong Kong real estate developers.”

Land auctions often decided how well - or poorly – the Hong Kong people were to live.

Property prices would affect billions in budgets and living standards, in other words, people’s lives.

When I returned to Singapore, I found a little of the same, the difference being we were an independent country and not led by a passive colonial Governor. In short, developers here were powerful!

Once land values were decided auctions, the developers controlled the ultimate prices and timing of the sales.

To a large extent, it meant controlling of supply and demand.

If the developers thought the asking prices were too high, they would abstain from bidding, making them a sort of a little “pressure group”.

When I returned here I discovered a bit of the same.

Developers collectively could – if they chose to - influence the way the media reported the property market because they were big advertisers.

The bigger the spenders, the greater the influence! They could ensure newspaper reports did not report too negatively on the market and scare away buyers.

Some were not reticent exercising it by making it clear to advertising managers that their money could best be used in a media that keep encouraging property buyers, or at least not to predict weak markets too strongly.

Others stayed away from the game.

Many years ago when I was chief editor of a newspaper here I had one such run-in with several Singapore developers, who were among my paper’s frequent advertisers.

It was at a time when dark economic clouds were gathering and our Business Desk was reporting that property markets were heading for a fall. The bad vibes were strong, and they were reflected in our coverage.

During lunch, one developer referred to how much his company had spent on advertising in our paper.

He added that he “sometimes considered it a waste of money to advertise in a newspaper which frequently talked down the market”.

If this continued, they might as well stop or cut down advertising in the paper, he said.

I was very concerned. I replied that as a newspaper editor, I feared two things most; the government withdrawing the newspaper licence and secondly, businessmen threatening to withhold advertising unless we cooperated with them.

“In either case, our survival will be threatened, and we will bring the fight to Page One and let readers judge!”

We finally struck a deal: No advertising boycotts. In return I would run an interview on record with a property tycoon who predicted his views that the market would rise in the following year.

I am relating this to record appreciation of the National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan’s stand not to bend to the developers’ will “by consulting” them about market “cooling-off” action or price movements.

That would have been tantamount to tipping them off in advance of price-sensitive measures, an act no government can do.

Analysts expect the recent measures to cool buying and bring down the home prices by between 15 to 30% over the next two years.

“There will be a sell-off in the next three-to-five months,” said a property agent.

By imposing stiff measures against foreigners’ speculative buying, including a 10% duty, Khaw has gained public acclaim.

“Khaw has my full support. His policy is good for the younger generation,” a Singaporean commented.

“If the young people feel that even with hard work they still cannot achieve their goal, Singapore is done for. That dream is to own a private property.”

Khaw has also succeeded in shortening the queue of new Singaporean graduates applying to own their first public flat.

Since becoming minister after the May election, Singapore’s once world-acclaimed public housing is slowly working to dispel public discontent over shortage and high prices.

Many more years are needed to clean up the mess. But for now, wrote Khaw - one of the more popular ministers: “We’re starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel”.

And instead of the usual brickbats, praises are starting to come in for fending off foreign speculators.

“I’m seeing the quality of Minister Khaw,” one surfer wrote.

Another said: “Thank you for the cooling measures. This shows Singapore is clean and NOT controlled by the (property) billionaires club.”
 
ST_IMAGES_ETDEVELOPERSe.jpg

President of the Real Estate Developers' Association of Singapore (Redas) Wong Heang Fine (far left) with Minister of State for Manpower and National Development Tan Chuan-Jin, guest of honour at Redas' 52nd anniversary dinner last night. Mr Wong says one analyst is of the view that the harsh cooling measures could tip the economy into a recession. -- ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE


The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Dec 28, 2011
http://www.straitstimes.com/print/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_749439.html

Property curbs could hurt economy: Redas
Volumes, prices will be hit, but economists say dose of medicine needed

By Esther Teo, PROPERTY REPORTER & Cheryl Lim

The key organisation representing property developers warned on Tuesday night that the new cooling measures that sharply raised stamp duties could hurt the real estate market and the wider economy.

The president of the Real Estate Developers' Association of Singapore (Redas) said developers may face increased land costs. The curbs could also lead to a fall in home values, while possibly damaging the already fragile economy and dampening foreign investment.

Mr Wong Heang Fine highlighted the concerns during his opening address at Redas' 52nd anniversary dinner at the Ritz-Carlton, Millenia Singapore.

The Dec 8 measures - dubbed by some experts as the harshest out of the five policy moves since September 2009 - include an additional buyer's stamp duty of 10 per cent on foreigner home purchases.
Copyright © 2011 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved.
 
Comments section from Yahoo very interesting
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/opinion-developers-real-landlordsby-seah-chiang-nee-kuala-065007615.html

Anon • Singapore, Central Singapore • 6 hours ago
Mah Bow Tan's is the farking culprit who allow the Developers in Singapore to become so powerful. It won't be a surprise if, in the end, you find that he is in cahoots with them.

The GURU • Singapore, Central Singapore • 5 hours ago
This is day light "robbery". Developers colluded to sustain high proiperty prices at the expense of S'poreans. MBW also colluded with the developers. The competitive commission should seriously look into this "cartel" by developers. This is against free competiton which had been encouraged by gov and at the same time gov is also equally responsible for todays' high prices of properties. Who is responsible l for this situation? Hope some one (authority) can be held responsible.

see • Singapore, Central Singapore • 6 hours ago
Perhaps those ministers who feel that the property developers are very powerful should declare how many properties they and their families own.

Glenn • Singapore, Central Singapore • 6 hours ago
Well said n written for the transparency of the message.
Shall we get the CPIB to interrogate former minister Mah Bow Tan for causing a mess in the property market for the last 5yrs...???
 
The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Dec 31, 2011

Property activity can't be key growth engine
http://www.straitstimes.com/print/STForum/Story/STIStory_750448.html

THE comments by the Real Estate Developers' Association of Singapore president on the recent property cooling measures are uncalled for ('Property curbs could hurt economy: Redas'; Wednesday).

Spiking property prices have led to home buyers taking up increasingly larger mortgage loans to finance their purchases, and if this is not nipped in the bud, the fallout from falling equity home values would be even harder to contain when the bubble finally bursts. It is a question of when, not if.

Having real estate activity constituting a significant portion of the gross domestic product (GDP) - the figure quoted was 5.2 per cent - is not a desirable state for the economy at all.

Real estate activity should not be a key driver of economic growth. I do not think we want to go the way of economies like Hong Kong, where real estate forms a significant chunk of the GDP and has been responsible for driving property prices beyond the reach of many home buyers.

It is not the responsibility of the Government to ensure that the developers continue to reap fat profit margins from selling homes at inflated prices to cash-rich foreigners, but it is certainly the Government's duty to make sure property prices, public or private, remain affordable to the majority of Singaporeans.

Andrew Hong
Copyright © 2011 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved.
 
Hogwash! MBT is a short integrity man. I mean a man short on integrity. Oh fuck! I mean a short man of integrity. How dare these inferences. PAP is whiter than white! All these accusations can't stand on two legs or four or two or.........
 
The biggest landlord is the garment. They not only control used land but also vacant land which they pick and choose when to release to the developers and at what price. It's worse than collusion between garment, GLCs in property pursuits and private developers. By allowing a huge chunk of capital to get stuck in property was the worse economic policy of the maggot PAPies.
 
LandLord can have their ways as long as they pay their Taxes$$$! Last time civil defence says that it is not safe to have food stalls below MRT stations... After some compromise... look at SMRT stations like market place...
 
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