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Monday, December 29, 2014

A couple of years ago, ASSI squeezed into the ranks of the top 1,000 websites and blogs in Singapore. Today, we managed to squeeze into the top 1,000 again after dropping out for 2 years.

Yeah!

With many more websites and blogs in Singapore as time goes by, I have no doubt that being in the top 1,000 again is only possible because my blog's readers are quietly spreading the word and helping to increase readership numbers. ASSI is also very fortunate to have very good guest bloggers who contribute high quality articles which help to enrich the space.

All of you are the other half of ASSI. So, thanks very much for making ASSI the vibrant blog it is today and for spreading the word that financial freedom is not just a dream.




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Related posts:
1. Top 1,000 websites in Singapore. (2012)
2. Be ambassadors of financial freedom.
"Even if the horse would not drink, at least try our best to bring the horse to water. We could be saving more than one life if the horse eventually drinks."

Disastrous investments in the property market: Lessons (Updated 5 July 2018).

Sunday, December 28, 2014

UPDATE: 5 JULY 2018

History doesn't repeat itself but it rhymes or so they say.

Apparently, people are flocking to showflats to buy condos now and they are likely to be at it until midnight.

Many property agents are definitely enjoying a feeding frenzy as buyers panic buy.

Why the panic buying?

ABSD is going up 5% and LTV is being tightened as well.

New rules kick in at midnight.





Yes, the government has come up with another round of cooling measures.

In recent years, I have said that private real estate prices in Singapore are too high and that it does not make good financial sense to think of them as good investments for income.

Vacancy rate is still very high and in some places like Geylang, rental rates have fallen by as much as 25% due to a glut in supply.





Buying and thinking that prices can only go up is speculation and with the enormous price tags of private real estate here, it is big time speculation.

I have also blogged that unless we have deep pockets, it is best to avoid.

Still, many people are throwing caution to the winds but beware how it could get blown back as a nightmare to hit us in the face.

People rarely make money buying real estate in a market euphoria but they usually make money buying when Mr. Market is depressed.

This certainly has been my experience.






The Government has raised Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) rates as well as tightened the Loan-to-Value (LTV) limits for Singapore citizens and permanent residents, in order to “cool the property market and keep prices in line with economic fundamentals”.

With immediate effect, the ABSD rates will be raised by 5 percentage points for all individuals, and 10 percentage points for entities, said a joint statement issued on Thursday (July 5) from the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of National Development and the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

There will be no change in ABSD rates for Singapore citizens or permanent residents buying their first property.






Previously, the LTV limit for a buyer’s first housing loan is 80 per cent, or 60 per cent if the loan tenure is more than 30 years or extends past age 65. This will be cut to 75 per cent, or 55 per cent respectively. 

Similarly, the limit for a second housing loan will be reduced from 50 per cent to 45 per cent, or 30 per cent to 25 per cent if the loan tenure is more than 30 years or extends past age 65.

Read full article here:
https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/government-introduces-new-round-cooling-measures






------------------------------------
I read in The EDGE that there will most likely be "a new level of pain" for landlords of residential properties in Singapore next year because rents and prices of properties are sinking while vacancy rate continues to rise.

Regular readers would remember that I said that the writing was on the wall in 2011 and that there was too much euphoria in the air as people just kept flocking to condominium showflats and buying into every new launch there was until a year and a half ago when the 8th round of cooling measures with stringent TDSR was introduced.






Some of us might remember this report in The Straits Times:

Some home buyers rushed to submit mortgage applications to banks last Friday night before tougher rules on home loan financing kicked in at midnight.

But a day after the Government's move to tighten home loan financing, the overall effect was muted as only a small segment of buyers are likely to be affected, agents and mortgage consultants told The Sunday Times yesterday.

Developers said it was business as usual at show-flats and they still managed to sell a few units yesterday.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said on Friday that banks have to use a standardised set of guidelines to assess property buyers' ability to borrow. It also plugged a loophole that let buyers dodge tighter loan-to-valuation limits on their second and subsequent properties.

The restrictions apply to loans with an application date on or after June 29.

As a result, some buyers hurried to submit loan applications before the Friday midnight deadline. A significant number of these were buyers at J Gateway, which reportedly sold all 738 units at its Friday launch.
The Sunday Times understands that OCBC received a surge in loan applications on Friday night after the MAS announcement. 


(Source: The Straits Times, 30 Jun 13)



These buyers probably would not have been able to obtain bank loans with the new measures which are there to encourage financial prudence. 

I won't be surprised that some of these buyers had bought multiple properties too. 

This "kiasu" mentality that is born from greed is likely to be the downfall of more than a handful of such "investors".






In the last few years, I continually warned that we must be cautious about buying residential properties in Singapore in order to avoid wealth destruction unless it is a BTO flat or an EC or we have spotted a great value buy.

New launches usually have priced in future price appreciation. 

Have you wondered why a new project is almost always much more expensive than the surrounding condominiums? 

Is it only because the land cost is higher? 

So, it is difficult for buyers to make money from these purchases in a short time of a few years unless the euphoria continues. 

It is a game of musical chairs and the music (i.e. euphoria) will stop.






J Gateway

484 sq ft shoebox units in J Gateway sold for as high as $1,774 psf in July 2013. That is a price tag of $858,616! 

Freehold? 

Nope. 99 years leasehold. 

Yes, we know that Jurong is a promising location as our government has plans to develop it into a more robust regional centre but it just doesn't make much sense to me to pay so much for the place now. 

If that is not pricing in future price appreciation (the price would probably only make sense many years down the road), I don't know what is.






So, in the next few years, these buyers would have to service their housing loans (in an environment of increasing interest rates) and hope for the best, bearing in mind that there will be no rental income as the condominium is being built.

Now, with mortgagee sales (i.e. properties foreclosed by banks) rising and some expecting them to rise to 2008-09 levels as distress spreads from luxury condominiums to outlying areas, people who have been waiting for a meaningful correction in prices before making a purchase are going to be amply rewarded for their patience. 

Things are likely to get worse.






"Newly completed condos, including shoebox apartments in the suburbs and on the city fringe, have also popped up at auctions as mortgagee sales in recent months.... some investors holding on to multiple units may have difficulty servicing their mortgage or unable to secure tenants in their newly completed units. Collier's Ng believes, however, that mortgagee sales of upscale apartments in the prime districts will continue to dominate the auction scene. " Source: The EDGE, 29 Dec, page CC9.


Evidently, there are areas which are going to be worse off than others and if you are thinking of buying an investment property for rental income, I have said before that properties in the RCR would be more resilient and the data has supported this but, remember, if you overpay, you won't do much better at all. 

"... the leasing market is going to be more challenging in OCR and CCR, notes JLL's Ong. He sees condo units in the city fringe or RCR faring better. The city fringe is close to the city and yet more affordable. Rental decline in RCR so far has been the mildest." Source: The EDGE, 29 Dec, page CC2.







When I said that the government is determined to bring down the prices of residential properties in Singapore and warned that we should not underestimate the political will of the country's leadership, there were still many optimists out there saying that demand would stay strong enough to prop up prices. 

Recent speeches by Minister Khaw Boon Wan and DPM Tharman Shanmugaratnam indicated that prices are still too high. 

The cooling measures are staying in place.

Some might remember this from October 2013:


Alan Cheong, head of research and consultancy at Savills Singapore, made his case last Friday at Carlton Hotel marking Singapore Management University's (SMU) homecoming celebrations for its Master of Science in Applied Finance programme.

"I think barring external shocks, property prices, residential prices will stay elevated," he said.


Mr Cheong argued that a fundamental concern that there will be an oversupply of homes come 2015 is not the case at all.


"The reason is in Singapore; it is a situation of undersupply."


Source: ST Property






There are many lessons in this blog post and not to ask barbers if we need a haircut is only one of them. 

It is good to refresh my memory from time to time.

Related posts:

1. Selling a private property just got harder. (2011)
"This development is likely to hasten the weakening of private residential real estate prices which is something I expect to become really evident in 2014 or 2015.  "

2. Leverage up and buy investment properties? (2012)
"... it is obvious to me that the government is sending a clear message that they want property prices in Singapore to lower in the next couple of years.."

3. To rent or to buy: Rule of 15. (2013)
"For a while now, we see people buying real estate in Singapore and being quite happy with rental yields of 2+% to 3+%. This is acceptable really only because of the abnormally low interest rate environment. It won't last."

4. Ask these questions when buying properties. (2014)
"... for the more adventurous ones in our midst, please think again and again before handing over that cheque when temptations find their way into our mailbox."

5. Affordability and value for money.
"... we should remember that it is not about "affordability", it should always be about "value for money".


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