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Singapore residential home sales face billion-dollar litmus test

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
Singapore residential home sales face billion-dollar litmus test
SINGAPORE (Jan 10): Barely a week into 2019 and Singapore’s residential home sales market is facing a $1.1 billion litmus test. Horizon Towers, an older-style building near the popular Orchard Road shopping district, has gone on the market for redevelop
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SINGAPORE (Jan 10): Barely a week into 2019 and Singapore’s residential home sales market is facing a $1.1 billion litmus test. Horizon Towers, an older-style building near the popular Orchard Road shopping district, has gone on the market for redevelopment a third time after two failed attempts.

The sellers’ collective has retained its reserve price but other groups of homeowners also seeking so-called en-bloc deals are cutting their asking bids in the hope developers will bite.

For individuals who have held apartments for several years and ridden the property boom, the profits can be handsome. En-bloc, or collective, sales are where a group of apartments are sold to a common developer and the proceeds divided among unit owners. (In general, if a development is more than 10 years old, at least 80% of owners must agree to a sale.)

But government cooling measures introduced in July that increased the stamp duties home builders need to pay when acquiring land have made market watchers skeptical about how many transactions will be a success.

“Billion-dollar en-bloc deals will be very hard to get through,” said Nicholas Mak, an executive director at real estate asset manager ZACD Group. “Developers are no longer land hungry and are more concerned about selling existing projects.”

Singapore imposed higher stamp duties and tougher loan-to-value rules in early July after residential prices in the city-state rose 7% in the first half of 2018. Extra constraints since then have included curbs on the number of “shoe-box-sized” apartments, limiting transactions at the cheaper end of the market.

That’s a particular blow for en-bloc deals because developers often acquire older buildings with larger units and then redo the floor sizes to accommodate more dwellings. The new guidelines on size, outlined in October, effectively cut the maximum number of apartments allowed in any one development by 18%. The changes only affect projects outside the city-state’s central area, and come into effect later this month.

“With expectations of a slowdown in sales in 2019, developers might re-think their land banking strategy, or even stop looking altogether,” said Derek Tan, an analyst at DBS Group Holdings. “As the government moves in with more restrictive measures to curb both demand and supply, we expect developers to focus on clearing inventories rather than adding more.”

The Southeast Asian lender expects new home sales to drop 20% this year to between 7,500 and 8,500 units, and prices to slip as much as 3%.

Horizon Towers was relaunched for sale after an unsuccessful attempt last year. The 99-year leasehold estate, which was completed in 1984, comprises about 210 units and was most recently renovated in 2014. The first attempt for an en-bloc sale was made a decade ago at S$500 million, but the transaction fell through after a court ruled the sales process was improperly handled.

Park View Mansions is another relaunch, but at a reserve price that’s 22% lower. Gilstead Mansion, a condominium near Singapore’s Little India district, reduced its price guide by $3 million to $65 million and still couldn’t find a taker.

“Although some sites have slashed their reserve prices, developers have turned cautious and many won’t be in a hurry to bid for land unless an attractive deal comes to market,” Christine Li, head of research for Singapore at Cushman & Wakefield Inc., said.

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