Fewer Singapore home buyers chasing condo ownership
Fewer Singapore home buyers chasing condo ownership

Fewer Singapore home buyers chasing condo ownership

SINGAPORE: There are fewer Housing Board (HDB) flat upgraders chasing the condominium dream after several rounds of property cooling measures.

Adding to that are higher mortgage rates and private home prices, as well as growing economic headwinds.

A total of 2,322 new and resale non-landed private homes were bought by those with HDB addresses in the first half of 2023, down nearly 36% from 3,628 during the same period in 2022, said real estate firm OrangeTee & Tie, citing transactions recorded in the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s Realis database.

In 2022, 6,287 new and resale private homes were bought by those with HDB addresses, down 36.2% from 9,854 units in 2021, according to OrangeTee & Tie.

Among the reasons for the drop were three rounds of property curbs introduced in December 2021, September 2022 and April 2023, which tightened borrowing limits and raised the additional buyer’s stamp duty (ABSD) from 12% to 20% for those buying their second residential property.

The total debt servicing ratio (TDSR) threshold was also tightened from 60% to 55%, further restricting liquidity and financing for non-first-time buyers, said property firm ERA Singapore’s key executive officer Eugene Lim.

TDSR is the portion of a borrower’s gross monthly income that goes towards repaying all monthly debt obligations.

In addition, the medium-term interest rate floor used to compute TDSR and the mortgage servicing ratio was raised by 0.5 percentage points to 4% for residential property loans from Sept 30, 2022.

The mortgage servicing ratio is the portion of a borrower’s gross monthly income that goes towards repaying all property loans.

“As banks are now required to use a higher mandatory interest rate of at least 4% to compute the loan, some home buyers who were borderline cases were not able to secure their loan,” Lim said.

Further dampening demand, the average three-month compounded Singapore Overnight Rate Average – the benchmark interest rate used to price floating-rate home loans – jumped to 3.21% in the first quarter of 2023, from 0.22% in the first quarter of 2022, he added.

“This big surge in interest rates in a year means monthly mortgage payments would have correspondingly increased,” he said.

Even more pronounced is the drop in sales of new non-landed private homes to those with HDB addresses.

This came as the number of newly launched units shrank 57% to 4,528 in 2022 from 10,496 in 2021, noted Lam Chern Woon, head of research and consulting at Edmund Tie.

According to OrangeTee & Tie, buyers with HDB addresses accounted for just 682 new condo sales in the first half of 2023, down 40.9% from 1,154 units in the first half of 2022.

Condo resale transactions for this group, meanwhile, fell 33.7% to 1,640 units from 2,474 units over the same period.

Lam attributed the drop in resale transactions to the elevated interest-rate climate, sombre economic outlook and dampening effects of the cooling measures.

Nonetheless, resale transactions have been exceeding new sales since the second half of 2020, in part because the rise in resale condo prices has not been as sharp as that for new condos in the past two years, said OrangeTee & Tie senior vice-president for research and analytics Christine Sun.

Median resale prices rose just 9% from 2021 to 2022, compared with median new-home prices, which jumped nearly 22% in the same period, she said.

ERA’s Lim noted that buyers with HDB addresses paid an average of S$2,169 per sq ft for a new condo in 2022, compared with S$1,514 per sq ft for a resale unit.

“This may explain why the drop in new sales was more significant than that for resale condos,” he said.

The 15-month wait-out period, which restricts certain private property downgraders from buying a resale flat after selling their private home, may also have helped boost demand for resale condos, analysts said.

The spike in rents also pushed some HDB upgraders to buy resale condos instead of new ones.

Huttons Asia senior research director Lee Sze Teck said: “In the past, to avoid having to pay ABSD on the second property, buyers would sell their current property and rent a place to stay while waiting for their new condo to be built.

“But a more than 50% increase in rents from the fourth quarter of 2020 to the first half of 2023 made it harder for HDB upgraders. The rent for an HDB flat or private property may be comparable to a mortgage instalment for a resale private property,” he said. — The Straits Times/ANN

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