Tag: property

  • More Empty Homes On The Horizon

    More Empty Homes On The Horizon

    The housing vacancy rate in Singapore may hit a record high of 9.8 percent in 2016 as private home completions rise from 19,900 units in 2015 to 20,900 by the end of next year, according to media reports citing a Barclays report.

    Aside from the private home supply glut, the occupancy rate will also be pressured by growing public housing completions over the coming quarters.

    Barclays expects public housing completions to increase from 28,000 units in 2014 to 26,000 this year and 20,000 by end-2016.

    “As a result, the overall vacancy rate increased to 7.2 percent at the end of Q1 2015. Island-wide private home rents have fallen five percent from their Q3 2013 peak, while suburban rents have fallen six percent from their Q2 2013 peak,” the report said.

    History shows that prices tend to drop significantly when the vacancy rate exceeds eight percent.

    During the Asian financial crisis between Q2 1996 and Q4 1998, for instance, private home prices plunged 45 percent as the vacancy rate climbed from 6.2 percent to 9.7 percent.

    “With an annual private home demand of only 15,000 units – we estimate 55 percent of total annual household formation of 26-27,00 to live in or enable upgrades to private homes – we estimate the vacancy rate could reach 9.8 percent by 2016E,” noted Barclays.

     

    Romesh Navaratnarajah

    Source: www.propertyguru.com.sg

  • Record Deal Nets 26 Year Old Property Agent $1.5 Million

    Record Deal Nets 26 Year Old Property Agent $1.5 Million

    A property agent who went into real estate against the wishes of her family has become an overnight millionaire after selling a penthouse at the Le Nouvel Ardmore for a record $51 million last month.

    The deal would have reaped PropNex agent Shirley Seng a commission of about $1.5 million.

    Ms Seng, 26, was reluctant to disclose details of the sale at the 43-unit freehold condo but confirmed that the transaction was completed last month after negotiations started in March.

    The huge sale price – it is believed to be a record for a local penthouse – was paid by Mr Sun Tongyu, the co-founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba.

    Mr Sun is a Singapore permanent resident.

    While it looks like a life-changing transaction deal for Ms Seng, a Nanyang Polytechnic graduate, she is determined to carry on as before.

    “This deal is good money, like hitting the jackpot. But this is my lifelong career; if I go for a long holiday now, I may lose my clients when I return,” she said.

    “I still sleep in the living room of a terraced house in Serangoon where I live with my parents, grandparents, two sisters, four other relatives and one maid.

    “I bought a seven-seater Volkswagen MPV so that my grandparents can travel in comfort. They have been supporting my family all these years as my dad has been sick and unable to work. My mum is a housewife.”

    Ms Seng has not slowed down either, submitting around 16 transactions last month, with another seven this month. She is said to have made about $1.7 million in commission in 53 deals – mostly struck in the rental market – since she joined PropNex in January.

    Quite a record for someone with less than five years of experience in the job, one her family was against her taking as they felt she was “young and has no contacts” on which to base a real estate career.

    “They told me how their friends didn’t make it and advised me to get a job with a stable income. My grandpa then offered to support me in a degree programme with Singapore Management University,” said Ms Seng, who holds a diploma in multimedia and infocomm technology. “But I was determined to give it a try. I thought, if I couldn’t make it in a year, then I will go for a degree.”

    Ms Seng joined HSR International Realtors for four months before moving to ERA Realty, where she stayed for four years.

    She said she penetrated the network of wealthy people by helping to rent out their apartments, especially those in Marina Bay and the Orchard area.

    Mr Sun was a referral from a client she had previously served at Marina Bay Residences.

    “I only knew that he is someone of high net worth. And like any high-net-worth clients, they usually know what they want. And I am there to help to execute their plans,” said Ms Seng.

    And if there is one tip she could give in dealing with wealthy clients, Ms Seng advises: “Speed is crucial. I always try to get back to them within one to two hours. I want to let them know that they are my priority.”

    Ms Seng, who zips around town in a white, three-year-old Audi A4, said she also goes the extra mile for clients, such as picking them up in her car and dropping them off wherever they want to go. Sometimes she also helps them run errands.

    “Times are tough, unlike 10 or 20 years ago. Today’s agents need to do more for their clients. But you need to do it with your heart, so they can feel your sincerity,” she said.

    “I often get people asking me if it is money that drives me. I would tell them that many people are motivated by money, especially when they come from a poor family background.

    “I work hard to give my family a good life.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Chan Chun Sing: Build Social Cohesiveness Through Property Design

    Chan Chun Sing: Build Social Cohesiveness Through Property Design

    SINGAPORE: Building rental units next to new Build-to-Order flats and getting real estate students to also study social sciences – some of the ideas raised by Social and Family Development Minister Chan Chun Sing to have more social inclusiveness in Singapore.

    Mr Chan was speaking to 50 engineering and real estate students from the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) at a dialogue on Wednesday (Feb 25).

    Homes today provide greater privacy – for instance, common corridors are no longer seen at newer blocks. Flat owners can have greater privacy this way, but it can have social implications, said Mr Chan.

    “In short, today’s privacy will be tomorrow’s social isolation,” said Mr Chan.

    “That common corridor doesn’t just serve a functional role to allow people to get from the lift lobby or staircase back to their house – it allows mixing, it allows people to get to know their neighbours, it allows people to walk past and greet each other,” he explained.

    “When we take away that in the name of privacy, then we have to ask ourselves the next design that we need to incorporate that will allow people to have privacy and at the same time, not create a situation where in 20 to 30 years’ time, we will have an aged population with a social problem.”

    Mr Chan said in fostering social interaction, those in the real estate industry have an important role. Developers could consider building different types of flats, including rental units, in a single project to bring together people of different social and economic status.

    “Perhaps it’s important, in our whole society, to have social mixing whereby the rich grow up understanding that there are poor people in this society, that we will count our blessings, that in this society it’s our responsibility for those who have been more blessed to extend a helping hand to the poor,” he said.

    Mr Chan added that in cases of the “not-in-my-backyard” syndrome, designers and architects can also help to mitigate the situation through careful design.

    But for the property sector to play that role well, those in the industry, and real estate students, need to have a good understanding of social needs. That is still lacking in the curriculum of some universities in Singapore, said Mr Chan.

    “If you want to be a good architect, a good real estate student, beyond architecture and real estate, you should really study sociology, demographics – you should study social sciences,” he said.

    When asked if the government will consider building HDB flats at prime locations such as downtown Marina to improve social interaction, Mr Chan said he is sceptical it would work, as there are other issues to consider.

    For instance, buyers can purchase HDB flats in prime areas at “artificially low prices”, only to flip them in the resale market and enjoy a windfall.

    “Who is cross-subsidising them? The Government? Actually the Government has no money to cross-subsidise,” he said. “The real answer is the rest of the people – the three-room flats and the four-room flats are cross-subsidising them. That comes to another point which is then, is this a fair system? So there are complex considerations on where we want to build.”

    Organisers of the dialogue, the Real Estate Developers’ Association of Singapore, said it hoped to foster a better understanding of the real estate environment amongst youths.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Wakaf Property Is Currently Being Occupied By Pu Guang Temple

    Wakaf Property Is Currently Being Occupied By Pu Guang Temple

    A wakaf property is currently used as a temple.

    The wakaf of Haji Pitchay Meerah Hussain was designated to be a madrasah or Arabic school. Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS)is the administrator of the waqf.

    It is now used as the Pu Guang Tang Temple.

    Why is a wakaf property used as a temple? Are there no Muslim organisations that can use or rent the property?

    It is supposed to be used as a madrasah.

    A wakaf is a religious endowment. The person who created the wakaf hopes to gain ajr/ pahala through the use of the wakaf property. It is part of his service to Allah.

    But this wakaf property is used as a temple with a shrine.

    Edit: MUIS claim to have leased the property for 199 years in an asset migration exercise. The property will revert to MUIS in 2201.

    According to MUIS, “The Fatwa Committee opined that it is permissible to sell the commercial or residential units on a leasehold basis. In essence the freehold property will still remain with or belong to the waqf…”

    This means that the property “remain with” the wakaf. It is used as a temple.

     

    Source: Singapore Muslims for an Independent MUIS