DC for non-landed residential sites is lowered!

The government has lowered the development charge (DC) for non-landed residential sites by 3% on average.

 

This compared to the 12.2% increase during the last revision exercise six months ago.

The most significant decreases are in the Punggol Town/Upper Serangoon Road area, and the Hougang/Paya Lebar Road/Toa Payoh/Bishan areas, which will see rates fall by 14%.

Analysts say the cautious stance among developers in land tender bids may have prompted the government to cut DC rates for the non-landed residential sites.

Colliers International director of research and advisory Ms Chia Siew Chuin said in a statement that this could be due to a number of factors.

These include ample state land supply, concerns of a slowing economy amid global uncertainties as well as the possible bearing of the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty (ABSD) on the market that caused developers to bid conservatively for those sites.

Typically, development charges are paid to the government when land-use for a particular site is enhanced upon redevelopment, or more simply put, when a bigger building replaces a smaller one.

It also reflects changing land values.

For residential uses, DC rates mostly apply to the redevelopment of en bloc sale sites.

At the same time, DC rates for luxury residential sites like Sentosa Cove have been reduced by as much as 6.5%.

Analysts say falling prices of luxury homes and rents have caused a lack of interest for land in the high-end locations.

DC rates remained unchanged for non-landed residential uses.

Meanwhile, DC rates have been revised upwards for commercial property uses by an average of 6%.

This is lower than the 21.7% hike in September last year.

For commercial uses, the Sengkang/Seletar Area will see the highest DC rates increases of 52% or $3,500 per square metre.

DC rates for Hotel and Hospital uses have increased by an average of 15%.

All other DC rates, including those for industrial and warehousing uses remain unchanged.

Source: Channel News Asia

First is the aggressive launch of GLS sites, now comes the lowering of DC (which lowers the cost of en bloc sites).

Much as the wife and I like to think that these are genuine attempts by Government to cool the market, the cynic in us cannot help but wonder if this is in fact a last-ditch attempt to milk the market before the jolly good time ends…

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Private home resale prices fall in January 2012… again!

Prices of resale private homes dipped by 0.4% in January, according to the Singapore Residential Price Index (SRPI) flash estimate published by the Institute of Real Estate Studies at the National University of Singapore.

It is the second straight month of decline, after resale prices fell by 1% in December.

The SRPI for January showed that resale prices for private homes in the central area fell 1.9% while prices of small units dropped by 1%.

Meanwhile, prices of resale units outside the central area climbed 1% in January.

Releasing the data, the Institute of Real Estate Studies says the Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty announced by the government on December 7 has had some impact on home prices.

For the next few months, industry players said prices for resale private properties are likely to soften slightly.

They say transaction volume in the secondary market has been slowing since last year.

Donald Han, Special Advisor at HSR Property Group said, “Transactions for resale non-landed private homes fell from 24,000 in 2010 to 16,000 in 2011. Moving into the first quarter of 2012, in terms of transaction volume, the bulk of the activity is likely to be dominated by new units.”

According to the Urban Redevelopment Authority, 1,872 units of new homes were sold last month.

The strong sales for January was driven by mass market projects like Watertown, The Hillier and Parc Rosewood.

Mr Han added, “More home buyers are now looking at the primary market, they are drawn by the appeal of newer developments as well as discounts offered by developers for example. People have more confidence in the market in the mid to long term, and they feel that by the time the units are completed, perhaps they could see an appreciation in value.”

Despite the slower sales in the resale private property market, analysts say prices will not fall drastically.

Mr Ong Teck Hui, Head of Research and Consultancy at Credo Real Estate said, “I don’t think we will see big price cuts if the economic conditions do not deteriorate badly. For the first quarter, we expect overall resale prices for private homes to remain flat or just marginally negative.”

Source: Channel News Asia

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New project sales status: Parc Rosewood, Guillemard Edge & Bartley Residences etc

Home sales over the past week stayed strong, with few signs of the expected declines brought about by December’s property measures.

Parc Rosewood
Parc Rosewood at Woodlands has moved 55 more units since Monday last week, bringing total sales at the 689-unit project to 565. Prices have averaged $1,000psf.

Guillemard Edge
Macly Group’s Guillemard Edge in Geylang has nearly sold out. Last week, the developer reported sales of more than 230 units. Since then, about 40 units have been sold with prices ranging between $1,180psf to $1,250psf.

Bartley Residences
Hong Leong Group is understood to have sold about 160 units at Bartley Residences since Tuesday last week. the average price after discounts is $1,240psf.

In addition, 917 of the 992 units at Watertown have been taken since sales began in January. As for The Hillier, 446 of the 528 units have found takers, while the 748-unit euHabitat has seen 651 units being snapped up.

Source: The Straits Times & Business Times

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Property Spotlight: Tai Keng Gardens

The quiet landed housing enclave of Tai Keng Gardens located off Jalan Lokham in the Paya Lebar area has seen a flurry of activity. Two houses in the neighbourhood recently changed hands, according to caveats lodged with URA Realis at end-January. One was a semi-detached house sitting on a 3,423sqft freehold plot on Tai Keng Gardens (the street bearing the name of the estate) that was sold for close to $2.69 million ($786psf), while the other was an intermediate terrace house located across the road and sitting on a 1,873sqft freehold plot that was sold for $1.76 million ($939psf).

Peggy Ong, a Singaporean and mother of four, has been a resident in Tai Keng Gardens for the last five years. Ong had paid $1.4 million for her intermediate terraced house on 2,000sqft of land back in 2007. She moved there because of her four school-going children. Tai Keng Gardens is within 1-km radius of well-respected schools – Paya Lebar Methodist Girls’ School and Maris Stella High School.

“Many of the aging houses have been sold by owners whose children have grown up and moved out,” says Ong, ” So, a lot of young couples and families have moved in because of the schools. Most of them tend to do extensive renovations or tear down the existing structure and redevelop into a brand-new three-storey house.”

Tai Keng Gardens is a mature estate, made up mainly of terraced and semi-detached houses developed more than 30 years ago by Keng Seng Group, according to property agent who knows the area very well. The residential neighbourhood is tucked away from the bustling Upper Paya Lebar Road and the nearby light industrial estates, and yet accessible to teh CBD via the Kallang-Paya Lebar Expressway, and to Orchard Road via the Central Expressway, he adds. Shopping malls such as nex and Hougang Mall are also within a five-minute drive of Tai Keng Gardens.

Interest in the area has picked up because of a spill-over effect from other more popular landed housing enclaves in the area, including Serangoon Gardens and Kovan. “It’s going to be the next wave in landed housing,” says Particia Zoey Tan, senior realty adviser at Knight Frank. Tan is marketing a two-storey, four-bedroom corner terraced home at Thrift Drive, a short walk from Tai Keng Gardens. The 2,550sqft terraced unit is priced at $2.7 million ($1,500psf, based on a built-up area of 1,800sqft). She notes that the asking price is on par with those of terraced houses in Serangoon Gardens, which are typically at a 10% to 20% premium to those at Tai Keng Gardens. “This reflects the optimism of the seller,” she adds.

The newly opened Bartley MRT station could also play a part, as Tan has seen the number of transactions in the Serangoon Gardens neighbourhood increase significantly since the Serangoon and Lorong Chuan MRT stations opened.

Ong says most residents in Tai Keng Gardens, which is dominated by owner-occupiers, prefer the location to Serangoon Gardens, as it is quieter and less congested. The transformation of Paya Lebar into a commercial hub, which is part of the government’s 2008 master plan, is also expected to speed up the rejuvenation of the ageing estate.

Located just off the busy Upper Paya Lebar main road is Tai Keng Court, an old mixed-use development with residential-cum-commercial units fronting Jalan Lokam, just one street away from Tai Keng Gardens. The property has been put up for collective sale with an indicative price of $130 million ($903psf ppr), according to sole marketing agent Jones Lang LaSalle. With a potential gross floor area of 152,301sqft, including an adjoining piece of state land of 4,988sqft, the freehold site could yield a five-storey building with 121 residential units averaging 950sqft in size, and 30 commercial units averaging 700sqft. “Tai Keng Court is the largest condo site in the Tai Keng Gardens area,” says Stella Hoh, head of investments at Jones Lang LaSalle. She sees interest coming mainly from mid-sized developers because of its low price. “Such sites will appeal to developers, as there’s scarcely any supply of land parcels of this size that can be redeveloped into a mixed-use project in the Tai Keng Gardens neighbourhood,” adds Hoh.

If the collective sale of Tai Keng Court is successful, it will also speed up the renewal of the landed housing area.

Source: THEEDGE SINGAPORE

Click on link below to read our previous post on the collective sale of Tai Keng Court:
http://sgproptalk.blogspot.com/2012/02/enbloc-news-tai-keng-court.html
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Bartely Residences: 65 units sold on preview!

Hong Leong Group yesterday sold 65 units at Bartley Residences at an average price of $1,240psf after a discount of up to 20%.

During yesterday’s preview, it released 120 units in the 702-unit, 99-year leasehold private condo next to Bartley MRT Station. According to Hong Leong, 90% of the buyers at yesterday’s preview were Singaporeans and permanent residents.

The absolute price of a one-bedroom unit ranges from approximately $610,000 to $670,000; a two-bedroom unit ranges from $970,000 to $1.1 million; three-bedroom unit is between $1.2 million and $1.4 million; a four-bedroom ranges from approximately $1.65 million to $1.9 million; and a dual-key unit ranges from around $1.8 million to $2.1 million.

The average price psf of $1,240 is after absorption of 18% (including the standard 3% buyer’s stamp duty discount, and 3% early bird discount), and an additional 2% district discount.

The project – developed by Bartley Development, a joint venture between Hong Leong Holdings, City Developments, and TID Residential – is located next to Bartley MRT station, and offers a range of unit types, from one-bedroom units (464sqft) to four-bedroom units (1,345 – 1,377sqft), and dual key units (1,603sqft).

In January, the consortium won the 99-year leasehold private condominium housing plot at Mount Vernon Road. their bid came in at $388.1 million, or $495psf ppr.

Source: The Business Times

This looks to be another “gold mine” for Hong Leong and company, if the take-up rate is anything like that for Watertown
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Sales Update: Guillemard Edge, Parc Rosewood & The Nautical

According to a report in The Straits Times today, almost 500 new homes were sold over the past week as developers stepped up their marketing efforts to ride on last month’s stellar transaction figures.

Experts noted that many of the projects that sold well consisted of small one- and two-bedroom units with affordable quantum. These are typically popular with investors.

Guillemard Edge
Macly Group’s Guillemard Edge near Dakota MRT station has recorded more than 230 sales. Units in the 275-unit project were priced between $1,150psf and $1,250psf.

More than half of the units were one-bedders of around 409sqft with a price tag of about $500,000.

Parc Rosewood
Parc Rosewood in Woodlands found buyers for 120 units at an average price of $1,000psf. This was up from the $925psf to $998psf price range when it was first previewed late last month.

Last week’s transactions brought total sales to more than 510 at the 689-unit project. It is jointly developed by Fragrance Group and World Class Land.

The Nautical
About 10 sales over the weekend at 435-unit The Nautical in Sembawang Road brought total sales to more than 200 units. Average prices were between $850psf and $860psf.

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Singapore’s "Red Earth"

That’s what Tanah Merah means. It is also the featured area in the latest issue of The Real Deals.

The Real Deals (16-02-2012)http://www.scribd.com/embeds/82182732/content?start_page=1&view_mode=list&access_key=key-1300ve593n53ff319cd2(function() { var scribd = document.createElement(“script”); scribd.type = “text/javascript”; scribd.async = true; scribd.src = “http://www.scribd.com/javascripts/embed_code/inject.js”; var s = document.getElementsByTagName(“script”)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(scribd, s); })();

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Enbloc News: Bartley Grove Apartments

A 25-unit residential development, Bartley Grove Apartments, along with three adjoining terrace houses located along Bartley Road have been put up for en bloc sale.

Marketing agent Credo Real Estate said the 65,305-square-foot site could fetch between $73 million and $75 million, with no development charge payable.

The prices reflect land rates of about $798 to $820psf ppr, with a gross plot ratio of 1.4.

Including an extra 10% Gross Floor Area (GFA) for balconies, the land rates could come up to $726 to $746psf ppr.

Credo said the combined site would allow a new development of about 100,570sqft of GFA to be built, with 115 apartment units at an average size of 800sqft, depending on layout and configuration.

The tender closes at 2.30pm on March 21.

Source: Channel News Asia

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Project Spotlight: RiverGate

There has been notable increase in the number of transaction at the 545-unit RiverGate early this year. Last december, the pace of transactions in the freehold development took a plunge following the property cooling measures introduced by the government on Dec 8, but the recent spike in transactions at the waterfront project along the Singapore River indicates that there is renewed interest in the area.

A 1,841sqft, four-bedroom apartment on the 31st level of RiverGate recently fetched $3.6 million ($1,956psf) in the resale market, according to the latest caveats lodged and downloaded from URA Realis as at Feb 8. The seller had purchased the apartment from the developer in October 2006 for $3.03 million ($1,645psf), and hence enjoyed a capital gain of 18.9% in five years. The price achieved for the unit, however, is nowhere near the peak in May 2007, when a 3,143sqft unit on the 40th level was sold for $8.5 million ($2,701psf).

Prior to the sale of the 1,841sqft unit, a 2,077sqft, four-bedroom apartment at a neighbouring block was transacted for $4.3 million ($2,090psf), according to a caveat lodged on Jan 19. The seller had purchased the unit on the 18th level in June 2009 for $2.95 million ($1,420psf).

On Jan 17, a 1,507sqft, three-bedroom apartment on the 21st floor of the same block changed hands for $2.8 million ($1,851psf). The previous owner paid $2.3 million ($1,551psf) when he purchased the unit in July 2009, thus recognising a profit of 19.3% in just over two years.

In the three months prior to the government’s announcement of the additional buyer’s stamp duty (ABSD) on Dec 8,2011, apartments at RiverGate were going for $1,980 to $2,173psf. The highest unit price achieved last year at the freehold condo was for a 2,077sqft unit on the 41st level that was sold for $4.7 million ($2,262psf) in June 2011.

Benny Lim, a sales director at DTZ Debenham Tie Leung, admits that the cooling measures, coupled with the global economic uncertainty and year-end holidays, led to a slowdown in transaction volume in December. Developers sold only 623 new homes that month, a 63% plunge from November, and the lowest level in two years since December 2009. “the ABSD will take some getting used to, but I believe the property market will begin to pick up in the coming months,” says Lim. “Properties in Robertson Quay have always been a favourite among investors, so the demand will always be there.”

Lim, who is also marketing a few units at RiverGate, says the average asking price for a three- or four-bedroom unit is $2,000 to $2,300psf. “The prices vary, depending on the orientation of the units and, of course, those that command a premium are units overlooking the Singapore River or with unobstructed city view on high floors,” he adds.

Developed by CapitaLand and Hwa Hong Corp, RiverGate was awarded landmark status by the URA – the first residential project in Singapore to be accorded the status. While most of the property developments along the Singapore River have a height restriction of 10 storeys, RiverGate‘s three towers are 43 storeys tall. The project also sits on one of the largest sites in the area. In addition to the uninterrupted views, residents also enjoy full condo facilities, direct access to the riverfront promenade and amenities such as a convenience stored and an Italian pizzeria and grill.

RiverGate tends to attract interest from investors from Indonesia and mainland China. DTZ’s Lim still received inquiries from these investors for the units he is currently marketing. “After more than a month, these investors are beginning to get used to the idea of the 10% ABSD, and have included it as part of their overall transaction cost,” he adds. “And they are still keen to invest in Singapore.”

Keith Tan, director of APRO Realtors, agrees and notes that rental rates at RiverGate have risen rapidly since its completion in 2009, as the project is popular with expatriates. A three-bedroom unit at RiverGate now fetches $8,500 to $10,000 rent a month, he says. Two-bedroom units, “which are exceptionally popular”, can command $6,500 to $7,000 a month, adds Tan, who recently rented out a two-bedroom apartment for $6,900 a month. Two years ago, two -bedroom units fetched $4,500 a month, while three-bedroom units were rented out at $5,000 to $6,500 a month.

Source THEEDGE SINGAPORE

The wife and I have been into and around the compound of RiverGate a number of times. We quite liked the project (externally) but have yet to see what the interior of the apartments are like. However, there is one aspect of RiverGate that we do not particularly like – the parking for the F&B outlet is located within RiverGate itself. And although parking meant for patrons are separate from those for residents, everybody still go through the same main entrance and into the development. This reduces the “privacy” factor, which we would expect a lot more of, if we are paying in excess of $2,000psf for a unit.

Click on link below to read our previous post on properties in the Robertson Quay/Martin Road area
http://sgproptalk.blogspot.com/2011/10/property-spotlight-robertson-quaymartin.html
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