February 20, 2010

Singapore: The Property Cooling Off

Before the bubble can build up, the Singapore authorities are already on their feet.

Let us read the Reuters report.

Singapore has introduced measures to cool its housing market, imposing a new stamp duty on homes sold within one year of purchase and capping the maximum housing loan at 80 per cent of the property value.

“While the current level of speculative activity in the market is still lower than what it was at the height of the property market boom, and overall price levels are below the previous peak, there is a risk that the market could overheat in the next few months,” the government said in a statement yesterday.


The new measures, which take effect today, do not affect first-time buyers of government-built HDB apartments who can still borrow up to 90 per cent of the property value.

Singapore private home prices have rallied strongly in recent months, with the government’s index gaining 7.4 per cent in the fourth quarter of last year following a 15.8 per cent quarter-on-quarter rise in July-September.

The government said that with the new stamp duty, sellers will have to pay up to 3 per cent of the value of the property transaction.

It added that while fewer than 10 per cent of housing loans in Singapore involve loans exceeding 80 per cent of the property value, “there are signs that more housing loans are originating at higher LTV (loan-to-value) bands”.

Mohamed Ismail, CEO of PropNex, a firm of property agents, said the new government measures will affect mainly homes in prime areas, which are the usual focus of speculators.

As for homes in outlying areas, the impact will be mostly psychological since loans exceeding 80 per cent of the property value are not popular due to the higher interest rate charged by banks in Singapore.

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