HDB flats resale prices increased by 0.1 per cent in the 2nd Quarter of 2018. This increase is the first rise after nine months of continuous decline. The hike – though only incremental – may indicate that HDB resale prices are bottoming out.

The Housing & Development Board’s data also showed that HDB resale transactions rose 33.3 per cent from 4,458 cases in Quarter 1 to 5,941 in Quarter 2. HDB’s data on Median Resale Prices by Town and Flat Type for Resale Cases Registered in 2nd Quarter 2018 showed that flats in Central area commanded the highest prices. The average price for 4-room flats in the area was $870,000.

HDB flats resale prices for 4-room flats in Queenstown followed the prices of flats in Central area very closely, with the average price registering at $738,000. 4-Room flats in Bukit Merah registered at $662,500, and came in at third highest priced area in the list.

Lowest average prices for HDB resale flats were logged for the areas of Woodlands and Choa Chu Kang. HDB’s data showed that the average price for both areas was $330,000.

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Screengrab HDB

Some real estate market observers have suggested that the HDB resale market will get a boost from the recently announced property cooling measures.

International Property Advisor Ku Swee Yong said: “The Loan-To-Value ratio limit will be dropped by 5 per cent, meaning we have to take out more equity upfront – more cash and more CPF upfront. And therefore buyers will probably find it difficult to buy the large sized (private residential) unit that they want.”

“In fact for some of these buyers they may then swing over to the HDB resale market, because the curbs are not put on to the HDB market at all,” he added.

ERA’s key executive officer, Eugene Lim, echoed Ku and said that with the new property cooling measures in place, home hunters with tighter budgets as well as en bloc owners would turn to the HDB resale market, where properties are cheaper.

“Resale flats remain the only way for buyers to pick a flat in a location of choice, and unlike BTO flats, the eligibility conditions are far less stringent; especially if the buyer is not applying for CPF Housing Grants; or not taking a home loan through the HDB,” he noted.

Lim in predicting that the total resale transactions for this year would range between 20,000 to 22,000 units (slightly lower than the 22,077 units transacted in 2017), added: “However, as buyers who wish to take loans will have to choose between bank loans, will be affected by the lower LTV, or HDB loans, which have higher interest rates, transaction volume of resale flats is expected to be affected as well.”

Christine Sun, Orange Tee & Tie’s head of research and consultancy said the strong demand for resale HDB flats may be “supply-driven as more units had been completed in recent years and being put up for resale after they reached the five year MOP (minimum occupation period)”.

In pointing out that the number of HDB flat completions soared 124 percent to 15,456 units in 2011 to 2013 from 6,902 units in 2008 to 2010, Sun said that she expected the resale volume “to rise in the coming years as an avalanche of 25,323 HDB flats were completed from 2014-2017 and will reach MOP from next year.”

The relatively large supply of Built-To-Order (BTO) flats coming onboard this year though, could partially dampen the quick rise of HDB flats resale prices.

HDB said that it will build 16,000 BTO flats this year. This figure is 1,000 less than the numbers projected by HDB earlier in the year. HDB adjusts its supply of BTO flats from time to time, depending on market conditions.

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