Median resale prices for exec condos soar 63%
(SINGAPORE)
THE median resale prices of executive condominiums (ECs) have increased
63 per cent in the past two years, riding on the bull run in the
private residential market, a report says.
Caveats lodged for ECs in the resale market in October 2009 showed
prices at $519 per sq ft (psf), says CB Richard Ellis (CBRE). This is
63 per cent higher than at the bottom of the market in Q3 2006, when
resale ECs were sold at $319 psf.
CBRE's analysis of caveats lodged between 2004 and early 2007 shows
median EC prices in the resale market fluctuated within the $300-400
psf band, bottoming out at $319 psf in Q3 2006.
ECs are a hybrid of private and public housing. They are similar to
private condominiums in terms of facilities and amenities, but
eligibility requirements are almost similar to those for new HDB flats.
The EC was first introduced in 1996 when the property bull run caused new private condo prices to soar to above $600 psf.
The last EC launched was La Casa in May 2005. It was completed in
early 2008. Since then no new EC projects have been launched. Since the
second half of 2007, when the private residential market was peaking
again, the government has placed up to four EC sites on the reserve
list, but there have been no takers.
0 ? blnMac = true:blnMac = false;
if (blnMac == true) {
document.write('
');
}
//-->


<script
language='JavaScript1.1' src='http://ads.asia1.com.sg/js.ng/Params.richmedia=yes&site=tbto&sec=btosuite&cat1=bus&cat2=btoexecsuiteart&size=300X250'></script><noscript><a href='http://ads.asia1.com.sg/click.ng/Params.richmedia=yes&site=tbto&sec=btosuite&cat1=bus&cat2=btoexecsuiteart&size=300X250'><img src='http://ads.asia1.com.sg/image.ng/Params.richmedia=yes&site=tbto&sec=btosuite&cat1=bus&cat2=btoexecsuiteart&size=300X250'
border='0'></a></noscript>
|
But in the recently announced government land sales
programme for the first half of 2010, the government placed two EC
sites on the confirmed list and three others on the reserve list, which
is 'a clear signal that the government wants to provide the EC as an
alternative housing choice for homebuyers from next year', says CBRE.
Currently, a 14 per cent price gap exists between the median prices
of ECs and mass-market non-landed projects in the resale market, CBRE
says.
'Our analysis shows that buyers who bought new ECs at various
periods from 1996 when EC prices hovered at around $400 psf should
benefit from the price appreciation in the past two years,' said Li
Hiaw Ho, executive director of CBRE Research. 'The residential market
run-up of 2007 lifted new EC prices to above the $500 psf mark.'
Going forward, CBRE says that if the price gap between the next new
EC project and a new private non-landed leasehold project in the same
location is attractive enough, buyer demand for EC developments will
surely return. The firms expects the tender bids for the two EC sites
to be offered in January 2010 on the confirmed list - Buangkok Drive/
Compassvale Bow and Yishun Avenue 11 - will be a function of
developers' confidence in the EC market and their pricing strategy.