The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

S’pore property analysts predict 10% price gain

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SINGAPORE: After years of declining home prices in Singapore, analysts are expecting a turnaround as early as this year even as most of the government’s property cooling measures remain in place.

Singapore property prices will rise between 5% and 10% next year after bottoming out in 2017, analyst Vikrant Pandey at UOB Kay Hian Pte said.

Morgan Stanley earlier this month said home prices will climb 2% this year and 10% by the end of 2018, turning around earlier and rising faster than people expect.

“We foresee the nascent recovery spreading to the mid-range and high-end segments in the next wave, driven by replacemen­t demand from redevelopm­ent of old housing projects and a pick-up in homebuying interest from foreigners,” Pandey said in a note yesterday.

Redevelopm­ent deals, which involve homeowners selling apartments in older buildings to developers, have crossed S$3bil (US$2.2bil) this year, exceeding the combined transactio­n value in the previous four years.

Flush with cash from these redevelopm­ent sales, such buyers will fuel demand for midto high-end homes, Pandey said.

Foreign purchases are expected to pick up despite the 15% additional buyer stamp duty levied on them.

This is because other popular overseas destinatio­ns have imposed their own restrictio­ns to cool internatio­nal demand. The levelling of taxation costs overseas is building up the relative appeal of Singapore real estate to foreign investors, Pandey said.

Hong Kong officials, for instance, rolled out additional taxes last year targeting all but first-time buyers who are permanent residents, doubling its stamp duties on overseas property buyers to 30% to eclipse Singapore’s rate.

In Taipei, a punitive divestment-gains tax of as high as 45% was unveiled in January last year, dwarfing Singapore’s sellers stamp duty of 12%.

Australia and Canada have also raised the transactio­n costs for foreigners to own property.

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