Business World

How ‘insider trading’ on the golf course lowers price of Singapore’s highly-coveted land

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A STRANGE thing happens in Singapore after the government announces it’s selling highlycove­ted land. Executives from developers bidding for the sites hit the golf course together.

In what it labels “insider trading,” a landmark study by the National University of Singapore Business School found those firms paid 14% less for land at auction, costing the government hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue and dragging down prices of neighborin­g properties.

However, it’s good news for buyers, as lower land costs allow developers to sell new units 8% cheaper than they otherwise would.

Using golf records, the study found the proportion of games between senior executives of land-bidding firms rose 14% in the first week after land sales are announced, compared to the week before, and 24% in the second week.

“In a competitiv­e land auction market, firms need to outbid rival firms to win the auctions; the winning motives, however, do not stop the firms from colluding and cooperatin­g with each other,” the study, released Wednesday, said.

“One way to collude or cooperate is for top managers of the bidders to play golf with top managers of rival bidders and exchange informatio­n related to the bid.”

The study didn’t name any executives or firms involved in the informatio­n sharing.

‘PRESUMPTUO­US’

The Real Estate Developers’ Associatio­n of Singapore rejected the findings.

“Even if there’s an exchange of informatio­n, it’s not a guarantee that you will win the bid,” the group’s President Chia Ngiang

Hong said. “Real estate executives play golf quite often. To just say we play golf just to discuss land sales or business is presumptuo­us.”

The researcher­s trawled through a Singapore Golf Associatio­n database of 30,108 golfers and more than 400,000 scores from 2010 to 2014. In Singapore, it’s mandatory for a player to submit their score to the sport’s governing body after a round.

They then cross-referenced a separate database of property developers, and found 774 golfers were senior executives at “landbiddin­g” firms.

The “informed bidders” paid 14.4% less for winning land bids than “less-informed” or “uninformed” bidders, the study found. That cost the government an estimated $147 million ($109 million) a year, or about 1% of total land sale proceeds, the study found.

“Informed bidders are more likely to face a lower ‘winners’ curse’ in their winning bids, despite the stiff competitio­n in the land market,” the study found. “This result shows that informal interactio­ns improve informatio­n disseminat­ion that benefits companies in the decision-making process.”

Nearby developmen­ts also suffer, with the study finding neighborin­g properties sell for almost 10% less within the 30 days after the announceme­nt of the land auction results.

“The ripple effect is seen when these lower land transactio­n prices send a negative signal indicating a downward market trend for property prices,” said Professor Sumit Agarwal, a real estate and economics academic at NUS and one of the study’s four authors. —

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