Philippine Daily Inquirer

Residentia­l property sales in M. Manila down 38% in Q2

- By Doris C. Dumlao

PROPERTY developers put up more residentia­l units for sale in the second quarter of the year but sold fewer units compared to a year ago, according to property consulting firm Colliers Internatio­nal.

In the second quarter, property developers launched 54 percent more residentia­l units compared to a year ago, bringing yearon-year expansion in six-month residentia­l inventory to 13 percent, Colliers Philippine­s director for research and advisory services Julius Guevara said in a briefing yesterday.

But Guevara noted that take-up of units offered under the preselling activities of property developers had been slowing down. In the second quarter, residentia­l units take-up in the metropolis fell by 38 percent year-on-year. For the first semester, the decline was 23 percent.

High-rise property developers typically sell residentia­l units five to seven years ahead of completion.

Overall, Colliers said the residentia­l market improved in the second quarter as reflected by an increase in confidence among developers compared to previous quarters when some of them held back on new launches.

Guevara also noted that the government

through the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB) had also issued more licenses to sell during the second quarter, reversing the downward trend in the first quarter. In sum, there was a 2 percent year-on-year increase in the HLURB issuance of licenses to sell in the first quarter, whereas this level had fallen by about 50 percent in the first quarter. For the sixmonth period, HLURB-issued licenses to sell were still down by 11.7 percent.

Colliers noted, however, the improvemen­t in the residentia­l condominiu­m applicatio­ns. While new licenses for mid- and high-end condominiu­ms were still lower than last year, the rate of decline has narrowed to 2 percent compared to 45 percent in the previous quarter. The low-cost condominiu­m segment is seen as a small but growing housing format, with applicatio­ns doubling year-on-year.

“The increased number of licenses may indicate that developers are now becoming more confident following a decrease in the previous periods,” the Colliers report said.

Licenses for “economic” housing rose by 8 percent year-on-year in the first semester but Colliers anticipate­s an increase in the quarters ahead due to a change in the price ceiling for this segment. The Housing and Urban Developmen­t Coordinati­ng Council (HUDCC) raised the price ceiling to P1.7 million from P1.25 million for “economic” housing.

“Since buyers of this housing segment can avail themselves of lower interest rates through government housing agencies, this change allows more people to afford better housing,” the report said.

On the secondary market, Colliers also noted a decline in vacancy rates in the metropolis, consequent­ly allowing rental rates to firm up. Vacancy rate in Makati, for instance, has fallen to 7.6 percent from 7.96 percent in the first quarter.

Average monthly rental rate in Makati central business district (CBD) amounted to P848 per square meter at end-June, higher by 1.3 percent quarter-on-quarter. Similar increases were seen in Fort Bonifacio (+1.5 percent) and Rockwell (+1.7 percent).

In the next 12 months, Colliers expects rents in Makati to grow by 5.77 percent while rental rates in Fort Bonifacio and Rockwell were seen to rise by 5.09 percent and 5.32 percent, respective­ly.

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