The good folks at Maybank Kim Eng have produced a report giving their take on the Singapore
private property market outlook for the second half of 2012.
And in the spirit of things, the wife and I have gazed into
our somewhat hazy crystal ball and these are what we saw:
·
To better exploit cater to
demands for low quantum but tiny homes, developers will roll-out a new category
of apartment termed "matchbox" units. These will be between 50 to
150sqft in size but at an affordable price of less than $500K.
·
Greece will exit Euro
2012 and thereafter, the Eurozone. Spain and Italy likely to follow.
·
Germany will win Euro 2012 but even
the King of Europe is helpless to prevent the continual Eurozone crisis.
·
A new law will be enacted which
requires developers to demonstrate that areas such as planter boxes and air-con ledges are indeed "liveable" before these can
be marketed as part of the total area of an apartment. Representatives from
developer of new projects must live in these areas for a week to prove their
"liveability".
·
A new department within URA will be
set up to handle the anticipated flood of complaints from shoebox/matchbox owners
whose apartment values are set to plummet due to excess supply. This is despite
previous government warnings and the fact that most buyers made their purchases
with their eyes wide open.
Tongue in cheek? We hope so...
Click on the link below to read the Maybank Kim Eng report:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/97494735/Singapore-Property-Outlook-2H2012#fullscreen
.
8 comments:
Folks at your element! Funny...;)
This is so funny!!!! ahhahas
there's a project that i like a lot but the price is slightly above what i can afford. every time i walk pass the showhouse, i will imagine all the crisis coming together and sellers putting up advertisement to sell their unit below the developers price. I know this is crazy, but i would like to know, if there's a such a case where the seller sell their new unit below the price they buy from developer? because i have heard the theory that "you can never sell a property at a loss if you buy straight from the developer". how true is this?
I bought direct from developer approx twenty years back. Sold at a loss two years back .... So there!
Hi Vian: Looks like you have got your answer there (Thanks Anonymous, 20/6/12, 2:14PM).
The wife and I always view private property purchase as a function of 3 important factors: Timing, calculated risk and luck.
What about location x 3? Wink
Hi Anonymous (20/6/12, 4:54PM):
THAT (location) would be the FOURTH factor, but we did say three. :)
thanks everyone! i'm more clear now :-)
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