Soaring prices and home loan curbs are forcing increasing numbers of buyers to turn to ever smaller homes as they struggle to get on the property ladder.
Thursday, July 10, 2014
"Case of the 缩水 (shrinking) condo" revisited
Soaring prices and home loan curbs are forcing increasing numbers of buyers to turn to ever smaller homes as they struggle to get on the property ladder.
The median size of private homes sold
dropped to 947sqft in the period from July 2013 to June 2014, according to
STProperty. This is slightly smaller than a HDB four-room flat, which is
typically 969sqft.
STProperty also found that 40% of
units (both new and resale) sold over the past 12 months have been no bigger
than 800sqft, which is the typical size of a one- or two-bedroom condominium
unit.
The 947sqft figure was 3.3% smaller
than the median size of 979sqft in the first half of last year, before the TDSR
was imposed.
The effect of TDSR on home sizes was
even more pronounced within the new sales market. The median floor area of new
homes bought from developers in the past 12 months was just 753sqft, according
to caveats lodged with the URA. That was 12.5% smaller than the median size of
861sqft in the first six months of last year before the TDSR was imposed.
A run-up in property prices per sq ft (psf) since 2009 after the global financial crisis has also played a part in
shrinking private home sizes.
Non-landed home prices jumped 56.2%
from 2Q 2009 to 3Q 2013, which was the peak.
Coincidentally, the median size of
private homes sold has been steadily declining since 2009 when the figure was
1,227sqft.
“While the TDSR framework is working
well to ease home prices, the shrinking home size is another area that the
Government might closely monitor… There are certain social implications should
small homes become a norm in Singapore ,”
said STProperty analyst Jason Chen.
Source: ST
The subject has generated increasing sound-bites over the past few years. In fact, the wife and I had written a piece about “shrinking condo” back in
April 2013. The STProperty and URA figures have helped to reaffirm the fact.
In all fairness, Singaporeans still have it good compared to their counterparts in Hong Kong . From what we can gather over the Internet, as much as 90%
of Hong Kongers live in homes that are less than 700sqft (% does seem a tad high, we must admit). And although the
average size of homes is said to be about
500sqft, it is quite common to find families living in units that are between 200 - 300sqft. While larger apartments definitely exist in Hong Kong , this is typically out of reach for the average
home buyers.
The average living space per person in Hong Kong is 132sqft – one
of the smallest in the world and supposedly only half that of Singapore.
Small flats have proven to be the most profitable use of land for private
developers and the most efficient (highest land premium) for the Government in Hong Kong . But this has resulted in the territory having
too many small flats and very few larger ones. The lack of quality affordable
accommodation is often cited to be a critical factor in Hong
Kong ’s relatively low ranking in the annual Quality of Living Index by
Mercer. Our friends
from Hong Kong tell us that the reason why Tsim Sha Tsui and Causeway Bay
are so crowded even at 9 or 10pm on weeknights is because many Hong Kongers
feel so claustrophobic at home that they would rather stay out till as late as possible. So the home becomes a place they only go back to sleep in.
Should Singaporeans allow the size of their private homes to decrease until we become another Hong
Kong ? Some may say that we
are far from being there yet, but if the trend of "shrinking condos"
continues unabated, whose to say that 3-bedroom
apartment of 700sqft or less will not become
a norm within the next couple of years?
The wife and I feel that it is time to stop perpetuating the building of
more small private homes and push up the average unit size. A suggestion is for our Government
to specify larger units (e.g. minimum of 900sqft) as a condition in some of
their future land sales. This may bring
down prices (as developers no longer have the options of building primarily small
units to try and prop up psf prices), which will entice existing home owners to
sell their small apartments and trade up to larger ones. In turn, the increase
in supply of the smaller second-hand private
homes will make it more affordable for first-time buyers to become home owners
too.
Something for the relevant authorities to think about, maybe?
Click on below to read our previous post on the "shrinking condo"
phenomenon:
http://www.sgproptalk.blogspot.sg/2013/04/case-of-shrinking-condo.html#comment-form
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