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The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Aug 11, 2012
New homes put pressure on high-end rentals

More than 4,000 units set to be completed in second half of the year

By Esther Teo property reporter

LANDLORDS of newly completed upmarket homes are being warned that they may have to be prepared to accept lower rents.

More than 4,000 private homes are set to be completed in the second half of the year - with many of them in the city centre and city fringe regions - possibly putting further pressure on rents of posh apartments that have already been softening.

Data from property consultancy CBRE shows at least 20 projects, with 4,285 units, are due to be ready in the six months to December. About half are in the prime districts of 9, 10 and 11 and the central business district.

These includes projects like Boulevard Vue, Volari, Skyline 360° and Marina Bay Suites.

Many of these high-end projects were rolled out in a slew of launches between 2007 and 2009 after the collective sale fever of the mid-2000s.

That was a vastly different landscape from the bumper supply of suburban launches from government land sale sites in the past two years.

Rents of non-landed city centre homes dipped 0.1 per cent in the second quarter - the only private non-landed rental segment to slide - according to data from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA).

The rents of high-end non- landed residential properties tracked by Savills also showed a four-month consecutive fall.

The average monthly rent dipped to $5.03 per sq ft per month in the second quarter, sliding 3 per cent compared with the three months before. On a year-on-year basis, prime rents fell by 8 per cent.

Experts say that the upcoming completions of upscale units will weigh further on the market.

But as long as Singapore remains a cost-competitive choice for corporates, newly completed projects should keep finding tenants, though landlords might have to manage rental expectations.

OrangeTee head of research and consultancy Tan Kok Keong said vacancy rates for city centre homes have been trending up - to 8.2 per cent in the second quarter, from 7.8 per cent in the first.

This is in contrast to islandwide vacancy rates falling from 6 per cent to 5.9 per cent in the same period.

"This is due to the lack of expansion in the financial sector... But I don't think owners will cut rents yet, they will probably see how the situation goes first.

"But over the next six months, there might be a moderate decrease of less than 5 per cent for high-end rents," he added.
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So is now a good time to buy high end property?
reading Mah's blog on property, the govt is really placing emphasis on bringing the price down for property.

However when the govt tighten the releasing of land for sale, I suppose more en-bloc might occur. pushing prices higher again perhaps?

just my thoughts
Do you mean *Khaw's* blog?