ValueBuddies.com : Value Investing Forum - Singapore, Hong Kong, U.S.

Full Version: Are 60-year leasehold residences here to stay?
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Pages: 1 2
A view from an insider, after the launch of Singapore first retirement village.

Any other views?

Are 60-year leasehold residences here to stay?

We are reminded regularly that one in five Singaporeans will be over the age of 65 come 2030. Immigration policies and the mix of new Singaporeans can alter our demographics, but the total number of senior citizens will certainly increase.

In public housing, the Housing and Development Board (HDB) already has several schemes catering for the elderly. But a pilot project was introduced in 2012 on the private housing front: Sixty-year leasehold residences targeted at retirees.

To test the interest of developers, the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) was generous in its incentives for this project provided conditions around Retirement Housing were met: An additional 10 per cent gross floor area and no limits on the maximum number of Dwelling Units (which means it can be filled with shoebox or pigeonhole units).

Developers took the bait: There were 23 bids submitted on Nov 15, 2012.

Fast forward to now. The Hillford in Bukit Timah is set to launch this weekend with 281 units, 186 of which are one-bedroom units with average sizes of around 410 sq ft. Buyer interest seems high, fuelled by the relatively low outlay with prices from around S$400,000. Thousands of visitors have visited the showflat.

But how attractive is the development from an investor’s perspective? And will this be a one-off experiment or the first of such properties?

ATTRACTIVE RETURNS?

Investors are probably attracted by the potential rental income. One possible buyer offered the following scenario: Rentals for the one-bedroom units may fetch S$2,200 per month. This means that over the 57-year lease period that would remain post-construction, the total rental income could potentially be S$1.5 million. Subtracting the purchase price of about S$400,000, that implies a profit of about S$1.1 million.

Ignoring stamp duties and other costs, as well as the vacancy period between tenants, one flaw in this proposition lies in the monthly rental expectation of S$2,200 for a 398 sq ft apartment that includes a bomb shelter and an air-con ledge.

In comparison, monthly rentals for two-bedroom units in Signature Park (1,055 sq ft) across the road are currently around S$2,500. A little further off, Springdale (970 sq ft) rents are approximately S$2,750. Both are condominium projects with much bigger grounds and facilities including tennis courts. A four-room HDB flat (about 1,000 sq ft) in nearby Bukit Batok may be rented at S$2,200 per month. The record high supply of private residences (about 19,000 units this year and next, and 23,000 units in 2016) will also put a cap on rentals.

Investors might also overlook the fact that if they wanted to sell this property, say 10 years from now in 2024 when the lease is left with 48 years, the next buyer may only get a maximum loan term of 18 years, which would limit the pool of potential buyers.

VALUATIONS

The estimated launch prices range from S$1,000 to S$1,100 per sq ft for this 60-year leasehold property. Using a straight line depreciation to zero value over 60 years, the equivalent price based on a 99-year lease is as high as S$1,815 psf.

If we adopt industry valuation methods and reference the Leasehold-Freehold tables from the Singapore Land Authority (SLA), a price of S$1,100 psf for a 60-year lease translates to an equivalent of S$1,320 psf for a 99-year lease.

However, at the other extreme, considering that banks do not lend for residential properties with a remaining lease of 30 years or less (and Central Provident Fund monies cannot be used to service the instalments), the depreciation is even steeper and, therefore, the equivalent price in 99-year terms might well be in excess of S$2,500 psf depending on the residual value of the final 30 years of lease.

Optimistic and eager investors often look beyond these issues and hope for a brighter future.

SCORECARD FOR SUCCESS

Apart from the development’s investment potential, a few milestones will need to be cleared before we can determine the final scorecard of this pilot project in assessing whether it is delivering on its aims.

Firstly, after the project is fully sold, we need to understand the profile of all the buyers. If the buyers are owner-occupiers, how many are senior citizens and retirees?

Secondly, after the construction is completed in two years, we need to tote up the profile of the tenants in this “retirement resort” — what proportion are senior citizens or retirees?

And most importantly — say three years after completion — we should take another look at the profile of the tenants in the apartments and the services provided in the commercial units below. Are the tenants elderly citizens and are the commercial outlets providing services relevant for retirees and eldercare?

The scorecard should be objectively assessed against the list of incentives given to developers for building retirement housing. And if these three final checks returned satisfactory results, i.e. the completed property is largely serving the needs of retirees, then the authorities might consider selling more residential land parcels on 60-year leases with similar incentives.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Ku Swee Yong is a property agent and CEO of real estate sales organisation Century 21 Singapore. He is the author of two bestsellers: Building Your Real Estate Riches and Real Estate Riches.
http://www.todayonline.com/business/prop...epage=true
See. without specific conditions for retirement homes purpose, investment
demand will crowd out those with immediate needs. If all investors rent to
others except retirees, how URA evaluate pilot project success?
insider?

I doubt.
He raised many questions that he is not able to answer.

His questions is actually aged/炒冷饭。
These questions was raised prior to the launch and caused a lot of "wait-and-see" including our VB.

With the 100% sold in one day... he is still asking the same questions instead of more objective (固步自封.

sad.

At a price tag of $388k, I quote one old couples say:
"I stay and enjoy my life. When I move on (touch-wood), leave it to my children to collect rental law."


QED.


A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.
(20-01-2014, 05:35 PM)opmi Wrote: [ -> ]If all investors rent to
others except retirees, how URA evaluate pilot project success?

We are aware that there are two new ideas in The Hillford.
1. 60 yr lease
2. retirement resort village

#1. is actually what Gov wanted to test out... the acceptance of shorten leasehold condo to the public

This test case pass with flying color.

Suppose, tomorrow The Hillford2 is launches, you can guess the response and don't need to tell me... keep it secret.

#2. is a nice to have. how do we package such that the public is acceptable to the shorten leasehold?

This test pass its test as public at best welcome the guesture or at worst do not mind the bundles.

*******
Many questions raised but still no answers...
I am still learning ...

Heart Love Compassion



A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.
(20-01-2014, 06:26 PM)chialc88 Wrote: [ -> ]
(20-01-2014, 05:35 PM)opmi Wrote: [ -> ]If all investors rent to
others except retirees, how URA evaluate pilot project success?

We are aware that there are two new ideas in The Hillford.
1. 60 yr lease
2. retirement resort village

#1. is actually what Gov wanted to test out... the acceptance of shorten leasehold condo to the public

This test case pass with flying color.

Suppose, tomorrow The Hillford2 is launches, you can guess the response and don't need to tell me... keep it secret.

#2. is a nice to have. how do we package such that the public is acceptable to the shorten leasehold?

This test pass its test as public at best welcome the guesture or at worst do not mind the bundles.

*******
Many questions raised but still no answers...
I am still learning ...

Heart Love Compassion



A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.

I think the main reason it "passed with flying colour" is the govt exemption that allows the developer to build tiny shoebox units and sell at small quantums. Big Grin
ki chia lo,
could be...
bottomline: the price tag of S$388k is hard to beat!

Heart Love Compassion


A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.
can't imagine this can be a retirement resort village with the usual convenience shops/eateries which are common all over the island
my imagination of a retirement village is one with aplenty coconut trees, avenue to play chess
is it true that one cannot get bank loan for lease remaining < 30yo?
AiYo, that is a model answer ...

But, by now you should know that other answers exist wow...

c.f. the proliferation of pawn shops everywhere in Singapore


A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.
QUOTE:-
"one flaw in this proposition lies in the monthly rental expectation of S$2,200 for a 398 sq ft apartment that includes a bomb shelter and an air-con ledge".

At to day Market, i think he is right.
i think if i am a FT working here i doubt i will rent it. Let's see how many investors will "Kenna Bullets"?
T,
If S$2200 per month is not realistic, then any good gauge on a more realistic number?

For your gauge, do some calculation and see whether it's still make sense.

Big Grin
Pages: 1 2