A mismatch in the residential collective sale market
One segment of the real estate investment market which is almost unique to Singapore is the collective sale market, where individual strata title owners team up to sell all their units all at once to a developer, en bloc.
Over the last 30 years, the collective sale market has been dominated by residential deals with hundreds of sales worth billions of dollars. However, more recently the residential collective sale market has come to a grinding halt, with only two or three successful residential collective sales last year.
The residential en bloc sale market will continue to struggle for the foreseeable future because there is a significant mismatch between owners’ expected selling prices and the prices that developers are willing to pay.
Sellers are faced with the high cost of buying a replacement property and high transaction costs resulting from the increased Additional Buyer’s Stamp Duty rates.
Developers’ prices, on the other hand, are lower because they are faced with higher construction costs, higher financing costs and reduced saleable floor areas in the new development resulting from the harmonisation of floor area definitions by the government authorities.
The lower prices which developers are willing to pay was reflected in the recent Orchard Boulevard Government Land Sales (GLS) tender.
The highest bid was from UOL at S$1,616 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppf). This is 38 per cent lower than the reported guide price of S$2,620 psf ppr for prime condo Orchard Bel Air, which was relaunched for collective sale in early 2023.
The gap clearly demonstrates the significant mismatch between owners and developers, with the mismatch greatest in the prime residential areas. Developers will accordingly focus on the GLS sites to replenish their residential land banks.
All is not lost for the collective sale market. Commercial collective sales are active with notable sales being Tanglin Shopping Centre, Ming Arcade and Shenton House.
In the near future, the collective sales of Delfi at Orchard and Concorde Hotel & Shopping Centre will likely be launched for sale by Savills soon, and both are expected to be successful.
Land prices which developers are willing to pay are at record levels along Orchard Road, and owners’ expected selling prices are not excessive. A pricing mismatch for many commercial collective sales does not exist, unlike for residential collective sales.
As liquidity in the market returns, prices for some assets are likely to have dropped by around 10 per cent or so, which may seem painful. But real estate price falls in Europe and North America are in the range of 20 to 30 per cent, and in some extreme cases, more.
Now that we are midway through the first quarter, there are plenty of reasons to be optimistic. The volume of investment deals in Singapore will increase this year, but pricing will be critical. Sellers should not get over-excited, and must remember that interest rates are still high and unlikely to return to the all-time low levels seen two years ago.
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This article was first published in The Business Times on 26 Feb 2024.