Real Estate
AMP Capital - Should Investors Smile On Singaporean Residential Property?

The investment house asks if the case can be made for investing in Singapore's residential property market.
AMP Capital, the Australia-headquartered investments firm with a focus on areas such as real estate, says it is keen on the idea of Singaporean residential real estate; the organisation is one of investment several groups at the moment asking what property markets in Asia are worth paying attention to. BNP Paribas Wealth Management, for example, has argued that many housing markets in Asia-Pacific are expensive. In a recent note on the markets, the French firm writes: “In Shanghai, for example, the ‘affordable’ housing market and the luxury segment have fallen by 47 per cent and 80 per cent respectively on an annual basis.” BNP Paribas has argued that in China, for example, housing regulations in China’s major cities are tightening, with potential buyers starting to look at opportunities in more medium-sized towns. At the same time, it notes buying and selling have continued in Hong Kong, which has the highest prices in the world.
AMP Capital has been a player in global real estate for some
time, and with A$187.7 billion ($144 billion) of assets
under management (as at the end of 2017), it's
got investment muscle. In this commentary, its global head
of listed real estate, James Mayhew, puts the case for Singapore.
The editors are pleased to share these views but they don’t
necessarily endorse guest comments and invite readers to respond.
Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
The concentration of business activity in a handful of global
cities and easy liquidity from central banks has led to
phenomenal residential price growth over the last eight years.
Valuations have soared in global cities from Shanghai to
Stockholm as well as the most global of all; New York and
London.
Fuelled by cheap money, the almost parabolic rise experienced in
these cities has raised fears that certain markets may be close
to rolling over. Some of these such as London and Vancouver are
already starting to soften as the deathly combination of
government intervention and rising interest rates begins to have
an impact.
However; there is one gateway market that is an exception to this
trend, and moreover its economy is starting to rebound at the
same time - Singapore.
The city state not only missed the same residential price
explosion but amazingly saw a decline in house prices over this
same period of excess central bank liquidity.
We believe that Singapore residential values are now in the early
phase of a multiyear recovery trend following the easing of the
two major headwinds that have held back the market since 2013 and
a better balance between supply and demand.
Firstly, the government (through the Monetary Authority of
Singapore) has eased some of its macro prudential measures,
implemented to curtail both speculation and to support
affordability in the housing market.
Secondly and most importantly, the domestic economy is now
looking far more robust than it has for many years, with
household balance sheets at their strongest position in 20 years.
We think this creates a fantastic opportunity for residential
developers in Singapore that have been sitting on sizeable land
banks and are now pushing inventory into a rising market.
Beginning in 2009, Singapore introduced a series of restrictions
on buying, selling and financing residential property. This came
as the government became concerned about housing affordability
for citizens as cheap money from central banks flooded into
Singapore’s open economy to finance real estate investment.
Buyers’ stamp duty was set at 15 per cent, a level that has
successfully deterred most foreign investors and speculation has
been discouraged with a 16 per cent sellers’ stamp duty on sales
made within a year of purchase. The policy certainly had the
desired effect, since 2013 the residential market has fallen by
12 per cent over 15 consecutive quarters, the longest losing run
in the 40 years that Singapore has compiled such data.
However, in 2017 the Singapore government announced that it would
unwind some of these measures. Home prices had fallen
substantially and the government was concerned about the impact
of this on the country’s three main banks. In short, as competing
global cities around the world had seen house prices hit the
stratosphere and affordability hit the floor, Singapore was
moving in the opposite direction.
Sellers’ stamp duty will now only be payable on sales within
three years of purchase, rather than four, and the stamp duty
rate is being reduced. It was also announced that rules regarding
debt servicing ratios for some mortgagees would be relaxed.
The Singapore residential market’s other headwind was the
weakness of its domestic economy stretching back to 2012. It has
suffered from weak external demand and subdued consumer spending
during this time.
However, signs are now emerging that Singapore is finally
starting to motor again, with improvements in the services
economy potentially providing a further boost. This is being
driven by growth in export-orientated high value industries such
as health care, information technology, communications and higher
education. This led to the Singapore economy growing by 5.4 per
cent year-on-year in the third quarter of 2017, the fastest
growth in four years.
This in turn is boosting fundamentals in the housing market as
net wealth improves – driving greater confidence, increasing
transactions and falling levels of unsold inventory, with supply
being further reduced by the demolition of older condominium
blocks in what are known as en bloc sales. Residential developers
are in fact holding inventory releases back, very likely because
they see greater value tomorrow than they do today, at a time
where we are at a decade low in unsold residential stock.
Sustainable economic growth and a relaxation of government
controls are the keys to a recovery in the Singapore housing
market. These conditions have been met and we appear to be at an
inflexion point at the same moment in time as other residential
markets are ending their multiyear bull runs. The relative price
attraction of Singapore residential property compared to other
world cities is driving investor demand and multiple expansion in
those residential developers that are listed companies, as the
growth realisation begins to get priced in.
We think that solid housing market fundamentals in a developed
Asian economy with protected property rights and an attractive
lifestyle represent an attractive opportunity that some investors
are now eager to explore.