S’pore luxury home prices up 7.9% in Q2

Romesh Navaratnarajah16 Aug 2016

Aerial view of Luxury yacht in Keppel Bay at Singapore

Singapore was ranked ninth for global price growth, revealed Knight Frank’s report. 

Singapore was listed ninth on Knight Frank’s Prime Global Cities Index for Q2 2016, with luxury home prices increasing by 7.9 percent in the year to June 2016.

According to the property consultancy, prime property corresponds to the top five percent of the wider housing market in each city.

Vancouver topped the list for the fifth consecutive quarter, with prices of high-end homes surging by 36.4 percent. However, price inflation in the Canadian port city is expected to slow after the British Columbia government unveiled a new 15 percent tax for foreign buyers, effective from 2 August.

Other top performers in the second quarter include Shanghai (22.5 percent), Cape Town (16.1 percent), Toronto (12.6 percent), Melbourne (11 percent) and Sydney (10.2 percent) – all of which saw annual price growth reach double figures. Also in the top ten are Tokyo, Guangzhou and Seoul.

Knight Frank noted that majority of the top ten ranking cities have been on the receiving end of new cooling measures over the past year.

In fact, the latest move by policy makers in Vancouver “to apply an additional tax for foreign buyers has mirrored some of the similar moves over the last few years in Asia-Pacific”, said Nicholas Holt, Asia Pacific Head of Research at Knight Frank.

“Hong Kong and Singapore, most notably, have added 15 percent additional buyers stamp duties, while the Australian states of Victoria, Queensland and New South Wales have also recently introduced various additional levies for foreign buyers,” said Holt.

“Conversely, liberalisation is the flip side of protectionism; whilst we have seen foreign buyers penalised in certain markets, in Vietnam and Indonesia for example, we have seen policy makers go the other way with recent moves to relax rules for non-nationals,” he added.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong has eclipsed Taipei to take the title of weakest-performing residential market. This comes as prime prices there dropped by eight percent in the year to June as supply increased and concerns over the slowdown in the local economy persisted.

 

Prime price performance Q2 2016

 

Romesh Navaratnarajah, Senior Editor at PropertyGuru, edited this story. To contact him about this or other stories, email romesh@propertyguru.com.sg

Addie Wong
Aug 17, 2016
You made a very big assumption that rental income will always cover mortgages and other expenses. When there is an economy collapse, people loose their jobs and wealth, companies cut back on expenses and stop sending expats overseas, etc. These will have a cascading effect on property prices. Singapore NODX has already fallen 10.6%. None of the world economies are doing well now, except seemingly the US, which by the way is very suspicious given that its major trading partner economies are all faltering. If your customers aren't doing well, you shouldn't be either but yet they seemingly are. Watch out for the coming US elections. Something big will be happening in 2016 and its gonna affect the global economy in a big but not so good way.
Omar Khoo
Aug 17, 2016
Cities that enjoy high rental demands would not kill the individual owners,when the stamp duties are raised. Prices would stabilized and mortgages would still be covered by rental income. Singapore,seeing a huge rental decline and an increasing unemployment rate,do not have the liberty to impose a high stamp duty on the purchase of properties.Especially when bank recall of mortgages are on the rise.Any idiot would be able to figure that out. If whoever couldn't,they are retarded.
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