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Wednesday 23rd Aug, 2009
The Straits
Times - 23 Aug 2009
MONEY MATTERS
Vacancy rate a
key statistic
Residential property buyers should zoom in on this in the URA quarterly
release
By JOSEPH CHONG
Every quarter, the
Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) releases data on supply and demand in
the residential property market.
In this year's
second-quarter release, there were 16 annexes filled with many charts,
ratios and other statistics. Multiply this by the historical releases, and
the amount of data could be mind-boggling.
So, what should one
focus on in this buffet of figures? For me, it is the vacancy rate.
Residential property buyers should zoom in on this key statistic. It can be
found in Annex E-1 of the release.
The vacancy
rate is the number of vacant units divided by the total number of available
units in Singapore. Previously, the vacancy rate was also expressed by the
URA in the inverse way - as the occupancy rate. This is the number of
occupied units divided by the total number of available units.
The vacancy rate is
important because there is a positive correlation between the occupancy rate
and prices. From intuition, this makes sense - a fuller 'Hotel Singapore'
would result in higher rents, and thus capital values. The occupancy rate
was 94.1 per cent in the second quarter.
Unfortunately,
prices tend to lead changes in the occupancy rate by two to three quarters.
The key, therefore, is to figure out how the vacancy is likely to change.
So, how does the vacancy rate look going forward in the next two years?
The clues are in the
URA data, HDB policy and the mechanics of supply and demand.
According to URA data, an additional 8,100 private homes on average have
been occupied every year since 1995, notwithstanding three severe economic
downturns. With the recovering global economy, we should at least see this
number next year.
The opening of the integrated resorts next year, which will attract more
foreigners, may push this number even higher.
Here again, the
published vacancy rate delivers another nugget, as URA's Annex E-1 shows how
it is derived. Despite numerous completions in the first half of the year,
the vacancy rate was steady as the number of homes occupied increased by
4,774 in the first half of the year - 2,616 in the second quarter and 2,158
in the first quarter.
This took place
despite Singapore's worst recession since independence. It also proved wrong
the projections made by a foreign investment bank that hundreds of thousands
of foreigners were expected to leave Singapore, thereby affecting occupancy.
This strong
underlying demand is probably driven by immigrants. From data published by
the Singapore Department of Statistics, growth in the resident population
has been driven by the growth in the number of permanent residents (PRs).
From 2000 to last
year, the number of citizens grew by 0.6 per cent annually, while that of
PRs grew by 5.8 per cent. PRs have been growing at an average rate of almost
22,000 per annum, and they need a roof over their heads.
On the supply side
for private residences, there will be only 5,233 completions next year,
according to Annex E-2 of the URA quarterly release. Here, I have used
expected completions of units under construction and ignored those that are
still being planned. It is unlikely that developments which have not broken
ground can be completed in 15 months.
This shortfall will push the rental vacancy rate down. I estimate that this
will fall from the current 5.9 per cent to below 4.9 per cent.
The last time this happened, in early 2007, rents and capital values moved
quite a fair bit. Moreover, unlike in 2006, the cushion of unsold HDB flats
is probably no longer available.
Supply relief will
come only in 2011, with 9,339 units expected to be completed. As for 2012,
it is too early to tell, given the possibility that some developers might
complete their recently launched projects early. Hence, the next 12 months
appear to signal good times for the residential property market, and perhaps
this is what investors and speculators have concluded too.
Speculative interest
will wax and wane depending on market conditions. Speculative interest is
important because it provides liquidity. It makes it easier for buyers and
sellers to perform transactions. And with more transactions, the fair value
of an asset is reached more quickly.
Nevertheless, if one
feels uneasy about the current rally and is hesitant about investing in a
property, there will be other opportunities.
In the investment world, another bus will always come along. In the near
term, the United States property market is an opportunity. Investors may
want to check out funds that include this bombed-out sector.
In the longer term,
Singapore office properties should offer compelling value by 2011, when the
oversupply drives vacancy rates up.
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The writer is CEO of financial adviser New
Independent. He welcomes feedback at : josephchong@ni.com.sg
This article is for information only.
Readers should seek independent advice before making any investment decisions
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