SINGAPORE: Resale prices of private non-landed homes jumped 13.4 per cent on-year in the fourth quarter last year, according to flash estimates put out by the Singapore Real Estate Exchange (SRX).
SRX compiles data from 11 top property agencies in Singapore.
It said non-landed
private resale home prices continued its uptrend to hit S$1,233 per
square foot in the fourth quarter (Q4), compared to S$1,157 per square
foot in the third quarter (Q3) in 2012.
Resale units in the mass
market segment led the gain with a 4.8 per cent increase over Q3, while
those in the city fringes saw prices climb 3.6 per cent.
But it was the core central region which saw a higher-than-expected growth of 4.6 per cent in Q4.
SRX said this was due to the city area's strong performance in December.
Average
private resale home prices in the city area surged 8.8 per cent to
S$1,899 per square foot in December, over November's average of S$1,746.
SRX
said the strong growth is partly attributed to a possible record
breaking price paid by Hong Kong's Swire Properties for all 12 units in
the en bloc sale of Hampton Court located at the corner of Draycott Park
and Draycott Drive
Meanwhile, resale transaction volume of non-landed private homes showed a seasonal drop of 5.5 per cent in Q4 compared with Q3.
But
transaction volumes in the city area bucked the trend by reporting a
7.3 per cent increase. Volumes in city fringes and mass market segments
fell by 11 per cent and 4.6 per cent respectively.
For the full year, 12,500 units were transacted in the private resale non-landed market - a 7 per cent drop compared to 2011.
SRX
said this can be attributed mainly to the weak performance in the first
half of the year, which saw a 27.3 per cent plunge in transaction
volumes after the additional buyer's stamp duty was introduced.
But
the trend was reversed in the second half of the year with a 20.1 per
cent jump in the number of units transacted compared to a year ago.
On
the HDB resale market, SRX said resale cash-over-valuation (COV)
dropped 5.7 per cent to S$33,000 in December, compared to November's
median COV of S$35,000 which is a record high for 2012.
For the fourth quarter, overall median cash-over-valuation rose to S$34,000 - up S$4,000 from Q3.
This
helped to push overall HDB median resale price to a new historical high
of S$455,000 - a 1.1 per cent increase from Q3's S$450,000.
- CNA/ck
one word: inflation
thing is i do not know if the rise is because of inflation or is the cause of inflation.. probably somewhere in the middle
and i don't understand this bullshit "cash over valuation" crap and what it is for other than profiteering
I think private property no COV per se.
For private properties, they get a valuer to do a valuation and the price that she gives is more or less the price the buyer will pay. No incentive for both sides to try to pay more or less.
Only for hdb flats do you get a "cash over valuation" which has become a flawed concept considering that hdb is public housing. COV has now become a rich man's game. Only rich people with lots of cash are able to outbid the next buyer for a hdb flat.
More cooling measures just came out today.
Seems like past cooling measures no use one.
I think prices might hit a new high by the middle of this year.
If population 7 million, prices will jump like crazy.