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Banking & Finance (includes credit cards posting)

hi jogger thx for info. how about the exchange rate? do they determine your SGD loan amount at start of loan? or it gets adjusted on a regular basis?

Basically if you get SGD loan for Malaysia property, your monthly repayment will be in SGD in future. I think they will use the bank exchange rate to convert the Ringgit to Singapore dollar at the point of disbursement. The exchange rate is not as good as money changer.

If you think ringgit will appreciate against SGD, then I think this SGD loan is good.

Personally, I will not take this because it will affect my loan margin. I prefer flexi loan arrangement.
 
Singapore | Updated today at 09:25 AM
By Esther Teo Property Correspondent

Mortgage rates here are on the rise and could continue climbing as funds grow tighter.

Last year, that rate was Sibor plus 0.8 to 0.9 per cent but it rose to Sibor plus 1.15 per cent earlier this month, a Barclays report this month noted.

This hike could be partly due to Singapore's current very high level of credit as measured by the loan-to-deposit ratio, which at 97 per cent is at its highest level since 1999
 
From Maybank Malaysia website: http://www.maybank2u.com.my/

Maybank Property Carnival 2013 (Johor)
Venue: Taman Rekreasi, Bukit Indah, Johor Bahru
Date: 20 April 2013 (Saturday)
Time: 8:30 am - 5:30 pm


Quote:
•"Attractive refinancing and home financing packages flexibility which caters to your needs
•Property Valuation and estimates
•Legal advice on property purchase"
 
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Currently the bank staff whos helping me on loan application etc etc is not doing a good job. Can i request a change? Loan already approved. Only waiting for the State approval. The bank is Alliance Bank.

Please advice. Tks
 
Re: Which bank offers the best FD rate for non-residents?

The bank lady who served us, Ms Kate Tee is amongst the most professional staff i have seen, kudos to the bank for
hiring someone like that.[/QUOTE]

Could you advise the address or the branch where Ms Kate Tee is located? I will give her a call and find out some details before I arrange to meet her.
 
DBS offers multi-currency account in Singapore

PUBLISHED MAY 07, 2013
BY ANGELA TAN

DBS Bank has introduced its first multi-currency autosave (MCA) account in Singapore which allows customers to save and transact in Singapore dollars (SGD) and up to 12 foreign currencies.

With the new account, foreigners working and living in Singapore will now find it more convenient to save and remit money in the currency of their choice without the need for currency conversions.

Similarly, a parent with a child studying in Australia, would be able to buy AUD periodically when the exchange rates work in his favour to accumulate for the tuition fee required and thus achieve greater savings.

"In Singapore, there isn't any Singapore dollar integrated multi-currency account that offers day-to-day transactional capabilities. DBS Multi-currency Autosave aims to fill this gap," said Lui Su Kian, Head of Deposits and Secured Lending, DBS Bank.

Over the last four years, the number of foreign currency accounts with the bank has increased 33 per cent. The number of inward and outward remittances has also increased by over 30 per cent from 2010 to 2012. Last year, the number of remittances conducted via DBS iBanking accounted for more than half of total consumer remittances, DBS said.

Existing DBS Autosave customers can convert their account to a MCA account via internet banking or at any DBS/POSB branch. The initial deposit is waived for new account openings.

http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/bre...ers-multi-currency-account-singapore-20130507
 
With the poor SGD-MYR exchange now, what's the best method of transferring SGD to MYR for downpayment of property (50-60k RM)? Some advice please, thanks! :)
 
Fresh from UOB Wealth Banking.

Fixed Deposit
RM300,000
1 year 3.75%
3 month 3.55%

News from UOB Wealth Banking at City Square.

Customers taking bank loan will have mortgage rate of 4.25%

This is not DIBS.
And buyers please beware of DIBS. Personally I rather pay higher mortgage rate and get a well protected mortgage package from bank.

DIBS mortgage you sign, you will need to fulfill the mortgage terms even when developer go broke or abandon the project half way.
 
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How about HSBC? Any comment or experience from forumers here?

Fresh from UOB Wealth Banking.

Fixed Deposit
RM300,000
1 year 3.75%
3 month 3.55%

News from UOB Wealth Banking at City Square.

Customers taking bank loan will have mortgage rate of 4.25%

This is not DIBS.
And buyers please beware of DIBS. Personally I rather pay higher mortgage rate and get a well protected mortgage package from bank.

DIBS mortgage you sign, you will need to fulfill the mortgage terms even when developer go broke or abandon the project half way.
 
Fresh from UOB Wealth Banking.

Fixed Deposit
RM300,000
1 year 3.75%
3 month 3.55%

News from UOB Wealth Banking at City Square.

Customers taking bank loan will have mortgage rate of 4.25%

This is not DIBS.
And buyers please beware of DIBS. Personally I rather pay higher mortgage rate and get a well protected mortgage package from bank.

DIBS mortgage you sign, you will need to fulfill the mortgage terms even when developer go broke or abandon the project half way.

Can you share with us , how does the well protected mortgage package works and protect the buyer ? Is the rate significantly higher?
 
Read Potter post #391..
Do not intend to talk about loan.

If something sound too good to be true, they usually are too good to be true.

Remember
羊毛出在羊身上
天下没有白吃的午餐
 
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Go direct to the bank and tell them you want normal mortgage and not DIBS scheme.

Do not listen to what the bankers, agents or developers says.
You pay progressive payment like those mortgage in Singapore. You pay the interest along the way till completion.
 
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Yes, I read somewhere about this DIBS recently, do be careful.

This article explains what it means:

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/12/22/business/12472840


The Star Online > Business
Saturday December 22, 2012
House-buyers beware of DIBS
Buyers Beware
By CHANG KIM LOONG
OF late, there have been a few housing developers who proudly advertise that the sales of their product are offered are with “interests payment borne by developers”. Such schemes are known as DIBS, that is developers' interest-bearing scheme.
A particular one even boldly states that house-buyers make no payment until due vacant possession of the said houses.
It entices potential house-buyers that all they need is to pay the requisite downpayment of 10% upon signing the sales and purchase agreement (SPA) and the balance thereof will be financed by their panel banks/financial institutions.
Some even have the audacity to equate the same with the 10:90 concept of built-then-sell (BTS). One even goes as far as to advertise the mode of payment as 5:95 model. The connotations in all these advertisements are that buyers do not make any progressive payments until the houses are completed and ready for vacant possession.
All these advertised “schemes” of payments are nothing more than loan packages. Although the advertisement states “no payment until vacant possession”, in reality the buyers' loans are “locked-in” with panel banks/financial institutions and hence, buyers' housing loans are used to pay the developers as they construct the houses.
It is based exactly on the current sell-then-build (STB) or progressive payment formula. This formula has got so many house-buyers into trouble when the houses they buy are abandoned by the developers.
The only difference in the advertised system is that the interests towards the progressive payments are shouldered, absorbed and borne by the developers. Buyers still have to secure their end-financing housing loans as soon as they sign the SPA. Buyers are still responsible to the banks and financial institutions for the loans whether the houses are delivered or not. BTS 10:90 model
This is far different from the real BTS 10:90 concept put in place and encouraged by the Government, whereby the buyers truly do not make any payment except for the deposit of 10% until vacant possession because the end-financing loans do not kick in until the houses are completed with all the certifications obtained and keys with vacant possession are available.
It is a far safer mode of buying houses and this is precisely why the Government is encouraging it and furthermore offering incentives to developers who opt to adopt this mode of selling their products. But it fell short of compelling the industry to adopt this BTS 10:90 concept currently. However, the Housing and Local Government Minister has reiterated that the BTS 10:90 will be made mandatory by 2015.
Vital differences
The vital difference between the advertised DIBS abbreviation and the government-encouraged BTS 10:90 is that, in the advertised DIBS or 10:90 or 5:95 model, should the developer abandon the project (for whatever reason), buyers are left with a partially disbursed housing loan to settle.
The amount varies in accordance with the amount of disbursements made.
The primary borrower is still the buyers and that it is the sole responsibility of the borrowers/buyers to continue with the proper conduct of his loan from the financiers.
Banks have not been known to be sympathetic to victims of abandoned projects.
The loans still have to be settled house or no house! This is the predicament presently faced by tens of thousands of nave and innocent buyers when the houses that they had bought were abandoned by their developers.
Don't think for a minute that the financier will write off the loan payable by the borrower/buyer.
Thus, the various advertisements for DIBS abbreviation or 10:90 or 5:95 or 0:100 connotations are merely marketing tools and are not the same as the BTS 10:90 concept that is put in place under the Housing Development (Control and Licensing) Act and Regulations.
These advertisements are open to misunderstanding and confusion. In this period of soft market in the housing industry, it is natural that more and more innovative sales strategy will come in.
We are not in opposition to that, but we are of the stand that advertisements should not have any element of misrepresentation or misconception and should not give rise to misunderstanding and confusion.
Housing Ministry to be vigilant
The Housing Ministry's Licensing Department should also take a close look at the contents of such advertisements before granting them sales and advertisement permits.
To allow such advertisements is injustice to nave and innocent first-time house-buyers.
Has the ministry erred in allowing those advertisements or did it not manage to spot the difference?
I would like to categorically state that I'm by no means implying that the advertised project is likely to be abandoned. This article is aimed only to inform potential buyers on the differences between the advertised DIBS or 10:90 or 5:95 or 0:100 mode of purchase vis-vis the government-encouraged BTS 10:90 concept.
Be an informed buyer and empower yourself with information to make a wise decision.
How to spot the difference
On the side of caution, the buyer needs to check if he has bought into a STB 10:90 loan package “scheme” or a BTS 10:90 concept. The differences between the two models are already explained in the article. An easy way to know what the buyer has bought is to refer to the SPA. If the contract is a Schedule H or Schedule G, the scheme is a sell-then-build. If the contract is a Schedule I or Schedule J, the scheme is a BTS 10:90 variant.
> Chang Kim Loong is the honorary secretary-general of The National House Buyers Association, a non-profit, non-governmental, non-political organisation manned by volunteers. For more information, click www.hba.org.my or e-mail [email protected]
 
Hmmm....in this case, buying landed is safer! haha

even if developer collapse...it is easy for you to build the house..... :)
 
I needed serious help on refinancing. Does it matter as a foreign Chinese to approach an islamic bank in bukit indah r should I go to Taman molek where they cater to the Chinese?
 
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