This is from Credit Suisse, which has no vested interest unlike local banks with domestic mortgages on their books.
Singapore Property Sector: Credit Suisse
We believe the Singapore residential property sector could see a bursting of a bubble that has been created from exuberant expectations and liquidity over the past two years. With a potential economic slowdown that
may last through 2009, and historically high supply looming, we turn more negative on this cyclical sector, which has seen price declines of 40% and stocks trading at up to 70% discounts to RNAVs in previous down-cycles.
■ Housing prices have started falling. Secondary transactions already show prices of like-for-like units down 5-25% from peak levels. Our previous zero growth assumption seems to be too optimistic.
■ Prices could come off 40%. We believe further consolidation will be triggered by: 1) withdrawal of the liquidity; 2) dumping by marginal speculators; 3) potential price cuts by small developers; 4) rising vacancies with rising supply; 5) a deterioration of the local employment situation.
In addition, low rental yields and slowing capital inflows offer little buffer, and the strong S$ erodes the attractiveness of Singapore properties. Our housing supply-demand model suggests that vacancy rates may rise from the current 5-6% to 9.8-19% in our base and worst cases, prompting rent and price declines of more than 40%, based on historical trends, in our opinion.
■ Bad news not fully in yet; downgrade sector to UNDERWEIGHT. We have revised all RNAVs on base-case assumptions of average selling price (ASP) declines of 30%, 20% and 10% in the high-end, mid-end and massmarket segments from end-2007 levels, respectively. With the recent 20-30% rebound in stock prices, developers are now trading close to or above RNAVs.
Singapore Property Sector: Credit Suisse
We believe the Singapore residential property sector could see a bursting of a bubble that has been created from exuberant expectations and liquidity over the past two years. With a potential economic slowdown that
may last through 2009, and historically high supply looming, we turn more negative on this cyclical sector, which has seen price declines of 40% and stocks trading at up to 70% discounts to RNAVs in previous down-cycles.
■ Housing prices have started falling. Secondary transactions already show prices of like-for-like units down 5-25% from peak levels. Our previous zero growth assumption seems to be too optimistic.
■ Prices could come off 40%. We believe further consolidation will be triggered by: 1) withdrawal of the liquidity; 2) dumping by marginal speculators; 3) potential price cuts by small developers; 4) rising vacancies with rising supply; 5) a deterioration of the local employment situation.
In addition, low rental yields and slowing capital inflows offer little buffer, and the strong S$ erodes the attractiveness of Singapore properties. Our housing supply-demand model suggests that vacancy rates may rise from the current 5-6% to 9.8-19% in our base and worst cases, prompting rent and price declines of more than 40%, based on historical trends, in our opinion.
■ Bad news not fully in yet; downgrade sector to UNDERWEIGHT. We have revised all RNAVs on base-case assumptions of average selling price (ASP) declines of 30%, 20% and 10% in the high-end, mid-end and massmarket segments from end-2007 levels, respectively. With the recent 20-30% rebound in stock prices, developers are now trading close to or above RNAVs.
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