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Pickup in bungalow transactions
By Angela Teo | August 19, 2017
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Transactions of landed homes in established landed housing estates have picked up recently, based on caveats lodged between Aug 1 and 8. A bungalow built in 1995 and sitting on a 14,305 sq ft, freehold site on Wilkinson Road, off Mountbatten Road, changed hands for $17.19 million ($1,202 psf), according to a caveat lodged with URA Realis on Aug 8.

At Oriole Crescent, a bungalow completed in 1990 and newly renovated, was sold for $16.7 million ($1,623 psf) on Aug 7. It sits on a freehold land area of 10,290 sq ft and is located within the Raffles Park Good Class Bungalow area in prime District 11.

Over at One Tree Hill, an established housing estate in prime District 10, accessible via Grange Road, Tomlinson Road and Paterson Road, a freehold semi-detached house sitting on a 4,521 sq ft site fetched $9.28 million ($2,053 psf), according to a caveat lodged on Aug 7.

A bungalow sitting on a 14,305 sq ft, freehold site on Wilkinson Road changed hands for $17.19 million



In the Lucky Heights estate, a bungalow sitting on a freehold land area of 4,510 sq ft on Sennett Road, off Upper East Coast Road, changed hands for $7.8 million ($1,728 psf) on Aug 1. The house is believed to have been completed last year.

William Wong, founder and managing director of Realstar Premier Group, which focuses on the marketing of landed homes, says there was a 50% increase in the transaction volume of landed homes brokered by his agents in July and August, compared with the same period last year.

In 2016, Wong predicted that landed- home transactions would pick up by about 20% y-o-y in 2H2017. Based on the number of transactions so far this year, the growth is likely to surpass 20%.

“Pent-up demand is the main reason for the increase in transactions,” he says. Many buyers have been waiting for more than two years, and have resigned themselves to the fact that there is not going to be any change in the buyer’s stamp duty for the foreseeable future, Wong notes.

Average prices of landed homes have also come off by 15% to 20% compared with the peak in 2013. This has also enticed buyers back to the market, he adds.

This article appeared in The Edge Property Pullout, Issue 793 (Aug 21, 2017) of The Edge Singapore.


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