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10-02-20, 19:37
HDB resale market kicks off 2020 with upbeat sales in January

1,920 resale flats were sold last month, 3.3% more than December and 23.1% more than January 2019

FRI, FEB 07, 2020


THE Housing and Development Board (HDB) resale market has started the new year on an upbeat note. More HDB flats changed hands in January than in December, and their prices inched up by 0.5 per cent.

In all, 1,920 resale flats were sold last month, 3.3 per cent more than December, according to flash estimates from real estate portal SRX on Thursday. That reversed a 3 per cent slide in December from the preceding month.

It was also 23.1 per cent more than the 1,560 units sold in January 2019.

Resale prices inched up by 0.5 per cent, compared with December. Compared with January last year, this was a 0.3 per cent increase.

The prices of flats in non-mature estates rose by 0.8 per cent, while those for mature-estate flats fell 0.1 per cent from the December level.

The most expensive resale flat that changed hands last month was an executive apartment unit in Lorong 2 Toa Payoh, which sold for S$1.025 million. An executive maisonette unit in Hougang Street 21 went for S$853,000, the highest price in a non-mature estate.

There were also four HDB resale flats which transacted for at least S$1 million last month.

Resale flat buyers last month underpaid, according to what SRX estimates to be the market value for flats. The overall median transaction over X-value (TOX) was negative S$500 last month, a decrease of S$1,500 compared with December.

TOX measures how much a buyer is overpaying (positive value) or underpaying (negative value) for a property based on SRX's computer-generated market value. The data is only for districts which have had more than 10 resale transactions.

Flats in Woodlands recorded the highest median TOX at positive S$10,500, followed by flats in Bukit Batok, at positive S$6,800.

Meanwhile, flats in Punggol recorded the lowest median TOX, at negative S$6,500, followed by flats in Toa Payoh, at negative S$6,100.

OrangeTee & Tie research head Christine Sun said last month's figures might be due to the festive season.

"Some buyers could have returned after the year-end holidays. Those who are in urgent need of a home may have preferred to settle their purchase before the Chinese New Year, as house viewings are harder to arrange during the festive period."

Around 5,902 flats will be eligible to join the HDB resale market in the next three months as these units approach their five-year minimum occupation period.