Property stocks in deep freeze after cooling measures

Sat, Jul 07, 2018


PROPERTY stocks and financials took a hammering on Friday as news broke the night before of the government hiking additional buyer's stamp duty (ABSD) and tightening mortgages.

As at Friday's close, share prices swam in a sea of red, with research houses cutting ratings for stocks under their coverage. CapitaLand, the largest developer by market cap, ended the day nearly six per cent down to S$2.99, a level it last closed at on December 2016.

Oxley Holdings's stock fell to a level last seen in January 2017, losing 15.85 per cent to end at 34.5 Singapore cents. City Developments (CityDev) also saw one of the steepest drops, shedding S$1.75, or 15.61 per cent to end at S$9.46. Meanwhile, UOL's counter retreated 13.55 per cent or S$1.05 to close at S$6.70.

In a research note, DBS Group Research's Derek Tan and Carmen Tay downgraded CityDev, Chip Eng Seng and Roxy-Pacific Holdings to "fully valued", with a "hold" call on UOL.

With sentiment for developers expected to weaken further, the analysts expect to see a knee jerk sell-off for most developers in the near term.

"Depending on the physical market environment, stock prices may weaken further and could fall by up to 15 per cent a month after," the duo wrote.

RHB Research's Vijay Natarajan said the timing of the move caught him and other market watchers by surprise. "We deem this set of demand-side measures as 'very stringent' and a pre-emptive one, which will have a negative effect on buying sentiment, as well as slowing down property demand and prices in the near term."

Cushman & Wakefield's senior director Christine Li said: "The timing of the additional cooling measures came as a surprise, as developers have just loaded up their landbanks over the last 18 months in anticipation of blockbuster sales in the second half of the year and beyond," she said.

Property agencies weren't spared either, as APAC Realty shed 25.64 per cent to close at 58 Singapore cents, and PropNex - which made its mainboard debut on Monday - saw its shares hammered 24.64 per cent or 17 Singapore cents to end at 52 Singapore cents.

"Sledgehammer to kill a fly" was how OCBC Investment Research described the measures. The broker admitted the cooling measures were "not in our base case", given that private residential prices only began to increase by less than 10 per cent since the price trough in the second quarter of 2017, while the smaller rate of quarter-on-quarter increase in Q2 2018 seemed to have diluted concerns about a tighter regulatory environment.

OCBC downgraded its Singapore residential sector rating from "overweight" to "neutral", adding it will be reviewing recommendations of the developers under its coverage. Despite the surprise, JLL's head of research and consultancy Tay Huey Ying noted the measures should end up achieving their intended objectives of cooling demand and moderating price growth, seeing as how nearly all classes of buyers have been affected.

"All said, we feel the additional measures have been introduced too hastily coming just after 9.1 per cent growth in PPI over four quarters. The market should have been given a chance to find its own level in response to the expected surge in launches in coming months," she said.

Patrick Lai, chief operating officer of RHT Wealth Holdings noted that buyers could "look beyond Singapore for new opportunities and portfolio growth in markets such as London and KL".