Fancy a million-dollar HDB apartment

Fancy a million-dollar HDB apartment

An executive maisonette on Queenstown's popular Mei Ling Street could become the first public housing apartment to be sold for a million dollars.
The Singaporean buyer has agreed to pay a cash premium of $195,000 for the flat, which is located near the Queenstown MRT Station. No details were given on the size of the apartment.

If the sale goes through, the home will sit at the top of a list of HDB apartments that have been sold at prices close to $1 million this year. At least 19 homes have changed hands for over $800,000, with nine of them crossing the $900,000 mark, data from SRX and ERA Realty showed.

Experts, however, say there is no bubble in the market. Homes transacting at such prices are usually located in popular areas, and may have highly sought-after design features that are rare for public housing.
For an executive maisonette in Bishan that was sold at close to $1 million, the home came with a roof terrace, which is rare for public housing, said ERA Realty key executive officer Eugene Lim. "There are not many of such units (that come with a roof terrace). So they are a highly sought-after commodity," said Mr Lim. "But the majority of transactions are not like that".
He noted that homes in "hot areas" - such as Bishan, Toa Payoh, Queenstown and Marine Parade - generally see buyers who are willing to fork out top dollar. But in other areas, prices are far more moderate.
"So what you see (for these homes that are sold at over $800,000) is top-of-the-range pricing. If you draw a bell curve, they will be right at the top, but they are not reflective of the general market."
According to an SRX report issued yesterday, the median resale price of homes in Bishan compiled on Aug 5 was $520,000, and in Marine Parade it was $532,500. The median resale price of HDB apartments in Queenstown was $517,500.
In contrast, homes in Ang Mo Kio fetched a median resale price of $398,000, while for those in Bedok it was $412,000.
When it comes to median cash over valuation (COV), Bishan homes had a $47,000 cash premium, based on data compiled on Aug 5, said the SRX report. In Marine Parade, this was $45,000, and in Queenstown, $38,944.
Houses in Ang Mo Kio and Bedok registered a median COV of $30,000.

Source: Business Times – 8 September 2012