logo
Singapore million-dollar flat sales hit record

Singapore million-dollar flat sales hit record

Bangkok Post19 hours ago
SINGAPORE — A record number of Singapore public housing units were sold for S$1 million (US$780,000) or more in the June quarter, a private data provider said on Wednesday, taking the number of high-value sales in the first half of the year to almost 75% of the 2024 total.
Eight out of 10 Singapore citizens live in public housing built and sold by the government, and its affordability is a key issue for policymakers alongside high living costs.
According to real estate agency OrangeTee Group, a record 415 apartments were sold at prices above S$1 million in the second quarter, a 75.8% increase compared to the same period in 2024, after 348 sales in the first quarter.
Sales of million-dollar flats this year are "on track to exceed last year's full-year record of 1,035 units", OrangeTee Group analysts said in a report. The most expensive resale in the quarter was a 122 square metres (1,313 square feet) apartment which sold for S$1,658,888, the report showed. Overall, resale prices rose 0.9% on a quarterly basis, according to earlier government data.
While prices have now risen for 21 straight quarters, it was the smallest rise since the second quarter of 2020, during the coronavirus 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic. OrangeTee Group analysts expect public home resale prices "to rise modestly for the remainder of the year, driven by our stable economic fundamentals and declining interest rates", forecasting an annual rise of 4% to 5.5%.
Last year, the government sought to cool the market by reducing how much buyers can borrow from the state. After a better-than-expected first half performance, the government on Tuesday raised its GDP growth forecast for 2025 to 1.5% to 2.5% from 0.0% to 2.0%, having cut the forecast earlier this year after the announcement of US tariffs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gem exporters eye 5% growth
Gem exporters eye 5% growth

Bangkok Post

time3 hours ago

  • Bangkok Post

Gem exporters eye 5% growth

Exports of gems and jewellery products are on track to achieve the nation's growth target of 5% this year, says the Gem and Jewelry Institute of Thailand (GIT). Sumed Prasongpongchai, director-general of GIT, said for the first half of 2025, total exports in this sector jumped by 82.3% year-on-year, totalling US$14 billion. Excluding unwrought gold, exports surged by 62.7% to $7.41 billion. Key export products included gold jewellery, silver jewellery, and coloured gemstones, with the major markets India, Hong Kong and the US. Mr Sumed said the 2025 export growth target of 5% remains achievable. In 2024, gems and jewellery exports excluding unwrought gold generated $9.6 billion, representing year-on-year growth of 11.5%. He said the substantial growth in the first half was driven by stockpiling before US tariff enforcement. Although the US is imposing a 19% tariff on Thai products, which gives Thailand a competitive edge over its competitors, it also increases costs for American consumers. Rough gems previously lacked an import tariff, while jewellery products faced a tariff of 5-10%. While the industry monitors purchase demand in the US and global markets, Mr Sumed said it remains concerned about baht appreciation from 33.50-34 per US dollar to 32 baht per dollar, translating to a loss of 6-7 billion baht in revenue with each rising baht. "Another concern is attracting and developing a new generation of workers for this industry," he said. This sector must explore new markets, including Southeast Asian countries such as the Philippines and Indonesia, along with the Middle East, said Mr Sumed. Sunanta Kangvalkulkij, director-general of the Department of International Trade Promotion (DITP), an organiser of the 72nd Bangkok Gems & Jewelry Fair, said the fair is recognised as one of the world's top four trade fairs in the industry. The fair plays a crucial role in positioning Thailand as a leading global hub for the gems and jewellery trade, noted the DITP. This year's event features 1,104 companies across 2,628 booths and is expected to welcome more than 40,000 visitors from around the world, generating at least $100 million in trade value. The fair is scheduled for Halls 1–8 at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center from Sept 9-13.

China's uphill fight vs price wars
China's uphill fight vs price wars

Bangkok Post

time4 hours ago

  • Bangkok Post

China's uphill fight vs price wars

Overcapacity has made its way into China's domestic market, with price wars leading to collapsing profitability and accelerating deflation. The government has responded by launching a so-called "anti-involution" programme to combat deflationary price wars. It's had some early wins, but this could be a lengthy battle. The Chinese internet slang for "involution" originally referred to competitive pressures faced by young Chinese in education and the workplace. Since early 2024, however, the word has come to describe supposedly excessive, unsustainable competition among Chinese firms, where more resources are being invested without increasing higher returns. The Chinese government began to highlight the economic dangers of "involution" as early as June 2024 in the face of declining corporate margins and profitability across diverse sectors such as electric vehicles, solar panels, lithium batteries, steel, cement and food delivery. Critiques of "excessive" competition grew much louder in the first half of 2025 as several price wars escalated. In particular, EV leader BYD started sharply cutting prices, and food delivery giant Meituan and new e-commerce platform began offering discounts and subsidies. Increased competition in China also appears to be amplifying deflationary pressures. While China's Producer Price Index (PPI) has been in negative territory for much of the last three years, hopes of escaping this morass were ignited in mid-2024 as domestic demand appeared to be recovering. However, that optimism was doused this year as price wars intensified, with PPI falling by 3.6% year-on-year in the most recent report. China's government launched a multi-pronged anti-involution campaign in July. The programme seeks to channel investment funds to advanced manufacturing, control production in highly competitive industries like steel, oversee pricing and subsidies in EVs and food delivery, and continue phasing out obsolete industrial capacity. It's early days, but some nascent impacts are visible. Carmakers' average price discount declined in July, and Meituan, and Alibaba recently agreed to end aggressive discounting in food delivery and promote "fair competition". Industry consolidation has accelerated as well. Polysilicon manufacturers are discussing the creation of a US$7 billion (226.3 billion baht) fund to acquire and shut down almost one-third of their production capacity and restructure part of the loss-making sector. Additionally, the country's largest coal miner, China Shenhua Energy, stated its intention to acquire various assets from the subsidiaries of its controlling shareholder to improve operational efficiency. China's anti-involution program faces myriad hurdles, however. For one, most of the targets of the anti-involution programme are in the private sector, which means they will be making voluntary pledges to maintain pricing discipline and thus could revert to aggressive tactics in the face of market pressure. Importantly, Beijing's previous supply-side structural reforms from 2015-17 reduced excess capacity among state-owned firms, over which Beijing, by definition, had much more control. Moreover, many of China's local governments are highly indebted and may prioritise short-term revenue generation over long-term reform, potentially offering subsidies to firms to attract investment even in industries targeted by the anti-involution campaign. Innovation in emerging technologies could also be a casualty if deterring overlapping investments hinders experimentation with different approaches. And tighter oversight on pricing and capacity could dampen private capital's investment enthusiasm overall. Finally, one of the biggest risks to the implementation of the program is the possibility of job losses as industries consolidate. While China's youth unemployment rate has declined recently, it remains high and could increase over the next few months as over 12 million new university graduates join the workforce. And the private sector generates the vast majority of China's incremental employment. China's anti-involution efforts have had some success, but this will likely not be a short fight. First, to truly absorb excess capacity in various industries, Beijing will almost certainly have to stimulate domestic consumption more aggressively than it has in the past. Sentiment among Chinese consumers remains quite low, implying that the monetary and fiscal stimuli undertaken by China's government over the past year have had only a limited impact. It could mandate superior product quality to weed out players who compete purely on cost to encourage industry consolidation. However, defining "low quality" and enforcing standards would be challenging, and this strategy may be less effective in services industries. Another way to reduce the incentives for extreme competition would be encouraging collaboration between firms through technology sharing and mutual equity holdings. And the increased availability of patient long-term capital could obviate the need for companies to ramp up production and revenues rapidly. The anti-involution programme marks a new phase of China's pursuit of high-quality development. Enforcing pricing discipline and market stability in furiously competitive industries will be no easy task. Reuters

PTTEP to divest from Mexican site
PTTEP to divest from Mexican site

Bangkok Post

time5 hours ago

  • Bangkok Post

PTTEP to divest from Mexican site

SET-listed PTT Exploration and Production (PTTEP) is pushing ahead with its plan to exit the petroleum business in Mexico, in line with the company's business restructuring to invest in other regions. The move, which was announced in February this year, results in the company selling its entire share of 16.67%, worth US$40 million, in the offshore petroleum Block 29 project to Repsol Exploracion Mexico, a subsidiary of Spanish energy firm Repsol. "The transaction is expected to be completed within the third quarter of this year," said Sermsak Satchawannakul, senior vice-president of PTTEP's finance division. The decision to sell the shares was made after the company completed a thorough consideration of its budget as well as oil exploration work at Block 29, he said. Block 29, located in the southern part of the Gulf of Mexico, has the potential for oil production from two oil wells: Chinwol and Polok. PTTEP previously decided to sell shares in petroleum businesses in non-core strategic countries, including Australia, Brazil and Canada, enabling it to refocus investment, allocating budget to the petroleum industry in the Middle East and Asia-Pacific. Mr Sermsak said the company will maintain its investment in Rovuma Area 1, an offshore petroleum field in Mozambique, despite a delay in business development mainly caused by a local political conflict. He said the company's business direction for Rovuma Area 1, currently in the exploration phase, will become clearer in the second half of the year, following talks with Total, the France-based national energy conglomerate, which believes the site can be developed for liquefied natural gas (LNG). PTTEP's total petroleum sales this year are estimated at 512-517 kilobarrels of oil equivalent per day, thanks to asset restructuring, said Mr Sermsak. LNG prices in the spot market in the second half of this year are expected to be slightly higher than the average price of $12.3 per million British thermal units in the second quarter, attributed to increasing demand from Asian and European nations.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store