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Buy resale flat near parents? Financial help is key: Experts

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FINANCIAL support is the main way to help people who want to get a resale Housing Board flat near their parents, said experts.

This could mean giving a higher resale grant, or allowing more buyers to qualify for it.

As part of efforts to encourage extended families to live close together, the Government is studying whether such resale buyers can get more help, National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan said last Friday.

Currently, there is the Higher-Tier CPF Housing Grant for first-timers who are buying a resale flat with, or close to, parents or married children.

Experts said that unlike new flats, which allow for quotas or different ballot chances, the resale market has just one main possibility for intervention: financial help.

Increasing the Higher-Tier Grant is an obvious move as resale prices have risen, said PropNex Realty chief executive officer Mohamed Ismail Gafoor.

5 money traps couples fall into when buying their first property

Click on thumbnail to view. Story continues after photos. The Straits Times

  • Thanks to the government's slew of cooling measures, among which are capping MSR at 30 per cent for HDB flats and TDSR at 60 per cent for all properties, you should find yourself unable to seriously overextend yourself even if you are tempted to.
  • - Staying home to look after children may potentially half your income.

- Interest rates are at rock bottom currently but they will most definitely go up.

- Property prices are not at fire sale prices.
  • The ABSD will not last forever, but your property may (especially if it is freehold). One must remember they are one of a set of cooling measures to rein in property prices and keep them affordable for first-time property buyers.
  • However, if property prices were to start tanking significantly, it is likely that the current measures, including ABSD, will be relaxed layer by layer, like peeling an onion. After all, it is to no one's benefit for the single largest asset owned by most of us to depreciate.
  • Refinancing later on comes with many risks, including the interest rate environment then, your employment situation then, the state of the economy and property market then (affecting the valuation of your homes) and government/banking policies then (which affect whether legal subsidies can be given by banks).
  • Even if the initial rates are 0.1 per cent higher than the other bank's, what you'd want to ensure is that the rates after the initial years are competitive, in case you are unable to refinance to your advantage when the lock-in period is over.
  • It may be tempting to buy a 500 or 600+ sq ft condominium unit at less than S$1million, especially for professionals or HDB dwellers looking to buy an investment unit.
  • Do keep in mind the thousands of units coming into the market over the next few years, which means that it may not be easy to rent out or sell your unit at a profitable price. This while it locks up your 'quota' for property ownership with ABSD and punitive financing quantums for subsequent property purchases.
  • An old property on a 99-year lease is simply what it is, an old property with a shorter life span. One should always assume that the value of the property will be zero at the end of the lease and ask ourselves if we are comfortable paying the amount for the remaining lease.
  • If you are contemplating marriage and buying your first property in the foreseeable future, it is good to use the above as a checklist to have the necessary discussions with your significant other before making the largest purchase of your life.

Chris International director Chris Koh noted that the grant used to be $50,000, but was reduced to $45,000 and then to the current $40,000.

This is only $10,000 more than the usual grant for first-time resale buyers.

Said Mr Koh: "If we restore the grant back to $45,000 or $50,000, the difference is substantial and will surely encourage more to buy near their parents or married children."

To prevent abuse, a larger grant could come with strings attached, suggested R'ST Research director Ong Kah Seng.

Buyers could have to live in their flat for up to eight or 10 years before selling it again, instead of the current five years.

The grant could also be made available to more buyers.

It is currently for resale flat buyers whose parents or married children live in the same town or within 2km. This eligible distance could be increased, said experts.

"I think there is no need for young couples to live very near their parents because sometimes the flats might be too costly for them, especially in mature estates," said Mr Ong.

A smaller grant could even be made available for resale flats in the same region, he added.

Help could also be given to non-first-timers who want to move close to their families, said Mr Koh. "If they have never taken the Higher-Tier Grant before, we can extend to them a $10,000 grant - after all, it is the difference with the normal grant."

But Century21 chief executive officer Ku Swee Yong is sceptical as to whether more help is truly needed. "If we consider the ease and convenience of the extended family support, families should not need financial incentives to move near to parents," he said.

janiceh@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on June 23, 2015.
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