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Singapore Is Seeing an Unprecedented Mortgage Slowdown

Housing values may drop as much as 3 percent this year, and new home sales might plunge 20 percent.

Singapore Is Seeing an Unprecedented Mortgage Slowdown
The Seascape luxury property development of Sentosa Cove stands on Sentosa Island in this aerial photograph taken above Singapore. (Photographer: Darren Soh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Rising interest rates and the latest round of property curbs have put the brakes on mortgage demand at Singapore’s banks, potentially further dragging down the city’s housing market.

Home-loan growth slowed to 1.9 percent in the first 11 months of 2018, less than half the 4.2 percent increase posted in 2017, the latest Monetary Authority of Singapore data show. Mortgage growth will stay stuck below 2 percent this year, according to Diksha Gera, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.

Singapore Is Seeing an Unprecedented Mortgage Slowdown

The credit slowdown threatens to further accelerate the decline in residential prices, which fell for the first time in six quarters in the final three months of last year. Housing values may drop as much as 3 percent this year, and new home sales might plunge 20 percent, according to Derek Tan, a real estate analyst at DBS Group Holdings Ltd.

A surge in housing supply, rising mortgage rates, a China-led economic slowdown and volatile financial markets are all weighing on sentiment, said Royston Foo, an independent property analyst who publishes on Smartkarma.

“I expect the overall property market outlook to be weaker in 2019,” Foo said. “Insecurity and bearish sentiment will result in potential buyers holding back purchases and adopting a wait-and-see approach.”

The latest property curbs announced in July hit mortgage demand, DBS Chief Executive Officer Piyush Gupta said earlier this month. The bank’s Singapore mortgage book grew less than S$2.5 billion ($1.8 billion) in 2018, compared to the S$4 billion initially anticipated at the start of the year, he said.

Still, the drop in lending growth won’t necessarily dent earnings at Singapore’s three biggest banks, because recent increases in mortgage rates will buffer interest income. DBS, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. and United Overseas Bank Ltd. have raised home loan rates an average 20 basis points in the past three months to just above 2 percent, and they may climb to 3 percent, according to Nomura Holdings Inc. analyst Marcus Chua.

To contact the reporters on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in Singapore at cchanjaroen@bloomberg.net;Pooja Thakur in Singapore at pthakur@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, ;Katrina Nicholas at knicholas2@bloomberg.net, Peter Vercoe

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