SINGAPORE: Home rental pressures may ease in the coming months because of a “significant” supply of new housing units, said the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) on Wednesday (Apr 26).
Almost 40,000 residential units will be completed across the public and private housing markets this year, which is the highest number of annual completions since 2018.
This pace of completion will continue over the next two years, with nearly 100,000 public and private residential units coming on-stream over 2023 to 2025, the central bank added in its latest half-yearly macroeconomic review.
At the same time, rental demand will also be tempered by people vacating their rental units once their new homes are completed.
Anecdotally, real estate agencies have seen a decline in viewings for rental units and leasing enquiries since the start of 2023, said MAS.
The global economic uncertainties and slower growth may also further weigh on sentiments in the rental markets.
MAS said rents for Housing Development Board (HDB) and private residential housing units have risen sharply by 38 per cent and 43 per cent, respectively, since 2021.
WHY RENTS WENT UP
This broad-based increase in home rents was largely due to an “exceptional demand-supply imbalance” brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pandemic-induced disruptions, ranging from manpower to construction materials, had led to severe delays in the completion of private and public residential projects.
An average of about 20,000 private and public residential units were completed each year between 2020 and 2022, about 22 per cent lower than the yearly average of 26,000 units from 2018 to 2019.