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Ought to You Pay For A Purchaser Agent?




3 min read

You know those guides that say you should bang pots and pans, to scare off a bear? 

Or that you should talk calmly to an armed kidnapper to humanise yourself? 

Those are the kinds of solutions only someone in my current position – safely hammering away on a keyboard in my room – would present. I refuse to believe that many people would attempt that in the actual scenarios. And this is, I think, one of the issues the Singapore Estate Agents Association (SEAA) faces with their recent pact.

SEAA has signed guidelines with a lot of property agents, asking for buyers’ agents to collect service fees from their clients. This goes against the established norm, where in most cases, it’s the seller who pays the commission for both (i.e., there’s a two per cent commission on the sale of the property, of which the buyer and seller’s agents both get one per cent). This is negotiable, but only in the same way most United Nations crises are: a low chance of success, coupled with nobody being very happy.

And to no one’s surprise, it was recently revealed that the real world take up was “tepid”

Now the intentions are definitely good. If everyone was willing to pay for their own buyer’s agent, property transactions would actually be easier on all of us. Sellers’ agents wouldn’t have to ghost other potential agents, and there would be less impulse to engage in certain shenanigans. 

The problem is exactly the same as the aforementioned bear attack scenario. Sure, a property agent might understand how – industry wide and in an abstract sense – asking a buyer for money makes sense. But in reality, very few want to be the ones to try it. 

It doesn’t matter if you explain that oh in the end the costs even out as the seller has to pay lower commissions, which can be factored into the pricing etc. That doesn’t matter in the face of FREE, which causes the human brain to immediately ignore the numbers and divide everything into: Free/Not free.

Besides, how are they going to do it, unless there’s a guarantee everyone else is guaranteed to stick to the guidelines? If Agent A wants to charge their buyer, and Agent B doesn’t, then Agent A will soon be looking for a change of career. 

I understand that, by using guidelines, it’s possible for the industry to try and self-regulate before the authorities step in.

And maybe because it’s an organisation of professional salespeople, they’re confident they can sell any idea, even to other salespeople. But this is a classic collective action problem: even if it would be good for the property market as a whole, it’s nigh impossible to find the momentum needed for what is, essentially, a simultaneous behavioural change across the entire industry. Because again, this doesn’t work if some agents won’t charge buyers, whilst others try to. It’s just too much of an edge to lose, in an already competitive business.

In the end, this may boil down to requiring government-level regulations, rather than guidelines or an honour system (see what is happening in the US). 

Meanwhile in other property news:

  • A new condo review is up! Check out 8@BT, a Bukit Timah condo which has some of the most efficient layouts we’ve seen.
  • Condo units with private pools aren’t necessarily expensive, but they are hard to find. Here are some where you can have a quiet soak, sans screaming kids at the pool area. 

  • Not all the best located freehold properties are obvious, or super pricey. Here are the hidden gems in the central areas, which you’ve probably missed.
  • 999-year lease homes, for $3.88 million or under, and also next to an MRT station. Need we say more? Check it out

Weekly Sales Roundup (02 September – 08 September)

Top 5 Most Expensive New Sales (By Project)

PROJECT NAME PRICE S$ AREA (SQFT) $PSF TENURE
KLIMT CAIRNHILL $5,690,000 1496 $3,803 FH
19 NASSIM $5,321,000 1475 $3,608 99 yrs (2019)
TEMBUSU GRAND $3,517,000 1432 $2,457 99 yrs (2022)
THE CONTINUUM $3,384,000 1270 $2,664 FH
GRANGE 1866 $3,024,000 1012 $2,989 FH

Top 5 Cheapest New Sales (By Project)

PROJECT NAME PRICE S$ AREA (SQFT) $PSF TENURE
KASSIA $1,009,000 474 $2,130 FH
SORA $1,250,000 538 $2,323 99 yrs (2023)
PINETREE HILL $1,353,000 538 $2,514 99 yrs (2022)
HILLHAVEN $1,509,511 700 $2,157 99 yrs (2023)
LENTORIA $1,562,000 732 $2,134 99 yrs (2022)

Top 5 Most Expensive Resale

PROJECT NAME PRICE S$ AREA (SQFT) $PSF TENURE
LEEDON RESIDENCE $5,880,000 2131 $2,759 FH
REGENCY PARK $5,125,000 2250 $2,278 FH
THE DRAYCOTT $5,000,000 2637 $1,896 FH
NEWTON ONE $4,608,000 1916 $2,405 FH
THE SUITES AT
CENTRAL
$4,310,000 1733 $2,487 FH

Top 5 Cheapest Resale

PROJECT NAME PRICE S$ AREA (SQFT) $PSF TENURE
STRATUM $680,000 452 $1,504 99 yrs (2012)
PALMERA EAST $715,000 431 $1,661 FH
D’NEST $762,000 484 $1,573 99 yrs (2010)
NORTH PARK RESIDENCES $818,900 431 $1,902 99 yrs (2015)
HILLION RESIDENCES $820,000 474 $1,731 99 yrs (2013)

Top 5 Biggest Winners

PROJECT NAME PRICE S$ AREA (SQFT) $PSF RETURNS HOLDING PERIOD
REGENCY PARK $5,125,000 2250 $2,278 $3,237,000 22 Years
THE WINDSOR $2,898,888 1798 $1,613 $1,548,888 14 Years
CLOVER BY THE PARK $2,480,000 1292 $1,920 $1,435,000 15 Years
VARSITY PARK
CONDOMINIUM
$2,720,000 1894 $1,436 $1,370,000 16 Years
EAST VIEW $2,180,000 1098 $1,986 $1,242,658 28 Years

Top 5 Biggest Losers

PROJECT NAME PRICE S$ AREA (SQFT) $PSF RETURNS HOLDING PERIOD
THE SCOTTS TOWER $1,300,000 667 $1,948 -$916,416 13 Years
THE PEAK @ CAIRNHILL I $1,060,000 527 $2,010 -$340,000 13 Years
26 NEWTON $1,088,000 484 $2,246 -$86,129 8 Years
URBAN VISTA $1,170,000 797 $1,469 -$51,233 11 Years
NYON $1,900,000 915 $2,077 $1,000 5 Years

Transaction Breakdown

Type Of Sale Proportion NEWSLETTER 2

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