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Singapore’s
landlords have already pushed their tenants into a
corner; now they may be testing the central bank’s
patience.
If the
global economy doesn’t slow in 2008, the island’s
monetary authority may have to tighten its policy to
manage the impact of skyrocketing rents on consumer
prices.
And that
means there is a good chance of a stronger Singapore
dollar.
The
average monthly rental for prime office space in the
city state has tripled in the past three years, reaching
a record high of $12.60 per square foot in the third
quarter, according to real-estate brokerage CB Richard
Ellis.
The
global credit-market turmoil doesn’t seem to have had a
discernible impact on Singapore office demand, which
continues to be dominated by banks and financial firms,
Richard Ellis said.
Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co. are
building their own office complexes as vacancy rates in
the central business district fall close to zero.
Future
supply, too, is getting snapped up.
Standard
Chartered Plc. has booked 500,000 square feet (46,451
square meters), or about one-third of the first phase of
Marina
Bay Financial Center, which will only be ready in the
first quarter of 2010.
The
government is releasing more land to ease the supply
crunch, though there’s no reprieve in sight for tenants
for at least another couple of years.
Collective sales
Chicago-based property consulting firm Jones Lang
LaSalle Inc. estimates supply of new office space in
Singapore
to be less than half of the projected demand of 5
million square feet from 2007 to 2009.
A
similar story is playing out in residential and retail
segments, which have even deeper linkages with local
inflation.
In the
first seven months of this year, 61 sites were sold to
developers by owners of apartment complexes in so-called
en-bloc, or collective, deals for a total value of S$11
billion ($7.5 billion), surpassing last year’s record of
S$7.8 billion, according to research by property
brokerage Savills Plc.
This has
curbed supply of housing at a time when demand is
soaring. International schools are overbooked,
suggesting that more foreigners are being allowed in to
boost the island’s small work force of 2.6 million
people.
The
government has recently tightened the rules for en-bloc
sales and imposed higher fees on developers. That might
help contain the frenzy of collective sales somewhat.
Residential rents, however, are unlikely to come down in
a hurry. If anything, the rental increase will be
inflationary.
14-percent growth
“Given
the tight labor market, we expect higher living costs to
lead to more generous wage settlements,” Nicholas Bibby
and Puay Yeong Goh, currency strategists at Barclays
Capital in Singapore, wrote in a research note last
week.
The
Singapore economy grew an annualized 14.4 percent in the
second quarter, its fastest pace of expansion in two
years. Adding to the pressure on inflation—which is
already at a 12-year high of 2.9 percent—retailers, too,
are faced with galloping rental costs, which they want
to pass on to consumers.
The
Monetary Authority of Singapore sets policy by targeting
the local dollar against a basket of trading partners’
currencies. At its semiannual review tomorrow, the
central bank will have an opportunity to highlight the
inflation risk.
Still,
it’s unlikely that the monetary authority will change
its policy of “modest and gradual” currency
appreciation, which has been in place since April 2004,
to seek a significantly stronger Singapore dollar.
At least
it may not do so immediately.
Inflation hawk
A
stronger currency won’t be welcome at a time when the
island’s key electronics exports—semiconductors, disk
drives and telecommunications equipment—have fallen for
seven straight months.
“The
difficulty for the central bank this time around is that
while the domestic economy is booming, exports are not
and indeed are threatened by US developments,” says
Robert Prior-Wandesforde, an economist at HSBC Holdings
Plc. in Singapore.
Even so,
a stronger
Singapore
dollar may become inevitable in 2008 as inflation
crosses the 3-percent mark. Last time that happened was
in 1994, when the stance of monetary policy was for
quicker appreciation in the Singapore dollar than at
present, the Barclays economists note.
The
Singapore dollar has risen just 4 percent so far this
year against the US currency, compared with almost a
14-percent surge in the Thai baht and a 12-percent jump
in the Indian rupee.
Singapore’s
monetary authority is an extremely credible inflation
fighter. And inflation expectations are already firming,
thanks to the frenzied real-estate market.
While
the central bank probably won’t jump into the fray to
prick the property bubble, it won’t let consumer prices
get out of hand either. A strong Singapore dollar may be
a good bet. |