The government's latest property cooling measure unveiled on Oct 5, where the loan tenure is capped at 35 years, will change the attractiveness of property as an investment, Credit Suisse said.
The measure, seen as the 7th round, comes slightly over a month after the government tightened on "shoebox" units (see chart below).
It affects all new residential property loans. In addition, for loans exceeding 30 years tenure or if the loan period extends beyond the retirement age of 65 years, these borrowers will face significantly tighter loan-to-value (LTV) limits.
In its report on Singapore's property sector, Creidt Suisse believes volumes will be hit in the near term.
"Driven by constraints on upfront payment (liquid assets at hand), people / couples over 35 are likely to opt for shorter tenure loans (to preserve the 80% LTV). This could deter some demand, with monthly mortgage payments likely to increase 13-21% (depending on tenure),'' Credit Suisse said.
However, most buyers should be able to absorb the increase given the household balance sheet strength.
Th research house also believes that the new measures could also deter some investment appetite.
Buyers could be put off by the negative carry, as a shorter loan tenure means higher monthly instalments, which may be unattractive to some investors if the rental income received is insufficient to cover the monthly instalment.
Older investors could opt for longer tenure loans, but buy properties close to half the ticket size of what they could earlier.
"Either way, we believe 'investment' demand for larger ticket properties will likely soften in the near term, as a result of the recent measures,'' Credit Suisse said.
It estimated that some 31 per cent of buyers who previously indicated their intention of buying property for investments could be affected by the latest round of measures.
Headline prices may surprise the market by being resilient. This is because vacancy rates are well below long-term averages, particularly in the mass market.
" Given the weaker demand outlook, developers may also choose to delay property completion - supporting shorter term prices,'' Credit Suisse said.
CapitaLand is the research house's "top pick" among the property counters.
"We believe some of the overhang has been priced in,'' it said.
At 0.9 times price to book, CapitaLand is preferred for the likely improvement in earnings momentum in 2013, driven mainly by CapitaMalls Asia (CMA) and its more diversified income base. Singapore residential accounts for less than 10 per cent of the property group's portfolio.
Credit Suisse said the downside risk to the stock price is supported by share buybacks.
City Developments Limimted, however, may see some pressure if volumes fall in the near term but any pullbacks present an entry opportunity, Credit Suisse said.