Though Thailand’s property market showed some signs of recovery in the third quarter of 2020, homebuyers’ purchasing power was weakened with the arrival of a new wave of Covid-19 infections in mid-December, Nattha Kahapana, deputy managing director and head of Knight Frank’s Phuket operations said
Hence, property developers are having to rely on local buyers, whose spending power has been restricted by layoffs or salary cuts, and subsequently banks denying them loans.
With no foreign buyers and limited local buyers, some developers have either postponed or cancelled new projects.
Nattha reckons it will take at least two years to sell off the units in stock and bring equilibrium to the market.
A recent Knight Frank Thailand study found that the supply of new condo units in Q4 2020 dropped by 77.8 per cent, with only 4,196 new condo units being put up for sale compared to 18,926 units in the same period in 2019.
Up to 65 per cent of the total new condo projects launched in the fourth quarter of 2020 were Grade C properties with a selling price of Bt40,000 to Bt75,000 per square metre, followed by Grade B projects going for Bt85,000-Bt120,000 per sqm. No Grade A condos were launched during that period.
In terms of location, 95 per cent of the new condominiums were situated in the suburbs of Bangkok followed by 5 per cent in the fringe of the central business district. No projects in the actual CBD area were launched in the last quarter of 2020.
The selling price of condominium units dropped in Q4 2020 compared to the previous quarter. Condos in the CBD area dropped by 5 per cent to Bt251,435 from Bt265,000 per square metre in the previous quarter. Those in the fringe of the CBD dropped 15.4 per cent from Bt146,000 to Bt123,560 per square metre, while the asking price for those in the suburbs dropped 13.2 per cent from Bt79,400 to Bt68,945 per square metre. This price drop was put down to operators pushing to sell off units to boost their liquidity. New projects launched in the fourth quarter of last year are also relatively cheaper, proving that it is truly a buyer’s market.
Source: The Nation Thailand