It has emerged that at specific "hot" launches, property agents themselves have purchased up to 20 per cent of the available units. At Emerald of Katong, agents snapped up 173 of the 846 units. At Norwood Grand, nearly 10 per cent of the inventory went to the sales force. This is not merely a statistical anomaly; it is a structural shift in how value is perceived, created, and potentially distorted in the Singapore property market.
When the gatekeepers of the market become its primary movers, it raises profound questions. Is this the ultimate vote of confidence, or a mechanism that artificially manufactures scarcity?
The Mechanics of "First Dibs"
To understand the implications, one must first understand the mechanism. In the high-stakes theatre of a Singapore condo launch, timing is currency. The "First Dibs" phenomenon refers to the priority access granted to agents—often allowing them to book units before the doors open to the general public or even VIP clients.
While the Council for Estate Agencies (CEA) and the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) currently view this as a "private commercial arrangement," the optics are striking. The agent is no longer just the intermediary; they are the front-running investor. They have the information advantage, the access advantage, and, as we shall see, a significant financial advantage.
Economic Implications: The Distortion of Value
The economic ripples of this behaviour extend far beyond the launch weekend. When 20 per cent of a project is absorbed by industry insiders, three specific economic distortions occur.
1. The Commission-Adjusted "Real" Price
The most immediate economic implication is the disparity in acquisition cost. An agent buying a S$2 million unit who is also entitled to a 2 to 3 per cent commission is effectively purchasing that asset at a S$40,000 to S$60,000 discount.
This creates a two-tier pricing structure: the "Public Price" and the "Insider Price." While the Sale and Purchase Agreement reflects the headline figure, the agent’s break-even point is significantly lower than that of the civilian buyer. In a softening market, the agent can afford to exit at a lower price point and still profit, potentially undercutting the very clients they served.
2. Artificial Price Anchoring
High take-up rates on launch weekends are the primary driver of market sentiment. When a developer announces, "80 per cent sold on day one," it validates the asking price and encourages fence-sitters to jump in.
However, if a significant portion of that 80 per cent is agent-driven, the demand is arguably synthetic. It creates a "floor" price that hasn't actually been tested by genuine end-user demand. We risk a scenario where the valuation is supported not by families needing homes, but by a speculative circle exchanging units among themselves.
3. The Liquidity Trap
Agents are often "flippers" rather than "keepers." They are acutely aware of the Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) timeline. If a development has a 20 per cent concentration of agent-owners, we must anticipate a potential supply shock three to four years down the line. When the SSD period expires, these agents may look to exit simultaneously to recycle their capital, potentially flooding the resale market and depressing prices for the other 80 per cent of owners.
Societal Implications: The FOMO Factory
The societal impact is perhaps less tangible than the economic one, but far more corrosive to the social fabric of the property market.
The Psychology of "If They Buy, I Must Buy"
Singaporeans are astute, if occasionally herd-like, investors. We look for signals. When the experts—the very people who see the data daily—are buying, it sends a powerful, almost irresistible signal of "guaranteed profit."
This heightens the Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO) to dangerous levels. It bypasses the due diligence process. A buyer might think, "Why should I research the rental yield? The agent bought two units!" This outsourcing of judgment is perilous. It assumes the agent’s financial situation, risk tolerance, and holding power are identical to the client’s. They rarely are.
The Erosion of Meritocratic Access
There is a subtle class stratification occurring here. The promise of the new launch market is that anyone with the capital has an equal shot at the "best" stack—the pool-facing, high-floor unit.
When agents secure the choicest 20 per cent of units before the public ballot, the meritocracy of the market is compromised. The public is left picking over the carcass of the inventory, often paying the same price per square foot for inferior facings. It fosters a cynical view of the market: that it is a rigged game where the house—and its employees—always wins.
Regulatory Implications: The Pending Correction?
Currently, the regulatory stance is hands-off. The authorities have not intervened, citing the free-market nature of developer sales. However, history suggests that in Singapore, policy follows sentiment.
The Conflict of Interest Conundrum
The primary regulatory concern is the conflict of interest. Can an agent truly act in the best interest of a client if they are competing for the same unit? If an agent knows a specific stack is under-priced, do they recommend it to the client, or reserve it for themselves?
The current guidelines require declaration, but declaration is a weak shield against structural incentives.
Potential Policy Responses
If this trend continues to accelerate—moving from 4 per cent of the total market to 10 or 15 per cent—we may see targeted cooling measures. These could take the form of:
The "Last Queue" Policy: Mandating that agents and their immediate families can only purchase units after the public balloting is complete.
Commission Clawbacks: Prohibiting the payment of commissions on "own-buy" units to remove the discount incentive.
The government is likely watching the Emerald of Katong cohort closely. If those units are dumped onto the resale market in 2028 causing volatility, the regulatory hand will almost certainly move.
Conclusion: The Real Value Perspective
For the discerning buyer, the high agent participation in a project should not be viewed as an automatic "Buy" signal. It is a data point that requires nuance.
While it indicates that industry insiders see value, it also signals a project with a high concentration of speculative capital. "Real Value" in real estate is found in genuine demand—proximity to schools, transport nodes (like the upcoming lines near Katong), and efficient layouts—not in the artificial heat generated by the sales team.
When you see a queue of agents buying units, do not ask, "How can I get one?" Ask instead, "Who is going to be left to buy this from me when the music stops?"
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it legal for property agents to buy units before the public?
Yes. Currently, this is considered a private commercial arrangement between the developer and the agency. There are no government regulations explicitly banning agents from priority queues ("first dibs"), provided they declare their position as agents in the purchase documents.
Do agents essentially get a discount on their own property purchases?
Indirectly, yes. While they pay the listed purchase price, agents who buy units often receive the standard sales commission (typically 2% to 3%) on their own transaction. This effectively acts as a rebate, lowering their net entry cost compared to a regular buyer.
Does high agent ownership make a condo a riskier investment?
It can. A high concentration of agent-owners (e.g., 20%) often indicates speculative buying. Agents are more likely to sell as soon as the 3-year Seller’s Stamp Duty (SSD) period is over. This could lead to a sudden surge of supply in the resale market, potentially dampening prices for other owners.
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