Written Answer by Ministry of National Development on cases under restriction on re-issue of Option To Purchase for same unit to same purchaser

Nov 2, 2020


Mr Chua Kheng Wee Louis: To ask the Minister for National Development with regard to URA's announcement on the Restriction on Re-Issue of Option to Purchase (OTP) for the Same Unit to Same Purchaser, what is (i) the total number of such cases over the last two years (ii) the average length of time taken to exercise OTPs for successful cases (iii) the number of cases that were eventually aborted (iv) the current number of cases outstanding and (v) the average number of weeks that developers have committed to purchasers for the re-issuance of OTPs.

Answer:

Since January 2019, 5,500 private housing transactions had Options to Purchase (or OTPs) for the same units re-issued to the same purchasers. Close to 70% of these re-issued OTPs have been exercised, on average less than 6 months from the date the first OTP was issued. Only about 1% of the re-issued OTPs eventually lapsed.

Given the current economic uncertainties, it is even more important for purchasers to be financially prudent and to secure the necessary financial resources before they commit to new property purchases. To reduce risk to purchasers, URA has, from 28 September, prohibited developers from (i) providing upfront agreement to purchasers to re-issue OTP, and (ii) re-issuing OTP to the same purchaser(s) for the same unit within 12 months after the expiry of the earlier OTP. Nevertheless, to minimise the impact on existing purchasers, URA will allow developers to honour their previous commitments to the purchasers, which were made prior to these changes.

For purchasers who require more time, such as to complete the sale of their existing property to finance the new property, URA is prepared to grant extensions of OTP validity, so there is no need for the developer to reissue the OTP.