Published September 2, 2008
Now, deferred payments with a twist
Credit-worthy buyers offered loans with no interest and instalment payment until TOP
By SIOW LI SEN
Email this article
Print article
Feedback
(SINGAPORE) The deferred payment scheme may have been banned, but something strikingly similar is doing the rounds to help developers sell their properties.
The interest absorption scheme (IAS) and the zero instalment scheme allow the buyer to make a 20 per cent downpayment - and then pay nothing until the temporary occupation permit, which may still be up to three years down the road.
Maybank, OCBC Bank and United Overseas Bank (UOB) are currently offering the scheme. Standard Chartered Bank is launching it soon, according to Dennis Khoo, its general manager of lending. Interestingly, DBS Bank has decided to stop offering such schemes.
The deferred payment scheme was banned by the government last October to dampen excessive speculation. It was offered by buyers and you did not even have to qualify as a borrower to buy property worth millions of dollars - as long as you had funds for the downpayment.
Under the new schemes, the buyers have to sign up to a bank loan for the property. 'The buyer has to be credit-worthy,' said Nicholas Mak, Knight Frank's director of research and consultancy. Once the creditworthiness is established, the buyer pays nothing more till TOP. During that period, it is the developer that pays interest to the bank, under the IAS.
0 ? blnMac = true:blnMac = false;
if (blnMac == true) {
document.write('');
}
//-->
Tuesday, 2 September 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment