Yeah, I believe URA is the most accurate, the rest is more speculative.
Probably... it's likely that the owner would seek to use whichever source validates his asking price.abbby wrote: ↑Mon, 23 Jan 2023 5:56 pmMost of them derive their data from URA. Not sure about SRX since you mentioned the prices are quite inflated. But I find URA has its accuracy of things, data derived from stamping of certs etc. So I assume it has the most accurate and MOST data as well, unless the tenant doesn't stamp his cert?
Not sure why the owner wants to use SRX, maybe so to get a higher rental for his unit..
Both data points have value.Friedliver wrote: ↑Wed, 25 Jan 2023 4:45 amFrom my knowledge, SRX is the most up to date. The URA data can lag by up to two months I've seen and the timing is dependent on when the agent/landlord has lodged the new lease contract with URA so there can be a large timing difference between the URA listed date and the actual date of the signed TA.
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What I mean is that the underlying data for URA and the SRX transaction data (that feeds into the index) are the same, except that the URA data has a time lag presumably due to some admin/processing times.malcontent wrote:Both data points have value.Friedliver wrote: ↑Wed, 25 Jan 2023 4:45 amFrom my knowledge, SRX is the most up to date. The URA data can lag by up to two months I've seen and the timing is dependent on when the agent/landlord has lodged the new lease contract with URA so there can be a large timing difference between the URA listed date and the actual date of the signed TA.
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When you compare actual URA transactions it’s also not 100% because comparable units being rented may not be renovated as nicely, or some may be on a high floor, nicer view, etc.
Let’s assume your original rent was fair market value at the time, you can apply the SRX index value change from that month and apply the % change in index value as of the latest month. This can be a starting point, but it’s also not 100% because the index includes properties in the wider area, some of which may be seeing greater hikes in rent depending on the specific area.
From that starting point, you then compare it with the latest URA transactions as a sanity check for your particular property — use your knowledge of units in that development as a guide to whether it’s in the ballpark relative to how nicely done other similar sized units are.
That is how I would approach it.
Not sure if they download it from URA or it’s some sort of real estate association database where agents post the rental details to. I have seen snapshots of the data and they list precise unit numbers and dates of leases. The URA dates are definitely lagged - you can check your own lease against the URA data and you may find it is a month or two delayed.Pal wrote:All these companies subscribed to the URA service and download the data daily to populate their database.
The data they downloaded includes the unit number.
All data comes from URA. SRX merely use their in house algorithm to determine an estimated price aka X Value.
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