I have just been informed that my full-time work from home arrangement is about to change. It will be an alternate 1 week work from office and 1 week work from home arrangement instead. The start date for this has yet to be confirmed though I’m hoping for it to be later in the month. My wife is still on full-time work from home arrangement but she goes into the office 1 day a week on her own (optional). During the 1 week when I’m working in the office, I doubt she has time to manage the baby even though the helper is there. We may have to get her parents to come over more often to assist. Because they live closer to us and want to spend more time with the baby anyway.
This is a decent 50%-50% work from home and office arrangement for me. I get to spend half of my work time at home with my family and the other half of my work time in the office with my colleagues. It’s what I was looking for as my permanent work arrangement going forward so I’m hoping it stays this way for a long time. I imagine my wife is likely to come to a similar permanent blended work from home and office arrangement eventually. This works well to improve the work-life balance of our corporate jobs and makes our careers & family more sustainable in the long-term.
My wife has submitted her preferences for the available roles as the major restructuring at her bank rolls on. She will find out about the results 2 months later in Dec whether she still has a job at the end of this. It’s a nervous wait for everyone. Her bank is still one of the better places to work at in Singapore and her colleagues (both locals and expats) definitely want to stay on if they can. Moving out to other banks in the current negative employment market means they are more likely to get stuck with an expanded job scope for the same pay or lower pay and bad managers.
Given the uncertainty with my wife’s job and Singapore’s economy for what could be a prolonged period of time, we have been rethinking our decision to buy a bigger property in the next 1 to 2 years. As the baby gets older and moves around a lot more now, the lack of space in our small apartment is becoming an issue. It was never meant to house a family and we have done well to make it work for this year. But we are running out of space and the need for a bigger property has become more immediate. We have started to consider renting the bigger property instead to house our family for the next 1 to 2 years.
Our view is that the rental market is likely to weaken over time and we can get better deals there in the short term. Owners are more likely to cut their asking rental prices and less likely to cut their asking sale prices. The former reduces the monthly property investment return but the latter takes a permanent loss to the property investment capital. Owners will exhaust all possible means to avoid selling their property at a loss. That’s what we expect to happen and any downward price adjustment in the property market will take some time. And it’s more likely to be a dip than a fall if the Singapore economy holds and recovers.
But we have a lot more options in the rental market now that expats are vacating their apartments to go home to their families. With remote working in place, they could do their jobs back in their home countries. As travel becomes more troublesome and less convenient, the allure of physically being in Singapore to take advantage of the ease of travel to various countries is no longer there. Among my wife’s expat colleagues (higher expat proportion to locals because it is a foreign bank), they are seriously thinking about relocating home. Even though it’s a small sample size, the struggles they face (missing their families, dealing with more hostile anti-foreigner sentiments among locals, etc) can be extrapolated.
And so we wait to see which option (buy or rent) in the property market is better for us. At this time, it’s looking like we may rent a bigger property in an area that we have been looking to buy but haven’t done so because of the high asking sale prices. We can experience what living there is like and whether it’s something we will be happy with for the next several years. It’s easier to relocate when we are renting than having bought a place if the location doesn’t work out for us. After all, there’s so many possible future considerations like maybe having a 2nd kid, proximity to schools, etc. We will also have more time to offload our current property in this slow and weakening market. To avoid being caught in a timing problem on the buy-sell transactions and getting hit with ABSD.