Add to this expatriates having their benefits reduced or withdrawn, and moving companies find their services in demand.
A check with five movers revealed that some have been enjoying double the amount of business within Singapore since the downturn.
Moving Star Express in Kallang, for example, now does eight home moves a day, up from five a year ago.
Its owner Billie Ching, 24, said: 'When they (expatriates) buy new homes or find cheaper places to rent, they come to us movers.
'We thrive when the economy goes up, and also when the economy goes down.'
Crown Relocations, which has more than 200 offices in over 50 countries, said it has handled 25 per cent more home moves in the last two months than over the same period last year.
And prospects ahead look bright.
Major player Santa Fe Relocation Services, which handles domestic and international moves, is expecting business to boom on both fronts over the next two months.
With still a week to go till the end of this month, it has already handled 45 local moves - up from 20 last month.
Its managing director Bill Cain said the company is having one of its best years: 'At this point, many finance companies are still waiting to see what will happen. After all, the recession is only about three months old.
'But soon, layoffs will go up and there may also be more international moves, as key top positions get tweaked.'
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November 2008 Property News
- Terminated Sale of Millennium Seoul Hilton
- URA Included Jurong East “white” Site in its Reserve List
- Cost is the barrier for green building development
- MAS brushed off Worries on Property Disclosure of Banks
- Minister Mah: Government has limitations
- Indoor Plants for High Homes
- Lessons from the US Subprime Mortgage Crisis
- HK’s mortgage loans drop to 40 percent
- Bukit site opened for hotel developers
- URA adds Bukit site to reserve-list hotel

