An unregistered property agent was convicted in Court on 18 April for eight charges of holding himself out to the public as being a property agent without being registered as such with the Council for Estate Agencies (CEA). Raymond Chng (Chng Leimeng), 36, was involved in closing a lease transaction and posting online advertisements for the sale of HDB and private properties though he was not on the CEA register.

BEING AN UNREGISTERED PROPERTY AGENT, CHNG WAS SENTENCED TO A FINE TOTALING $71,500, IN DEFAULT OF 25 WEEKS’ IMPRISONMENT.

In sentencing Chng, the Court also took into consideration 26 other similar charges of Chng holding out as a property agent to the public when he was not a registered agent on the CEA register.

Under the Estate Agents Act (Cap. 95A), “estate agents” refer to estate agency businesses (sole proprietors, partnerships, and companies) or individuals who do estate agency work. Estate agency businesses are commonly known as property agencies. “Salespersons” refer to individuals who perform estate agency work. They are commonly known as property agents.

Under the Estate Agents Act (EAA), it is an offense for entities and/or individuals to act or hold out as estate agents and/or salespersons in any property transaction if they are not licensed or registered with the CEA.

Chng pleaded guilty and was convicted in Court for a total of eight charges under Section 29(1)(a) of the EAA for holding himself out as a salesperson for Dennis Wee Realty Pte Ltd (DWR), without being registered as a salesperson.

Chng was a former agent with DWR between 18 November 2011 and 28 April 2015. He was terminated by DWR on 28 April 2015 and therefore became an unregistered property agent after 28 April 2015.

One of the charges against the unregistered property agent was in relation to the closing of a lease transaction. In October 2015, he assisted a tenant in the rental of an apartment for a year, from 13 October 2015 to 12 October 2016 though he was not on the CEA register. He had held himself out as a property agent with DWR to the landlord’s agent and suggested that they co-broke the transaction. He then arranged for a viewing of the property, negotiated the monthly rental on the tenant’s behalf, closed the transaction, and collected a commission of $1,450 from the tenant.

The other seven charges were in relation to advertisements that Chng had posted online. Investigations revealed that between early May 2015 and the end of August 2015, Chng had posted seven advertisements on an online property portal to market the sale of seven HDB and private properties in Singapore.

Sometime before October 2015, a prospective tenant and his friend responded to Raymond Chng’s advertisement on an online property portal and learned from Chng that there was an apartment unit at Spottiswoode Park available for rent.

On or around 1 October 2015, Chng knowing that he is an unregistered property agent, sent a Short Message Service (SMS) text to the agent who was representing the owner/landlord of the unit. The landlord’s agent had advertised the unit for rent at a monthly rental of $3,200. Chng asked to co-broke with the landlord’s agent as he had tenants who could commence a lease soon. In his SMS text to the landlord’s agent, he indicated that he was from Dennis Wee Realty Pte Ltd (DWR).

Chng arranged for his clients to view the unit on or around 2 October 2015 and facilitated the closing of a lease transaction for one year, from 13 October 2015 to 12 October 2016, at a monthly rental of $3,000.

Chng prepared a Letter of Intent for the lease of the unit and sent it to the landlord’s agent. The landlord’s agent then prepared the tenancy agreement, which Chng signed off as a witness for his client. Being no longer on the CEA register, Chng indicated his previous CEA registration number on the tenancy agreement. Chng received $1,450 as a commission for closing this lease transaction.

Separately, between early May 2015 and the end of August 2015, Chng also posted seven advertisements on an online property portal to market the sale of seven HDB and private properties though he was not on the CEA register.

In all his advertisements, Chng had represented that he was a registered agent and an Associate Division Director of DWR. The advertisements included his name, photograph, mobile number, previous CEA registration number, designation in DWR, DWR’s CEA license number, and DWR’s logo. Although he was an unregistered property agent, Chng signed off as an agent from DWR in the text of his advertisements.

During the same period, Chng also posted 30 other similar advertisements on the property portal to market the sale and/or lease of 28 other HDB and private properties, which form the basis of the other 26 charges that the Court took into consideration when sentencing Chng.

In all the advertisements, Chng held himself out as a registered agent and an Associate Division Director of DWR when he was not. The advertisements included his name, photograph, mobile number, previous CEA registration number, designation in DWR, DWR’s CEA license number, and DWR’s logo.

In sentencing Chng, the Court took into consideration 26 other similar charges of Chng holding himself out as a property agent without being registered.

The punishment for an offense under Section 29(1)(a) of the EAA is a fine not exceeding $25,000, or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months, or both.

Consumers who choose to have a property agent to assist them in their property transactions should engage only property agencies and agents who are licensed and registered with the CEA. The public can verify whether an entity or individual is licensed or registered with the CEA via the Public Register on the CEA website. The public can report those who perform unlicensed estate agency work and are not on the CEA register.

The landscape for property agents is fast changing and becoming more competitive. In this environment, property agents “must upgrade or die,” according to the chief mortgage consultant of iCompareLoan.com, Mr Paul Ho. Mr. Ho said that agents must adopt technology and automate their workflow or risk being replaced by automation or technical tools.

As buyers of the future grow more discerning, agents cannot afford to just rely on their personality or their experience to attract clients. Buyers and sellers of the future will increasingly rely on agents to have knowledge on property finance calculations and this is where icompareloan.com’s trademarked Home Loan report comes in handy.

The Home Loan Report tool is Singapore’s first one-of-a-kind analysis platform that provides the latest updates of detailed loan packages and helps property agents, financial advisors, and mortgage brokers to analyze home loan packages for their clients and give unbiased home loan / commercial loan analysis for their property buyers and homeowners.

https://www.icompareloan.com/resources/icompareloancom-helps-agents-stay-ahead-game/

This trademarked tool is a one-stop solution that can help deliver a detailed home loan report to property agents in 3 minutes flat. This is especially helpful when agents who do not have knowledge of property finance calculations make cold calls to potential clients and need to have a thorough analysis at hand in order to best direct each client on what their property buying and selling options are.

Such a report will not only help agents deliver the best possible property options to their clients, it will also help prevent the agent or potential buyers or sellers from wasting each other’s time since they already have all the information they need on the potential client’s buying or selling prospects at hand.

MR. HO SAID IT IS WRONG FOR AN UNREGISTERED PROPERTY AGENT TO SOLICIT BUSINESS FROM THE PUBLIC.

Registration with CEA provides protection for home buyers, and property agents who want to continue working legally in the industry must set themselves apart and position themselves as thought leaders, he added.

“It’s not a science, it’s a soft art,” Mr. Ho added, explaining how simply organizing content online, maximizing contacts using platforms like LinkedIn, creating simple webpages, and adhering to SEO principles can help agents become sought after without extraordinary effort.

Read also:
Unlicensed property agent not on CEA register convicted and fined $72,000 

Woman fined $15,000 for unlicensed real estate agency work – Singapore News 

Byravi