Saturday, July 4, 2009

New property bubbles rising in China: report


Source : Business Times – 4 Jul 2009

CHINA’S recent moves to ease curbs on the property sector have sent prices soaring recently, stoking fears that new property bubbles are forming, state media reported yesterday.

Residential property prices in Beijing’s Central Business District rose 6.5 per cent in the past week and demand for second-hand houses in some other areas is four times the supply, said the China Daily, citing brokerage Homelink.

It said that a land parcel in Beijing, which was withdrawn from a public tender due to a lack of bidders only 15 months ago, was auctioned off on Monday for a record US$585 million.

‘The bidders have gone irrational. A bubble in Beijing’s property market is definitely there,’ Pan Shiyi, one of the bidders that day and chairman of leading developer Soho China, said after the auction, according to the report.

In Shanghai, developers of the luxury Tomson Rivers apartments, priced at over US$14,600 per square metre, sold at least 10 units in June, the report said.

That compared with sales of only four units since the project was marketed four years ago, it added.

In the southern city of Guangzhou, the downtown housing price reached US$1,600 per square metre in May, close to the record high of US$1,700 in October 2007, the report said.

‘One thing we are concerned about is whether there is a new bubble being shaped,’ the report quoted Gu Yunchang, secretary general of the China Real Estate Association as saying. ‘The possibility of a bubble is pretty big.’

China’s house prices have been rising fast in recent years with the country’s economic boom.

The trend accelerated in 2006 and 2007, partly spurred by a growing stock market that prompted investors to place their windfalls in property.

As a result, the average home price in Beijing was 23 times a local family’s average income in 2007, compared with levels of four to six times average incomes internationally, state media reported.

Fearing the property market would suddenly collapse, Beijing launched a number of measures from September 2007 to curb speculation, including raising downpayments on second homes and banning loans to developers for land purchases.

The policies affected the industry severely, causing sales to slump and house prices to drop in dozens of major cities.

However, the financial crisis has forced authorities to relax the curbs, with local governments relying on preferential policies to boost demand.

Stamp tax on property purchases and value-added tax of land on property sales was lifted from November 2008 and minimum deposits for first-time home buyers was also slashed.


Resale flats: 3 groups of ready buyers


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

HOME buyers rushed to the HDB resale market in the second quarter and sent sales up as much as 60 per cent over the first quarter, according to property agencies.

These buyers, ranging from young couples to permanent residents and families upsizing or downsizing their homes, have propped up the resale market amid the recession.

They have also contributed to the surprising turnaround in HDB resale flat prices. Flash estimates stated that they rose 1.2 per cent in the second quarter to hit a record high after dipping 0.8 per cent in the first quarter.

Industry observers point to the recent improved market sentiment and low mortgage rates as key factors luring buyers.

The economic downturn has also delivered sellers a reality check, meaning buyers no longer have to fork out high amounts of upfront cash, known as cash-over-valuation, to buy a resale flat.

While agencies differ over the level of sales in the second quarter, they all agree that activity has rocketed.

Data from the Housing Board’s website captured by C&H Realty ahead of official figures due at the end of the month showed a 9 per cent rise in sales transactions for the second quarter compared to the first.

Agencies say the actual figure is much higher due to the large number of transactions done in the last month or so when sales activity picked up across the public and private markets. This would not have been registered by HDB in time.

Property agencies HSR Property Group, PropNex, ERA Asia Pacific and C&H Realty – which together account for almost the entire HDB market – told The Straits Times that sales transactions had surged by between 52 and 60 per cent in the April to June period compared with the preceding three months.

Surprisingly, larger flat types which fast lost popularity when the recession started came back into favour.

HDB data showed that five-room flats climbed 18 per cent, while C&H Realty saw transactions soar 75 per cent, with most done in the past month.

Executive flats enjoyed almost a 20 per cent rise in sales volume, said HDB data.

PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail said prices of bigger flats have come down since their peak. HDB valuations have also caught up, so the cash-over-valuation sum needed to buy a resale flat is very low or zero, he added.

Businessman Melvin Chua, 39, is one such home owner who felt that the time was ripe to upgrade.

He recently sold his four-room flat in Jalan Membina at $550,000 and last month, bought a five-roomer for about $638,000 in the same estate.

The same unit would have cost more than $700,000 last year, said Mr Chua, who is married with one son.

‘Larger flats, like my new home, have been selling below valuation, so I felt it was a good deal,’ he added.

But smaller flat types – the three- and four-roomers – still dominated by market share, thanks mainly to young couples, PRs and downgraders, say agency bosses.

All agencies showed that sales transactions were high for suburban, mature estates such as Woodlands, Jurong West and Tampines.

‘This is due mainly to the fact that comparable HDB flats in these estates are generally more affordable compared to other central estates,’ said C&H Realty managing director Albert Lu.

Agency bosses noted that the spike in sales has prompted agents to return to the business – a turnaround for an industry that suffered an exodus of staff last year when the recession set in.

The strength of the HDB resale market has spilled over to the private sector, where sellers of resale flats – the HDB upgraders – have been snapping up mass market condo units, say analysts.

But sustaining such a level of sales depends on the economy’s performance over the rest of the year, said ERA Asia Pacific associate director Eugene Lim.

‘The momentum will sustain, provided there are no unforeseen circumstances,’ he said.

‘For now, the uncertain outlook will continue to keep pressure downwards despite high demand, and deter sellers from jacking up asking prices if they are serious about selling.’


UNCERTAIN OUTLOOK WILL KEEP PRICES DOWN

‘The momentum will sustain, provided there are no unforeseen circumstances. For now, the uncertain outlook will continue to keep pressure downwards despite high demand, and deter sellers from jacking up asking prices if they are serious about selling.’ – ERA Asia Pacific associate director Eugene Lim, about the increased sales and prices of HDB resale flats.

Sustaining such a level of sales will, he notes, depend on the economy’s performance over the rest of the year.


Luxe glass curves


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

French luxury label Louis Vuitton is making waves, literally, with its Ion Orchard boutique. The 905 sq m store facing Orchard Road boasts the world’s first curved glass facade.

Designed by New York-based architecture firm Front Inc, it is a new look for a brand whose landmark stores such as its seven-storey flagship at Champs Elysees in Paris have box-like shells.

The store, which opened its doors to the public yesterday, is the chain’s largest outlet in South-east Asia.

A spokesman declined to reveal figures, but the cost of creating the duo-toned glass facade is believed to be hefty. Inspired by the folds of the label’s iconic Damier check scarf, all 197 glass panels of the facade were handmade and mould-textured by a glassmaker in London.

Located directly above the Mass Rapid Transit underground system, the boutique has an exterior which hangs like a glass curtain from the ceiling instead of being fixed on the floor.

It is one of the many architectural features at the outlet, the first to open for business at the mega-mall which is scheduled to launch on July 21.

Mr Jean-Baptiste Debains, president of Louis Vuitton Asia Pacific, said at a press conference at the store on Thursday: ‘In the past five to 10 years, not much has happened for retail and luxury here, so this is an important store. It marks the renewal of Singapore as a luxury hub for South-east Asia.’

The store interior is designed by the label’s own architecture team in Paris – which includes Singaporean Ho Kar-Hwa, the architectural design director for Louis Vuitton Asia Pacific – and has a curved layout to match the undulating glass exterior.

On the first floor, for example, there is a curved bag bar for women, which measures more than 9m, as well as a rotunda area that houses men’s accessories.

A circular staircase leads to the second storey where men and women’s ready-to-wear, men’s shoes and women’s leather goods and watches are sold.

Bathed in warm orange light and furnished with lush carpets and leather settees, the overall atmosphere is sophisticated yet intimate, much like a private dressing room.

Local show producer Daniel Boey, who attended the opening party on Thursday, says: ‘The glass facade is imposing and gives the store an air of dramatic fabulousness. It looks really grand, all lit up at night, like a showcase for a beautiful store.’


More boom for Changi


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

PLANS are afoot to transform the area around the historic Johore Battery and Abingdon Work Release Camp in Changi into a heaving hub filled with shops, restaurants and museums.

The Singapore Land Authority (SLA) has invited tenders for the two sites, which are located about 200m apart.

Successful tenants must keep the historic parts of the area – including some five-storey-deep underground bunkers and a number of other exhibits – intact.

The area for lease covers 7,200 sq m, slightly smaller than a football field. The initial term is for three years, but can be renewed up to 2014.

This is the second time the SLA is trying to inject life into the sleepy area. In January last year, a company called Linkway was awarded a tender to open a steamboat restaurant in the area.

But it never came about and the sites were repossessed last December after they were found to have been used for unauthorised activities. SLA declined to say what these activities were.

Linkway has since shut down.

The two sites have a rich history.

The British built the Johore Battery in 1939 to defend Singapore. The gun emplacement site housed three giant cannons, and included a labyrinth of tunnels used to store ammunition.

The tunnels, sealed after World War II ended, were uncovered by the Singapore Prisons Department in 1991 by accident.

The Abingdon Camp, meanwhile, was used to house prisoners on the work release scheme. Meant to help them reintegrate into society, the scheme allowed them to leave the camp for work each morning and return in the evening.

The Johore Battery site is open to the public now, but attracts just the occasional visitor.

The SLA wants to change this by injecting life into the area and increasing its business viability.

SLA’s director of private land lease, Mr Lee Seng Lai, said it is ‘looking for a creative tenant who can take advantage of the heritage and historical value of the two sites and transform them to give visitors a unique experience of Singapore’.

The three-week-long bidding period, which began on Tuesday, has seen more than 10 parties indicating interest so far.

One bidder is 47-year-old businessman Mr B. Wong, a Changi resident.

‘Johore Battery is dead, and I’m glad an opportunity is present to give it a new lease of life,’ he said, while refusing to divulge his plans.

Mr Colin Tan, the director of research and consultancy at real estate consultancy Chesterton Suntec International, said the site has commercial viability.

‘Tenants can capitalise on its rustic charm and greenery; it is workable,’ he said. But he added that whoever secures the lease ‘must have a unique concept to pull people in because the area is quite out of the way’.

His suggestion: Low rents during the initial stages, promotions and a shuttle service to pull in customers.

Some historical sites have proven to be hits when transformed. For example, the Dempsey Road area – previously home to the Ministry of Defence and its Central Manpower Base – has been transformed from a plot with crumbling buildings into one of the hottest wining and dining areas in town.

Closer to the Johore Battery, the old Changi Hospital site was snapped up when it was put up for bidding in 2006.

It is undergoing a $20 million makeover to turn it into a spa resort, and is scheduled to open next year.

Residents of the area, meanwhile, are looking forward to changes in the neighbourhood.

Retiree Chia Seow Eng, 64, who lives at New Upper Changi Road, said in Mandarin: ‘It’s a good thing, we need more things to do.’

For more information on the Johore Battery and Abingdon Camp sites, visit SLA’s State Property and Information Online portal at www.spio.sla.gov.sg, or call its hotline on 6323-9154.


Showing their age but hardly losing allure


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

IT’S becoming a boulevard of beauties and beasts – extravagant steel-and-glass architectural sylphs up against some pretty tatty and frayed old-timers that don’t so much show their age as shout it from their rusty rooftops.

Oh, what the stakeholders wouldn’t give for a little Botox to smooth out their deep lines and wrinkles. Problem is, it’s not often they can score a majority vote to agree on the appropriate procedure and price.

Mr Charles Yue, associate director of Ginza Real Estate, said: ‘Decision-making at strata-title malls is slow, usually only at the AGM, which is at the end of every year.’

Far East Plaza – which comprises retail and office space as well as serviced apartments – is 44 per cent owned by its developer Far East Organization. The rest of the property is owned by about 500 individual landlords, said Mr Yue, who added: ‘When it comes to money, people are generally unwilling to give.’

Take Lucky Plaza, also developed by Far East Organization, and completed in 1977. It is still awaiting management approval – after at least four years – for a $4.5 million pop-out facade which, according to plans filed with the Urban Redevelopment Authority, involves a space-age wave-like canopy on the ground floor.

Or Tong Building, an 18-floor office complex part-owned by The Hour Glass and Rolex and sitting like a plain Jane next to the glamorous Paragon Shopping Centre. It opened in 1978 and housed Singapore’s first standalone Gucci boutique. Today, even with a Rolex showroom on the ground floor, the building looks stuck in the 1970s.

The Hour Glass founder Jannie Tay said: ‘There’s always been people interested to both buy and redevelop the property. But it’s not happening. It’ll be great if everyone modernises and if all stakeholders could agree on how.’

At least they try.

In 2005, Far East Plaza spent $6.53 million to improve the block’s floors, ceilings and external walkways. It also buffed up the toilets and replaced the fountain in the lobby with a water feature that doubled as a stage.

That same year, Lucky Plaza started a $3.3 million interior upgrade which included improved toilets.

But while their best days may have come and gone, these malls of a certain age do have staunch supporters – some even in the unlikeliest places.

Ms Soon Su Lin, chief executive of Orchard Turn Developments, said: ‘They have their own niche. If that’s where people want to buy their electronic goods, watches and phone cards, so be it. They contribute to the character of Orchard Road and make it more interesting.

‘Besides, you need to have somewhere where locals shop. Tourists don’t want to visit a place where there are only other tourists.’

Indeed, the youth-oriented Far East Plaza has built up its name as a launching pad for start-ups and young entrepreneurs and is characterised by its small shop spaces, a handful of which are filled with services like tailors and cobblers.

Lucky Plaza houses medical offices plus an array of electronics and watch retailers – many with loyal customers, note industry insiders.

Its stakeholders include Far East Organization, Hong Property Investment – a subsidiary of the Hong Leong Group – and Royal Brothers.

A source close to Royal Brothers, which has a near 7 per cent interest in Lucky Plaza’s share values through a series of units in the basement leased to a food court operator and McDonald’s, told The Straits Times that rental for these units can average about $100 per sq ft.

That’s because sales per sq ft at these stores are some of the highest on the strip. A property consultant at Knight Frank was not surprised: ‘Yes, that is highly possible.’

So whether these malls are eyesore or heritage, it may make business sense to leave well enough alone.


Old kingpins not resting on their laurels


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

THERE are plenty of new players jostling for space on the speeding train that is Orchard Road’s rejuvenation but the old stagers are not ready to give up their seats yet.

The property tycoons and their firms, such as Far East Organization, Hotel Properties Limited (HPL) and City Developments (CDL), have built or currently manage venerable shopping centres such as Far East Plaza, Lucky Plaza, The Hilton Hotel Shopping Gallery, Forum The Shopping Mall, Palais Renaissance and Orchard Central.

They clearly have nothing to prove to the whippersnapper developers coming along now but they are not resting on their laurels or hoping that it all works out in the end.

Take Far East Organization, once known as the kingpin of Orchard Road malls, which built eight buildings there in the 1970s and 1980s.

The last malls the group, headed by Mr Ng Teng Fong, erected on Orchard Road were Cuppage Plaza and Far East Plaza in 1983, but it bounced back to the leading edge this year with the launch of the 14-storey Orchard Central next to the Somerset MRT station.

‘Back in those days, families would go to Far East Shopping Centre just to ride on the 14 pairs of escalators running up the building or take the bubble glass lifts at Lucky Plaza,’ recalls Ms Susan Leng, Far East’s director of retail management.

Now, shoppers get to climb something else: a five-storey indoor Via Ferrata climbing wall in Orchard Central, thanks to BorderX, a joint venture between two of the largest sport climbing gyms in the region.

Orchard Central has also set aside a dedicated retail space called The Ramp for budding local entrepreneurs and it has partnered with the National Arts Council to commission more than $9 million worth of art installations. It is the largest permanent public commission by a developer for a single property in Singapore, says Ms Leng.

CDL is also working hard to improve its niche-for-the-rich mall, Palais Renaissance. It is spending $16 million on renovation works, which are being carried out in phases for both the exterior and interior.

Its facade now features dancing LED lights. A long-time tenant, eatery Marmalade Pantry, will be replaced by Heart Bistro, a new concept between the former chief executive of Tung Lok Group, Mr William Tan, and the owner of Au Petit Salut, Ms Alice Ang.

Ms Corinne Yap, deputy general manager of leasing at CDL, says: ‘Palais was last upgraded over 10 years ago, so a revamp is due to serve our shoppers better.’

Pointing out the mall’s convenient location outside the Electronic Road Pricing zone, she adds: ‘We constantly refresh our tenant mix to cater to the ever-changing retail landscape and the niche shoppers that the mall attracts.’

Swee Cheng Holdings, which manages The Heeren, is shaping up for the future with confidence as well.

It recently embarked on a $20 million revamp for the mall, which will be conducted in five phases. This involves building glass structures on the facade that will accommodate double-storey outdoor cafes, as well as a three-storey egg-shaped construction for a flagship retailer by 2011, says a Heeren spokesman.

He adds: ‘Change was necessary as the youth who frequented The Heeren in the 1990s have grown up. The mall now seeks to stay relevant by targeting the young, affluent working adults with retailers offering more sophisticated fashion merchandise.’


Staying ahead of the retail curve


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

WHILE shoppers can flex their muscles by choosing where to spend their hard-earned cash, shareholders are showing that they can force mall managers to stay ahead of the retail curve.

It is no coincidence that among the first malls to embark on renovations were those backed by listed companies or real estate investment trusts (Reits) – in other words, entities with investors demanding a return on their money.

The need to meet dividend payments and distribution targets for their unit holders and investors have driven managers to smarten up their malls, improve the store mix – and raise rents.

Wisma Atria, built in 1986, was first to undergo an extensive revamp in 2004 to keep it up to speed with the fast-changing retail mix on Orchard Road.

The mall is 74.23 per cent owned by Starhill Global Reit of Malaysia’s YTL Group.

It was the first mall to take advantage of an Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) scheme that allowed it to have a ‘pop-out’ glass facade, as well as external escalators taking shoppers directly to Food Republic on the fourth floor.

Mr Kevin Chee, senior vice-president of asset management at YTL Pacific Star, told The Straits Times: ‘Wisma Atria boasts 123m of prime Orchard Road street frontage, and we are actively exploring ways to heighten the visibility of the stores to derive maximum mileage for our tenants.’

In fact, Starhill announced last week it was looking into raising $337.3 million via a rights issue and using some of the money to add up to 40,000 sq ft of retail space to Wisma Atria. It plans to push the frontage even further out towards Orchard Road and convert some carpark space into retail space.

Ngee Ann City next door, which is 27.3 per cent owned by Starhill, has also had a finger on the retail pulse since it opened in 1993.

Long before the latest round of rejuvenation started, it had duplexes for jewellery brands Tiffany, Bulgari and Cartier.

In December 2007, it announced that another two of its luxury tenants – Louis Vuitton and Chanel – were going to double the size of their Orchard Road-facing flagship stores at the Takashimaya Shopping Centre.

A spokesman for Toshin Development Company, a Takashimaya subsidiary that manages speciality shops at the mall, said: ‘Duplexes are not new for us, but an ongoing development according to tenants’ needs and desires for expansion.’

And Paragon Shopping Centre, owned by Orchard 290, a subsidiary of Singapore Press Holdings, is no laggard either.

The mall, which was merged with the old Promenade in 1996, is prized as a hot spot for international designer brands such as Gucci, Bottega Veneta, Tod’s, Prada and Ermenegildo Zegna.

In October, it will unveil duplex stores for five luxury labels, including a five-storey facade for Gucci.

While brands with deep pockets are splashing out at these malls, other retailers struggling to maintain their bottom line in the recession have accused mall managers of ’squeezing them for higher rents, even though they cannot afford to pay them’.

YTL’s Mr Chee, however, retorted: ‘Like any other business concern, we have a duty to our owners to deliver returns.’

Reits collect rental income from mall tenants and distribute it to unit-holders.

Frasers Centrepoint Trust said: ‘While we have a responsibility to ensure adequate returns to shareholders, it is certainly not in our interest to see our tenants fail. Rental increases are by no means unduly onerous, as they usually work out to annual increases of 2 per cent to 3 per cent, well in line with the national inflation rate for the past three years.’

Mr Gabriel Yap, senior dealing director at DMG & Partners Securities, said: ‘Reits are no different from normal property developers as landlords. If a Reit consistently underperforms as a landlord, other Reits will be very happy to swallow it.’

Clearly, no one wants to be left behind.

As Mrs Sng Ngoi May, director of Orchard 290, which manages Paragon, put it: ‘We are just moving with the times. We don’t take our customers for granted and have to tell them we’re not dated.’


New in the city


Source : Business Times – 4 Jul 2009

IT’S hard to believe, but more than 10 years have passed since a new mall opened on Orchard Road. Naturally, the stakes are high for Orchard Central, the new shopping and dining destination which opens in the Somerset precinct this week.

Long-starved of fresh and exciting options on Singapore’s prime shopping belt, locals and tourists alike are looking for something distinctly different – will the mall consistently please, or turn out to be a hit-and-miss?

On its part, Orchard Central’s developer, Far East Organization, has pulled out all the stops as far as creating uniqueness is concerned, positioning the 12-storey mall as the ‘Centre of New’.

There are new retail concepts, brands, architecture and designs, and a new approach to shopping, dining and service – all aiming to provide new experiences for the shopper, whose needs are at the centre of it all. International establishments making their debut include Japan’s Yamano beauty retailer, popular English shirt-maker, TM Lewin, well-known Japanese eatery Ootoya, and Duo Le – a Chinese restaurant specialising in cold dishes and cuisine from the Shaanxi region.

Then there’s Orchard Central’s largest F&B tenant, Heaven’s Loft – a new and unique all-day dining and dessert concept from the team behind the Ben & Jerry’s outlets in Singapore.

For easy navigation, related shops and dining outlets are grouped in clusters according to distinct lifestyle experiences. These include fashion, food, pampering, and active lifestyles.

In addition, renowned Japanese interior designer Takashi Sugimoto of Super Potato has created a visual feast using lighting, design and creative features on the dining levels along the open-air Verandah on levels 7 and 8 and the Rooftop on levels 11 and 12. Some 30 per cent of the floor space at the topmost floor on level 12 is outdoors, including a public Rooftop Garden. Incorporating indigenous plants, water features and infinity pools, the sky-high dining experience under the stars will open later this year.

Shopping and dining aside, Orchard Central is home to the world’s tallest indoor Via Ferrata climbing wall, the first-of-its-kind in Asia.

And of course, there is the much-talked about collection of contemporary artworks specially commissioned for the mall. Costing over $9 million, this is the largest permanent public commission for a single property in Singapore. With installation art – including sculpture, automation art, interactive digital art, light and sound installation art and multimedia art – integrated into the mall’s architectural and design elements, visual art is thus extremely accessible and non-threatening even to those new to the form. One can expect to see works by internationally renowned artists.

Topping off the entire experience is a pioneering concierge service that truly focuses on the shopper – service staff who will fan out from the mall’s information desk, roaming every floor to help shoppers with information, directions and even restaurant reservations.

Orchard Central is open till 11pm daily, with its Rooftop Garden and air-conditioned shopping street, Discovery Walk, accessible 24/7. Combined with its late-night dining options, it’s a panacea for those who’ve long wished for Orchard Road malls to open till late.

‘Looking at the bigger picture with our new and existing neighbours, mid-town Orchard Road presents an exciting new shopping precinct in the near future,’ says Susan Leng, Far East’s director, retail management, Retail Business Group.

Climbing an indoor wall on Orchard Road, dining at a rooftop verandah and getting assistance without having to look for the assistant – these are not the usual mall experiences. But if the newest shopping destination to open in Singapore’s beloved shopping street in over a decade succeeds in what it set out to do, then Orchard Central will indeed be the ‘Centre of New’.


Condo-style granny units


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

Always close, but never too close. That is the carrot dangled before extended families buying new condominium units which come with adjoining studio apartments.

Apart from the usual two-, three- or four- bedroom layout options, property developer Frasers Centrepoint Homes has introduced what it calls ‘dual key’ apartments at two recent two projects, Caspian at Lakeside and 8@Woodleigh.

This new layout has a studio apartment attached to a two-bedroom unit and is about 10 per cent larger than a regular three-bedroom unit.

And it has been an unqualified success.

At the recently sold out 8@Woodleigh at Potong Pasir, the 390 sq ft studio apartment comes fully equipped with its own kitchen, bathroom and dining and living areas. It also has its own entrance, which opens up to a foyer that is shared with the 682 sq ft two-bedroom unit.

Frasers’ chief operating officer Cheang Kok Kheong says such units are ’specially conceptualised to promote inter-generational ties within families’.

All 30 units of this new layout at Woodleigh have been sold. Scheduled to be completed in 2013, the project has a total of 330 units, including one-, two-, three- and four-bedroom types.

Over at Caspian, a 712-unit project, all 17 such 2+1 bedroom units are also sold out.

Global investor Simon Yong, 50, bought one such unit at Woodleigh. He nows lives with his wife in a semidetached home at Braddell. When the Woodleigh project is completed, he hopes to move in with his mother, who is in her 90s. She will live in the studio apartment.

‘My wife and I still have our privacy, but we can take care of my mum easily too,’ he says.

CapitaLand is another developer that has offered a similar adjoining unit option to encourage multi-generational living.

Its The Metropolitan at Tanglin contains 29 single units with two entrances. In these apartments, a partition wall can be built to divide the living space.

Another option the development offers for multi-generational living are adjacent separate units. There are 14 pairs of such units, which offer buyers the option of removing the partition between the two units to create a single living and dining area.

The condominium was completed recently. At its launch in 2006, Ms Patricia Chia, chief executive of CapitaLand Residential Singapore, said: ‘Many families today would like to live near to, or with, their ageing parents, while enjoying a certain amount of privacy.

‘We also recognise that every family’s lifestyle needs would change with time. The flexibility that we have built into the unit layouts at The Metropolitan is ideal to meet these needs.’

There is another use for 2+1 bedroom units: rental.

Frasers’ Mr Cheang says: ‘The new layout also gives buyers the option to finance their purchase by renting out the studio component of the unit.’

It is still about four years before they can move in, but buyers of units at Woodleigh that Life! spoke to are already thinking the same way.

Ms Teresa Kwan, a manager in a financial institution who is in her 50s, has bought a 2+1 bedroom unit at Woodleigh. She says: ‘I can live in one and rent out the studio, or I can rent both units out.’

At Lippo Realty’s Newton One, one of the bedrooms in its five-bedroom units comes with its own kitchenette and entrance – ideal for extended families and also rental.

Mr Chris Koh, director of Dennis Wee Properties, says these units are a good option for property hunters, particularly those who are looking to lease out the unit. ‘Both the tenant and the landlord still have their privacy.’

Such apartments are a new trend in the private property sector, but HDB introduced them about two decades ago. In 1987, it launched multi-generation flats, or ‘granny flats’. They comprised a four- or five-room flat with an adjoining studio apartment with a separate entrance. Around 367 units were built in Bishan, Tampines and Yishun.

However, HDB stopped building them ‘as the demand then was not high. The completed multi-generational flats are still available in the resale market’, says a spokesman.

Dennis Wee’s Mr Koh believes that 2+1 units are a hit now because they can generate extra income.

A check with other property developers, such as UOL Group and City Developments, showed that they are not implementing these special two-in-one units in their upcoming projects.

Still, tutor Leah Teo, 35, hopes that more developers will offer such units. ‘I can rent out one unit for extra income, and later on, I can have my elderly parents living next to me,’ she says.


Work begins on Bt Timah MRT line


Source : Business Times – 4 Jul 2009

To be completed in 2015, it is the second phase of the Downtown Line

WORK started yesterday on the second phase of the Downtown Line (DTL2), which will take commuters through the Bukit Timah corridor to the city centre.

When completed in 2015, the 16.6km long DTL2 will give Bukit Panjang and Bukit Timah residents a direct rail link to the Central Business District (CBD) and Marina Bay.

More than 30 schools with about 60,000 students in all – including Hwa Chong Institution and National Junior College – will also benefit as train stations open near them.

Transport Minister Raymond Lim said at the groundbreaking ceremony yesterday: ‘Those who live, work and go to school in this area will enjoy a completely new way to travel, with convenient connections to every part of the city.’

A dozen stations will be strung out along DTL2, which will start in Bukit Panjang, pass through Bukit Timah and run to Rochor. There, it will link up to the first phase of the Downtown Line, which loops around Marina Bay and the CBD.

Those living and working in Bukit Timah are looking forward to having an MRT station open near them.

Mr Low Meng Hai, the 59-year-old chairman of the Beauty World Merchants Association, said with a laugh: ‘I might sell my car when the new line opens!’

Madam Ong Guat Ngo, 62, who lives in Jalan Jurong Kechil, is pleased that the upcoming Beauty World station will be a stone’s throw from her home.

The retiree now relies on buses to get around. A journey to People’s Park Centre in Chinatown takes her 1-1/2 hours by bus, including waiting time.

When the DTL2 opens, she will take only 40 minutes – less than half the time.

Sections of Upper Bukit Timah Road will be diverted from as early as the fourth quarter of this year; extensive diversions are also expected in Rochor.

The Land Transport Authority (LTA) stressed that the capacity of the roads will not drop significantly because there will be a lane-for-lane replacement in the diverted roads.

The LTA will award four more civil contracts for the DTL2 by September. Six, worth $2.6 billion in all, have been awarded so far.

LTA chief executive Yam Ah Mee said the entire Downtown Line, projected to cost $12 billion, is within budget. Almost $6 billion in contracts have been awarded so far.

Tendering of civil contracts for the third and final phase of the line begins next year. Due for completion in 2016, this section will thread through eastern Singapore, ending at Expo.


Is property rally sustainable?


Source : Straits Times – 4 Jul 2009

A YEAR after it started, the recession to end all recessions has yet to hit bottom officially.

But private home buyers in Singapore don’t seem to care. Since February, they have been snapping up almost as many homes each month as during the frenzy of 2007.

The strong demand has caught even property veterans by surprise, and set off furious discussions among property-obsessed Singaporeans.

Their million-dollar question: is this rally for real?

Opinion is divided. For every analyst proclaiming a sunny recovery, there is another warning of a false dawn.

To recap: after a hiatus of several months following the credit crunch last year, the property sector came back to life in February with unexpectedly healthy sales of new condominiums.

Even the stock market collapse in March didn’t deter buyers of new homes, who picked up more than 1,000 units that month for the second time in a row – 10 times what was sold at the low point in October last year. The buying momentum has held steady since then, despite more doomsayers predicting anew each month that the numbers are unsustainable.

Interest in new homes has spilled over to resale homes in the secondary market – which clocked a 70 per cent increase in sales in the second quarter over the first – as well as the harder-hit luxury home segment, where sellers are starting to turn a profit again.

As confidence in the property market builds up, boom times seem to have returned to the showflats. At the recent launch of One Devonshire in Somerset, the two-bedders were so much in demand that buyers had to ballot for them.

Agents for the upcoming Ascentia Sky project in Redhill have begun to take orders – and cheques – even before the showflat opens in the coming weeks.

There is certainly no denying that the property market is faring much better than expected, given that in the first quarter of this year, the economy contracted a record 10.1 per cent and shed the most number of jobs since Sars in 2003.

But some industry veterans, such as Knight Frank managing director Danny Yeo, are reluctant to call the increased buying activity a true rally. Even though sales are up, prices generally are not.

Between April and June, even as buyers returned to the market, the price index for private homes dropped 6 per cent, according to estimates released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority on Wednesday. Prices have now fallen for four straight quarters and are about 25 per cent off their peak last year.

Experts say that demand for private homes is returning precisely because prices have nosedived. They plunged a precipitous 14.1 per cent in the first quarter, the biggest drop in history.

This is a far cry from 2007’s property boom, when some developers raised prices for their projects multiple times in a single weekend.

Some consultants believe the price index is lagging and will show a slight increase when all the second-quarter sales are taken into account at the end of the month. Wednesday’s estimates are mostly based on deals done in April and May.

But even if this happens, the index isn’t expected to keep rising. Analysts say a sustained increase in the price index that develops into a full-blown rally by the end of the year is unlikely.

A more probable scenario is a plateau: prices and sales stabilising at their current levels for the next few months, with occasional moderate dips or increases, until there is more certainty about the economic outlook next year.

Would-be buyers hoping for another crash in the market are likely to be disappointed unless a major shock takes place, such as a delayed economic recovery, a stock market collapse, or the H1N1 virus turning more deadly, analysts say.

In fact, many dire predictions trumpeted by bears have failed to materialise. Fewer expatriates have left the country than expected. Unemployment is below the all-time high in 2003.

Home-owners and buyers are still able to afford their properties, especially as they have lowered their debt levels and increased their savings. The surprisingly low level of mortgagee sales so far this year – half of that during the Asian Financial Crisis – seems to bear this out.

Concern about oversupply of new homes crashing prices have abated in the light of the robust take-up of recent launches. Instead, low interest rates are encouraging buyers to take up mortgages.

The gravity-defying rise in HDB resale flat prices, which hit an all-time high in the second quarter, provides a firm floor for prices of mass market condos and helps support all the other price levels.

On the other hand, sellers who hope to hold out for a marked improvement in prices, could end up waiting a long time.

For one thing, the stock market resurgence appears to be tapering off, as sentiment gives way to the sobering fundamentals of an uncertain economic recovery, underscored by still-rising unemployment in the United States.

Anecdotally, buyers are also still price-sensitive, a further sign of the fragility of their confidence, although more seem willing to jump on the buying bandwagon for fear of rising prices in future.

Demand may also be limited. Most buyers now are owner-occupiers who were shut out of the 2007 market surge and are unleashing their pent-up demand. When this runs out, sellers and developers will be relying on investors and foreigners to pick up the slack, which may not happen as rentals are expected to continue falling with more homes being completed.

Then there is the deferred payment scheme. Properties sold via the scheme reach completion this year and next, and analysts fear some buyers will dump their units when full payments are due.

In the near term – say, six months – the market should be stable, given that supply and demand factors seem more or less balanced at this point.

But Singapore’s sentiment-driven property market has seldom been rational and hardly predictable, as the last six months have shown.

So it ultimately comes down to which typical Singaporean home-buyer behaviour wins out: the panic of being left out of a property boom, or the fear of buying now and being left high and dry if there is a slump.


Private resale home prices up in Q2, says DTZ


Source : Business Times – 4 Jul 2009

12.8% increase in average price of 2-bedroom units; firm expects full-year primary market sales to top 2006 figure of 11,147 units

THE average price of freehold non-landed resale private homes in prime districts 9, 10 and 11 increased 11.3 per cent to $1,247 per sq foot in the second quarter from Q1, says DTZ.

This followed a 3.7 per cent quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) price fall in Q1.

Two-bedroom units posted a 12.8 per cent q-on-q gain in Q2, as their lower quantum prices stimulated interest among people hoping to own prime district property.

But DTZ considers the Q2 price gain a blip supported by buyers’ fears of missing the bottom, pent-up demand and low interest rates – rather than economic fundamentals.

As for primary market sales, the property firm is now projecting that developers’ private home sales for the whole of 2009 are likely to surpass the 11,147 units achieved in 2006, which was the second-highest performance after the 14,811 homes they sold in 2007.

In the first six months of this year, the tally was about 6,700 to 6,900 units.

DTZ’s figures also show the average price of luxurious non-landed resale homes rose 9.6 per cent q-o-q to $2,060 psf in Q2.

Outside the prime districts, the average resale price of 99-year leasehold homes rose 3.2 per cent q-o-q to $573 psf in Q2, as prices had fallen less and there are fewer ’specu-vestors’ in this segment.

Earlier this week, the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s flash estimate showed the overall private home price index declined 5.9 per cent in Q2 from Q1.

Despite DTZ’s figures showing an increase in resale prices of non-landed homes in Q2, DTZ’s head of South-east Asia Research Chua Chor Hoon said: ‘Without a clear recovery in sight for the US and Singapore economies, the price recovery in Q2 2009 is not sustainable and sales volume would be affected if prices continue to rise.’

She noted that average resale prices have fell only 10-35 per cent between Q4 2007 and Q1 2009, compared with the fall of 35-45 per cent from the Q2 1996 peak to the Q4 1998 Asian financial crisis trough.

The number of caveats lodged for resales and sub-sales in April and May this year exceeded that for the whole of Q1 by 70 per cent. The proportion of foreign buyers, excluding Singapore permanent residents, rose from 5 per cent in Q1 to 8 per cent in April and May.

Indonesians and Malaysians accounted for 49 per cent of caveats lodged in April and May by foreigners and Singapore PRs, compared with 40 per cent in Q1.

Sub-sales and resales are secondary-market transactions. Sub-sales involve projects that have yet to obtain a Certificate of Statutory Completion (CSC), while resales relate to projects that have received CSC.

Meanwhile, as new supply came on stream amid waning demand, rents continued to fall in Q2, although at a slower pace than in Q1.

The average rental value of prime district homes slipped 9.1 per cent to $3.32 psf per month in Q2, after a 16.2 per cent slide in Q1.

Rents for luxury homes were the hardest hit, with a 10.6 per cent decline to $4.65 psf per month – back to their Q4 2005 level.


Friday, July 3, 2009

Exciting days ahead for Orchard Rd shoppers


Source : Business Times – 3 Jul 2009

EAGER shoppers may be on tenterhooks as they wait for Ion Orchard to fling open its doors on July 21, but they’ll also be pleased to know that as the Orchard Road revamp unfolds over the coming months, there’ll be enough new malls to keep them busy for a pretty long time.

In fact, any shopper with Sloane Ranger aspirations can strut their stuff on Knightsbridge – London’s most prestigious address – without having to fly to the United Kingdom, thanks to a chic four-storey retail podium opening next year.

The 83,000 sq ft luxury shopping destination that will house between eight to 10 luxury brands will be integrated within an $80 million makeover of the former Park Hotel Orchard (across Bideford Road from Paragon Shopping Centre).

‘The Knightsbridge branding is in line with our vision for Grand Park Orchard to become synonymous with fashion and luxury,’ says Allen Law, director of Park Hotel Group.

‘Our unique concept and strategic location has attracted many sought-after international brands and we are confident that Grand Park Orchard is set to become an iconic landmark on Orchard Road.’

Meanwhile, art lovers dreaming of the Tate Modern or Saatchi Gallery can find distraction by marvelling at the $9 million worth of contemporary art that Far East Organization has showcased in the mall.

The collection that features the creations of renowned artists such as Gary Carsley, Hans Peter Kuhn and Inges Idee is the largest permanent public commission by a developer for a single property in Singapore.

Artistic nightowls will also be able to enjoy the mall’s 24-hour public rooftop garden that will be transformed into a sculptural haven, showcasing a series of 11 wire sculptures by local sculptural artist, Victor Tan.

Not to be outdone, ION Orchard will also be contributing to the local artscape through ION Art – a structured art and design programme which introduces new and multi-media art outside the traditional museum venue, into the integrated mall experience.

The initiative includes permanent and changing signature sculptural and media installations positioned throughout the mall, as well as a spectrum of art-based events and exhibitions held throughout the year in the ION Art gallery (a dedicated art space in excess of 5,600 sq ft), and at other locations in the mall.

With all these in the pipeline, in these tough economic times, rather than waste money travelling abroad, a quick visit down Orchard Road might just be a cool, affordable alternative.


Three new sites on industrial GLS programme for H2


Source : Business Times – 3 Jul 2009

THREE sites have been added to the government’s industrial land sales programme for second-half 2009, which was launched yesterday by the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI).

The three sites have been added under the reserve list to continue to meet potential demand for industrial land, MTI said. This brings the total number of industrial sites on the reserve list to nine.

The confirmed list, on the other hand, remains suspended.

‘In view of current economic uncertainties, MTI will continue to suspend the confirmed list for the second half of 2009,’ the ministry said in a statement. ‘This will provide flexibility for the market to adjust supply in accordance with the current economic conditions.’

Market watchers said that the continued suspension of the confirmed list was expected. Using the reserve list only means the market will have the final say on when a site is released.

Under the reserve list system, the government puts up a site for public tender only if it receives an application from a developer who commits to bid for the site at or above the minimum price acceptable to the government.

‘This is in line with the government’s aim of letting developers decide if they are interested in a site and letting them trigger the sites they like,’ said Savills Singapore managing director Michael Ng.

The three new sites on the reserve list are at Woodlands Avenue 12, Kaki Bukit Avenue 4 and Ubi Road 1/Ubi Avenue 4. In addition, six sites from the first-half 2009 reserve list have been carried forward to the second-half list.

The nine sites on the reserve list have a combined area of about 19 hectares.

It is unclear if the demand for these will be strong, analysts said. Singapore experienced a sharp drop in industrial investment sales in the first quarter of this year, with only a few isolated transactions completed.

However, sentiment picked up in the second quarter. Data from CB Richard Ellis (CBRE) showed there were at least six investment transactions in the industrial sector in Q2 – totalling $58.9 million. Most of the buyers were end-users, CBRE said.

Singapore-listed real estate investment trusts (Reits), which bought up a significant amount of industrial property during the boom in 2007, are still holding back on acquisitions this year as dividend yields have increased significantly and it would be extremely challenging to make purchases that are yield accretive. Obtaining finance also continues to be difficult.


Strong buying momentum of private homes continues in Q2


Source : Channel NewsAsia – 3 Jul 2009

Property consultancy DTZ said strong buying momentum of private homes in Singapore has carried on into the second quarter this year.

In its latest Singapore Property Market Report, DTZ estimated that sales in the primary market came up to between 6,700 and 6,900 units from January to June, surpassing the 4,264 units sold for the whole of last year.

As such, the firm is forecasting that this year’s sales are likely to exceed 2006’s level of 11,147 units.

DTZ also added that the secondary market picked up considerably in terms of transaction volume, with more foreigners buying as well.

The proportion of foreign buyers increased from 5 per cent in the first quarter to 8 per cent in April and May alone.

Amidst the buying frenzy, private resale home prices also increased in the second quarter. Homes in prime districts registered higher growth than those in suburban areas.

Average prices of freehold non-landed resale private homes in the prime districts of 9, 10 and 11 rose 11.3 per cent to S$1,247 per square foot.

Outside the prime districts, average prices of leasehold resale homes increased 3.2 per cent to S$573 per square foot.

The leasing market continued to see decline in rental values, but at a slower pace than the preceding quarter.

Average rental values of homes in prime districts fell 9.1 per cent to S$3.30 per square foot per month, following a 16.2 per cent fall in the previous quarter.

As for retail rents, DTZ said they continued their downward slide in the second quarter this year.

Prime first-storey rents in the city, excluding the Orchard and Scotts Road areas, fell by 3.1 per cent in the second quarter to S$25.40 per square foot per month. The drop was more than the previous quarter’s fall of 2.2 per cent.

In the Orchard and Scotts Road areas, rental falls were more moderate – down by 0.8 per cent to S$39.60 per square foot per month. This is better than the 4.8 per cent decline seen in the previous quarter.

Supported by local resident catchment, rents in suburban areas fell only marginally by 0.6 per cent, unchanged from the previous quarter.

Since its peak in 2008, prime retail rents in the Orchard and Scotts Road areas dropped 6.8 per cent. Those in other parts of the city fell by 6.3 per cent, while those in the suburban areas saw milder declines of 2.1 per cent.

DTZ attributed the drop in prices to new supply coming on stream and the ongoing economic contraction. It added that the H1N1 flu pandemic will be a threat to retail sales and dampen a strong recovery in the retail sector.


Thursday, July 2, 2009

Foreign investors boost London Q2 sales


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

London commercial property sales more than doubled to £1.43 billion (S$3.43 billion) in the second quarter from the first, driven by more West End sales and an influx of overseas investors, a survey showed yesterday.

Property broker Cushman & Wakefield found commercial property sales in the West End, City and Docklands rose 110 per cent in the April-June period, from £679 million in the January-March leg. This compared with £2.1 billion in the second quarter last year.

‘The central London property investment market is likely to be among the first to recover in Europe, and the increase in activity is further evidence that overseas investors see value with yields at an historic high,’ the survey said.

In the West End, £733 million of sales were recorded in the second quarter, up 250 per cent from the first quarter, but down from the £928 million booked in the year-earlier period.

The average lot size was £23.6 million, up from £14.7 million in the first quarter. Overseas private buyers accounted for 38 per cent of purchases, with overseas funds behind a further 22 per cent.

Clive Bull, Cushman & Wakefield’s head of central London investment, said the overseas buyers’ interest was piqued by a perception that the London market was relatively good value, the lack of rivalry from UK/Irish debt buyers, and the pound’s weakness.

‘The question exercising the minds of many investors, however, is whether this activity is the start of the recovery or some kind of false dawn,’ Mr Bull said in a statement.

He said the evidence suggested this activity was a nascent recovery, citing a further £275 million of stock under offer in the West End and £167 million worth of deals that have exchanged but are yet to complete.

Yesterday, Land Securities said it had sold a key retail and office building on London’s Oxford Street to a Libyan state-backed investor for £155 million.


Hotel loan defaults double in the US


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

Room rates and property values tumble as recession curbs travel

As many as one in five US hotel loans may default through 2010 as the recession means companies are spending less on travel and perks, according to University of California economist Kenneth Rosen.

The value of hotel properties in default or foreclosure almost doubled to US$17.3 billion in the second quarter through June 24 from US$9 billion at the end of the first quarter, data compiled by Real Capital Analytics Inc show. The New York-based research firm, which began tracking distressed commercial pro-perty in November, expects hotel defaults to increase by as much as US$2 billion next quarter, said analyst Jessica Ruderman.

‘Hotels without question will have the highest foreclosure rate of any commercial real estate sector,’ said Mr Rosen, who runs a real estate hedge fund with US$310 million in assets and is chairman of the University of California’s Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics in Berkeley.

Hotel owners are defaulting as room rates and property values tumble and the securitised mortgage market that fuelled an 88 per cent gain in US commercial prices from 2001 to late 2008 is dormant. Luxury hotel revenue fell 28 per cent in April from a year earlier and has dropped for 12 straight months, according to Smith Travel Research Inc in Hendersonville, Tennessee. The 29 per cent decline in March was the biggest since October 2001.

A third of the US$8.6 billion in securities backed by hotel loans due in 2010 are at risk of defaulting, data compiled by credit-rating firm Realpoint LLC in Horsham, Pennsylvania, show.

‘Rates, revenue and cash flow levels across the hotel industry are projected to continue to decline,’ said Frank Innaurato, managing director of CMBS analytical services at Realpoint. ‘If those projections stay true, a lot of these hotel loans that are scheduled to mature are at high risk of defaulting.’

Securitised loans due over the next 12 months total US$99.8 billion for all commercial mortgage-backed securities, 20 per cent of which are hotel loans, ranking them second after office building loans, according to Realpoint data.

A total of 753 properties bearing the Bethesda, Maryland-based Marriott International Inc brand have a combined outstanding securitised loan balance of US$10.4 billion. More than 270 hotels with the Blackstone Group LP’s Hilton Hotels Corp brand have $5.6 billion in debt, Realpoint said.

‘We do not expect any significant impact,’ said Ellen Gonda, a spokeswoman for Beverly Hills, California-based Hilton, in a statement. ‘Like most of our competitors, our owners have utilised the CMBS market in some cases to finance their hotels. These are certainly challenging times in the industry, but we have very few defaults and this is a small component of our 3,300 hotels worldwide.’

Forty-eight properties bearing the Chicago-based Hyatt Corp brand have US$1.6 billion in outstanding debt; seven carrying the Windsor, UK-based Intercontinental Hotels Group Plc name have US$328.4 million; and 17 bearing the White Plains, New York- based Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. name have US$114.1 million, according to Realpoint.

A Marriott spokesman referred to comments made in April that the company was focused on cutting costs and would delay certain expenditures and investments to help owners, particularly those who invested at the peak of the market.

Officials at Starwood, Hyatt and Intercontinental Hotels didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The owners of hotel buildings rely on chains to help them manage and operate their properties, set room rates and hire staff. The chains can have multiple brands serving different market segments.

The recession has led to a ‘cancel everything kind of attitude’ for business travel, said Vasant Prabhu, Starwood’s chief financial officer, at a June 1 Goldman Sachs Group Inc lodging and gaming conference, according to a transcript. ‘It’s too early to call a turn,’ he said.

Bookings are down 50 per cent as financial institutions that received funds from the government’s Troubled Assets Relief Program scale back costs, said Kelly Foy, chief executive officer of Elite Meetings International, a luxury event planner in Santa Barbara, California.

Revenue per available room, a measure of hotel rates also known as RevPAR, dropped 18 per cent from January to March this year compared with 2008, with luxury properties faring worse than the overall market, according to Moody’s Investors Service. The slump means ’sharply downward ratings pressure’ on CMBS deals, the New York-based ratings company said.

Of 1,036 hotels on Real Capital’s distressed list, 447 are Extended Stay Inc properties; 126 are controlled by Atlanta-based Homestead Studio Suites Hotels; and 79 are run by Hillard, Ohio-based Red Roof Inns Inc, Ms Ruderman said.

Extended Stay, purchased in 2007 by a group led by David Lichtenstein, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on June 15. Red Roof, acquired in a Citigroup Inc-led buyout for US$1.3 billion two years ago, defaulted on four loans totalling US$361.4 million, Realpoint said on June 23.

Owners of the 250-room Watergate Hotel, part of the complex made famous by the bungled 1972 burglary that led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation, recently defaulted on a US$69.8 million loan held by PB Capital Corp, Real Capital Analytics said.

Kurt Sachs, senior managing director at New York-based PB Capital, said the firm has ‘offers on the table’ to purchase the debt. Spokeswoman Tasha Stancill at owner Monument Realty LLC in Washington declined to comment.


Aussie home building approvals fall 12.5%


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

But govt’s stimulus measures expected to drive housing market recovery

Australia’s home building approvals unexpectedly fell in May for the first time in four months as rising unemployment increased concerns over job security and sapped demand for apartments.

Permits granted to build or renovate houses and apartments tumbled 12.5 per cent from April, the biggest drop since November 2002, following the previous month’s 4.1 per cent increase, the statistics bureau said in Sydney yesterday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 19 analysts was for a 3 per cent gain.

Housing demand may recover in coming months after treasurer Wayne Swan, in his May budget, extended federal government grants to first-time homebuyers until the end of the year. State governments have also unveiled stimulus measures for the property market to help cushion the Australian economy against fallout from the global recession.

‘One thing that may have been driving the weakness may have been that people were waiting for increases in benefits from state governments,’ said Hayden Atkins, an economist at Macquarie Group Ltd in Sydney. ‘The increase in finance probably backs that up. We’re still pretty confident that building approvals will continue to rise.’

Loans provided to consumers to buy property climbed 0.5 per cent in May from April, the central bank reported on Tuesday.

The two-year government bond yield dropped five basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 3.96 per cent.

The decline in building approvals was led by apartment permits, which tumbled 43.6 per cent in May from April.

A separate report yesterday showed retail sales rose one per cent in May, twice as much as economists estimated, as government cash handouts prompted consumers to spend more at department stores, clothing outlets and restaurants.

To spur the economy, the Reserve Bank reduced the benchmark interest rate by 4.25 percentage points between September and April to a 49-year low of 3 per cent before leaving it unchanged in May and June.

While consumer spending has ‘held up quite well so far’, it may weaken in the coming months as rising joblessness ’starts to weigh on incomes and willingness to spend’, Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens said in a speech on June 4.

Unemployment climbed to 5.7 per cent in May and the government forecasts it will peak at 8.5 per cent within the next two years, which would be the highest rate since 1997.

Mr Stevens said that slower growth and cooling inflation give policy makers ’some scope’ to reduce borrowing costs further if it helps secure ‘a durable upswing’. All 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News prior to this week’s economic reports forecast the central bank will leave the overnight cash rate target unchanged on July 7.

Australia joined China and India as one of the few major countries to expand in the first quarter as household spending drove a 0.4 per cent expansion in gross domestic product from the previous three months.

In his May budget, Mr Swan unveiled a A$22 billion (S$25.86 billion) infrastructure-spending programme to upgrade roads, schools and hospitals over four years.

The government of New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state, has slashed stamp duties by 50 per cent on purchases of newly built homes worth up to A$600,000. The policy took effect from yesterday until the end of the year.

Grants by Victoria’s state government mean first-time buyers outside Melbourne can pocket as much as A$36,500 to help purchase a home.

State and federal governments are ‘applying significant stimulus to the construction sector to manage through the global crisis’, Rod Pearse, chief executive officer of Sydney-based Boral Ltd, Australia’s largest seller of building materials, said in a speech last week.

‘Arguably there is still some pain ahead, but clearly Australia has been faring much better than other developed economies,’ Mr Pearse said. He expects that the first home-buyer grants and improved affordability will drive a recovery in the housing market in New South Wales, which accounts for 40 per cent of Boral’s domestic revenue.

Building approvals fell 22.4 per cent in May from a year earlier. Economists predicted a 6.9 per cent decline.


URA to release industrial site at Kaki Bukit Road 2


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) will launch a public tender for an industrial site at Kaki Bukit Road 2 in two weeks’ time, it said yesterday. The 1.07 ha site was made available for sale through the government’s reserve list system in May 2009.

Under the reserve list system, the government will put up a site for public tender only if it receives an application from a developer who commits to bid for the site at or above the minimum price which is acceptable to the government.

URA has received an application from a developer who has committed to bid at a price of not less than $5 million for the land parcel at Kaki Bukit Road 2, it said. The price works out to about $43 per square foot (psf).

The site comes with a lease period of 30 years. It is zoned for a Business 2 development, which means that it can be developed for a range of clean, light and general industrial uses.

Industrial rents will be under pressure given the broader economic outlook and weak demand for Singapore exports, said Nomura Research in a June 29 report on Singapore’s property market.

‘While the market appears to be pricing in a new economic optimism, the real estate sector is still faced with the dual reality of rental declines and higher yields as growth expectations are pared,’ said the report. Rents could decline by 31.7 per cent over the property cycle, Nomura believes.


HDB gives small retailers a leg up with new initiatives


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

THE Housing and Development Board (HDB) held its inaugural retail seminar yesterday – to help heartland retailers remain competitive and relevant.

Through networking and input from successful entrepreneurs, HDB hopes to create awareness of opportunities available to heartland retailers and inspire them to improve their operations.

‘This is a key way for us to reach the retailers themselves,’ said Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education Grace Fu, who was guest of honour at the seminar.

‘Besides looking at hardware upgrading and improving facilities, it is important for shopowners to have the opportunity to upgrade their retail management skills.’

HDB also launched the website Where2Shop@HDB – an online directory of heartland shops in the 148 towns and neighbourhood centres island-wide.

Through a simple search, users can find products and services provided by HDB shops in different districts. Transport advice and maps will be offered alongside the information.

Ms Fu said: ‘Small retailers have to keep up with the challenge of the newer and bigger shopping complexes coming up. We are helping them by providing a directory, consolidating businesses, helping them get listed on line and hopefully getting the mind-share of younger shoppers who are Internet savvy.’

While the government is helping retailers through various schemes, it is vital that retailers be receptive to new ideas so as to create new markets for themselves, Ms Fu said.

Where2Shop@HDB is looking at listing more than 10,000 heartland shops.

Asked whether HDB will host the site in a language other than English, Ms Fu said: ‘We will definitely consider doing so if there is positive feedback.’


Heartland stores get helping hand


Source : Straits Times – 2 July 2009

HEARTLAND stores, which are struggling to stay afloat amid competition from major supermarket and convenience store chains as well as franchised outlets, are getting a helping hand.

The retailers will be given lessons on better sales practices, how to spruce up their displays, and how to keep up with latest retail trends.

A website was also launched yesterday, so members of the public can get quick information about the shops and what they sell. The website – www.hdb.gov.sg/where2shop – allows users to see what kind of products are being sold at shops across the island.

If a shop catches their interest, they can obtain its name, address, a map of its location and even directions to get there.

These measures, which will benefit more than 10,000 heartland retailers, are being paid for by the Housing Board. They are designed to help neighbourhood shops hold their own against everexpanding chains and shopping malls.

In recent years, names such as NTUC FairPrice, Sheng Siong and Giant have set up big, well-lit and well-stocked outlets in the heartland. Because of their size and operational efficiency, these chains have managed to keep prices low as well.

In addition, franchised convenience stores under the 7-Eleven, Cheers or iEcon banner, are also popping up everywhere. These stores, with their air-conditioned, neat interiors and 24/7 hours, are eating into the business of neighbourhood provision shops and others.

Yesterday, at the launch of the HDB Retail Seminar programme, Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education Grace Fu said heartland retailers need new tools to compete with big chains. The shopping habits of double-income families who value the convenience of large-scale shopping centres, rising affluence and the expectation of better service also threaten the Mom-and-Pop outlets in HDB estates, she said.

‘Many of them have to keep up with the challenges of the newer and bigger shopping complexes that are coming up, and will have to make improvements,’ Ms Fu said. Neighbourhood shops, she added, need to rethink their strategy.

The three-hour seminars – the first of which was held in Toa Payoh yesterday – should help. At these seminars, expert speakers give HDB retailers tips on how to improve their operations and identify business opportunities.

For example, retailers are advised to cooperate with other shops to run promotions, and to train their staff so that expansion can happen quickly when the opportunity arises. More such talks, which can cater to about 400 retailers at a time, will be held if there is demand.

Federation of Merchants’ Associations president Chua Ser Keng said the seminars were a good idea and would ‘increase interaction between shops and promote working together’.

‘On the whole, neighbourhood shops lack unity and do not cooperate with one another,’ he said. ‘That means missing out (on) possible business opportunities.’

Agreeing, Mr Jeffrey Kam, the owner of Rochelle, a shoe store in Yishun, said he had once tried to get shops near him to run promotions together, but failed because ‘no one wanted to go first’.

‘I am friendly with my neighbour, but it is hard to get everyone together to hold promotions at the same time,’ said the 44-year-old, who has seen business fall by 30 per cent since last year.

‘Everyone is doing his own thing.’

Ms Emiline Lee, 40, a retail lecturer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, said neighbourhood shops really need help to stay relevant. Many, she said, are run-down and lack up-to-date products. She added that the HDB also stands to gain by helping them. ‘If HDB does not help them, that also means less rental revenue for it and fewer amenities for its residents.’

The big chains, meanwhile, welcome the help being given to smaller stores.

In fact, some, like the Prime Supermarket chain, will also attend the seminars.

Said Ms Ana Lei, assistant general manager at PSC Corporation, which runs the 100-store iEcon franchise: ‘It might actually increase customer flow to the neighbourhood areas and attract more customers to our outlets as well.’


TOOLS TO COMPETE
~ Lessons on better sales practices
~ Tips on how to spruce up displays
~ Guidance on how to keep up with latest retail trends
~ A Web directory to help the public find the stores and learn about their products


Singapore rises to 18th in global ranking of retail rents


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

38% of top global retailers have presence here, CBRE survey finds

SINGAPORE moved up a notch to 18th position in a ranking of the world’s most expensive retail locations at end-Q1 2009, from 19th position at end-2008, according to CB Richard Ellis’s latest Global Retail Market View.

Singapore also emerged 11th in CBRE’s ranking of the top 15 Global Retail Cities as at the end of last year. This was based on the percentage of leading global retailers present in cities. London was number one (59 per cent), followed by Paris (50 per cent), New York (47 per cent) and Dubai (46 per cent). About 38 per cent of top global retailers have a presence in Singapore, slightly lower than Tokyo (39 per cent).

The average super prime retail rental value along Orchard Road at the end of the first quarter was US$408 per sq ft per annum, or S$51.80 psf a month.

Giving an update, CBRE in Singapore said the figure for end-Q2 2009 was S$49.80 psf per month, down 3.9 per cent from the preceding quarter and 8.5 per cent lower than in the year-ago period.

‘Going forward, we expect the rate of rental decline for prime space along Orchard Road to ease given the healthy demand for existing shop space as well as high pre-commitment levels seen at yet-to-be-completed malls,’ said CBRE’s director, retail services, Letty Lee.

About 2.5 million sq ft of new shop space will be completed here this year, followed by a further 2.2 million sq ft next year.

CBRE’s Global Retail Market View shows New York remains the world’s most expensive retail location, with an average rental value of US$1,800 psf per annum in the latest end-Q1 ranking. This was despite a 10 per cent year-on-year rental decline.

Hong Kong held on to second place. But Moscow overtook Tokyo to grab the third place. Paris ranked fourth and Tokyo fifth.

CBRE notes that prime retail rents have fallen in almost every region worldwide, as the global recession hits consumer sentiment and retail sales.

‘Demand for retail space has declined in most markets as consumers cut back on spending and unemployment continues to rise in many countries,’ it says.

‘Emerging and less established markets have been most significantly affected. Buenos Aires saw the largest annual decline in retail rents year on year with a drop of 37 per cent, followed by Warsaw with a 33 per cent decline and Washington with a 26 per cent decline.

‘While some markets have continued to experience year-on-year increases in retail rents, in many cases the current pressure is downward.’


HDB resale prices up 1.2%


Source : Straits Times – 2 July 2009

PRICES of HDB flats have staged a surprising comeback, reversing a first-quarter dip of 0.8 per cent to rise 1.2 per cent in the second quarter and reach a historical high.

Flash estimates from the Housing and Development Board (HDB) released yesterday show the resale price index rising to 140 – a record level not seen since the current index started in 1990.

It beats the previous record set in the fourth quarter of last year when it hit just over 139.

Market analysts said they were caught off-guard by the turnaround, as many had been predicting 2 to 10 per cent declines in HDB resale flat prices for this year after a descent began in the first quarter – the first one since 2006.

Yesterday’s numbers have changed expectations, with analysts reversing their forecasts for HDB flat prices to hold or increase by up to 5 per cent this year.

Industry observers attribute the latest surprise figures to three factors.

First, talk of an economic recovery has gathered momentum, backed by the recent stock market rally and brisk private property sales. This has slowed the slide in private property prices islandwide.

Flash figures capturing sales prices in the first 10 weeks of the quarter, released by the Urban Redevelopment Authority yesterday, show prices falling 5.9 per cent in the second quarter, compared to a 14.1 per cent decline in the previous quarter.

The marked slowdown in the price decline is in line with rising transaction prices evident since the strong rebound in home sales since February, said Colliers International’s director for research and advisory, Ms Tay Huey Ying.

More bullish sentiment, coupled with the strength in HDB resale prices, has supported the private market, say analysts.

High HDB valuations is another key factor. HDB upgraders – buyers with HDB addresses buying private property – have been able to sell their units at high valuations and for tidy profits to fund private property purchases.

Banking executive Vic Cheow, 28, is one such HDB upgrader who recently sold a four-room HDB flat to buy a three-bed condominium unit in Jurong.

Due to the high valuations, buyers do not need to dig deep for upfront cash – otherwise known as cash-over-valuation – to purchase resale flats.

‘We found selling at a profit easier as a result of this,’ said Mrs Cheow.

ERA Asia-Pacific associate director Eugene Lim reports that the agency, which accounts for more than 40 per cent of the HDB resale market, saw transaction volumes surge 52 per cent in the second quarter compared to the first.

‘The feeling in the second quarter is the recession hasn’t been as bad as it seems,’ said Mr Lim. Many sellers have become more willing to negotiate and are realistic, especially those selling larger flats, he added.

The third factor, flagged by Chesterton Suntec International head of research Colin Tan, is that demand far outstrips supply. HDB launched 7,793 new flats last year and will launch another 3,700 in the first nine months of this year.

‘HDB may have ramped up the supply of new flats recently, but it’s not enough and it takes too long,’ said Mr Tan. ‘There is still a lot of pent-up demand from a needs-based group of people. And they have no choice but to pay high prices because they cannot wait.’

A Credit Suisse report released recently notes that total public and private housing supply for 2008 to 2012 is 16,000 on average per year – 42 per cent lower than the 10-year historical average.

‘This does not look excessive versus the annual average 24,000 household formations or marriages,’ said the report.

But, added Mr Tan, it seems ‘unnatural for prices to rise against the fundamentals of the economy’, which is still in recession.

More detailed public and private housing data for the second quarter is set to be released at the end of this month.


Private home prices fall 5.9% in Q2


Source : Straits Times – 2 July 2009

PRIVATE home prices slowed their downward slide in the second quarter, with suburban homes helping to hold up the market.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) announced yesterday that its initial estimates showed a 5.9 per cent fall in private home prices from April to last month, following a record 14.1 per cent slide in the first quarter.

Some property experts yesterday expressed surprise at the larger-than-expected drop. And with the recent strong demand, they are expecting to see a much smaller fall in four weeks’ time, when final second-quarter figures are released.

A few are even expecting to see a small price rise by then because of last month’s buying craze, which saw project launches attracting rising numbers of investors and speculators.

But given that the current frenzy is being whipped up against a still-weak economic backdrop, more analysts are turning cautious, saying it is unsustainable.

Yesterday, the URA reported prices of non-landed homes in the suburban areas falling just 2.6 per cent in the second quarter, compared with a bigger 6.6 per cent slide in city-centre prices and a 6.3 per cent decline in city-fringe prices.

The smaller mass-market price fall reflected the strong buying support from upgraders in the HDB market, where resale prices reversed a marginal fall to rise by 1.2 per cent in the second quarter.

The stock market rally, coupled with strong liquidity, has resulted in a surge in second-quarter new home sales. CBRE Research estimated that 4,000 new homes were sold – more than 50 per cent above the 2,596 units sold in the first quarter.

The volume lent support to home prices and, in some cases, allowed developers to raise their prices when supply was tight, it said.

The second quarter also saw more new launches at higher price levels because they were located either on the city fringe or in prime districts, CBRE Research added. These include Martin Place Residences, The Wharf Residence, One Devonshire and the sold-out 8@Woodleigh.

CBRE Research executive director Li Hiaw Ho said the 5.9 per cent decline in private home prices is ‘contrary to the present market perception’ as actual price levels in the second quarter are known to have risen more than 10 per cent from the first quarter.

DTZ head of South-east Asia research Chua Chor Hoon described the fall as ’surprising’ because prices picked up around last month – especially in the prime districts of 9, 10 and 11.

Average home prices were still relatively flat in April and May – some developments saw price increases, while others saw price falls – she said. But last month, resale home prices rose from 3 per cent in the mass-market segment to as much as 11 per cent in prime areas, she added.

‘Going forward, developers are likely to test the market with gradual price increases. Should the current momentum hold, we can expect private property prices to increase by 5 per cent to 8 per cent in the second half of the year,’ said ERA Asia-Pacific associate director Eugene Lim.

While local buyers are now supporting the market, more foreign investors may come when the integrated resorts open, he added.

Colliers International director for research and advisory Tay Huey Ying thinks the strength of pent-up demand should not be underestimated as new home sales had sunk to a low of 4,264 units last year – half of the annual average of about 8,500 new units since 2000.

Home sales could remain robust in the second half of this year, possibly reaching 12,000 units or more. This will hinge on price rises not exceeding 5 per cent for mass-market homes and 10 per cent for higher-tier homes, as buyers remain price sensitive in view of the absence of economic expansion and growth in employment and personal income, she said.

If the positive buying mood continues, the third-quarter price index may show a rise, said OrangeTee’s executive director (residential), Mr Steven Tan.

Others, like Ms Chua, think the final second-quarter index may already show some increase when more June caveats are included in the computation of the index. But she thinks this could be a ‘temporary blip’ with resistance setting in at some levels and prices possibly stagnant or falling from as early as the the third quarter onwards.


POSSIBLE PICKUP

‘Should the current momentum hold, we can expect private property prices to increase by 5 per cent to 8 per cent in the second half of the year.’ – ERA Asia-Pacific associate director Eugene Lim


A softer slide in private home prices in Q2


Source : Business Times – 2 July 2009

URA flash estimates show 5.9% fall but many expect final showing to be better

Singapore’s private home prices fell for a fourth straight quarter in Q2 2009 – but the marked slowdown in the rate of decline shows that the residential market here is recovering, analysts said.

The private residential price index fell 5.9 per cent in the second quarter, according to flash estimates from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) yesterday. By contrast, the index fell 14.1 per cent in Q1.

The continuing fall in the index caught many analysts by surprise, as anecdotal evidence showed that private home prices started climbing again in the second quarter.

‘The decline is surprising as prices have picked up in the latter part of the second quarter, especially in the prime districts of 9, 10 and 11,’ said DTZ’s head of South-east Asia research Chua Chor Hoon.

Echoed Li Hiaw Ho, executive director of CBRE Research: ‘This smaller decline in the price index is contrary to the present market perception where actual price levels in the second quarter were known to be more than 10 per cent above those in the first quarter.’

CBRE’s data showed that the median price registered in the second quarter for new 99-year leasehold projects was $788,000 – some 13.2 per cent higher than the median of $696,000 in Q1. For new freehold non-landed properties, it was $928,000 – 26.6 per cent higher than the first quarter’s $733,000. Some 3,800- 4,000 new homes were estimated to have been sold in Q2, 50 per cent more than the 2,596 units sold in the first quarter, the firm said.

DTZ’s Ms Chua pointed out that URA’s flash estimates are based on transaction prices from caveats lodged during the first ten weeks of the quarter, while the buying frenzy gained pace in June. ‘I expect the final price index to fall less or show some increase when more caveats in June are included in the computation of the index,’ she said.

A URA spokesman said that while some developers had started raising prices recently, the extent of price increase quarter-on-quarter was small and pertained to selected projects.

‘On the other hand, more projects had seen a fall in prices over Q2 2009,’ said the spokesman. ‘Hence, overall prices in Q2 2009 as reflected by the flash index fell in comparison with Q1 2009.’

The revised index (which will be out on July 24) will capture caveats beyond the first 10 weeks of the quarter.

Meanwhile, the slower pace of decline for private home prices was seen across the whole island.

In Q2, prices of non-landed private residential properties decreased 6.6 per cent in the core central region (which includes the prime districts, financial district and Sentosa Cove), 6.3 per cent in the rest of central region, and 2.6 per cent in the outside central region (which is a proxy for suburban mass-market locations).

In comparison, in Q1 2009, prices fell 16.2 per cent in the core central region, 17 per cent in the rest of central region and 7.3 per cent in the outside central region.

The improved sentiment was also evident in the resale prices of Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats.

The HDB resale price index, which fell for the first time in Q1 2009 after nine straight quarters of growth, also recovered somewhat to climb 1.2 per cent in Q2. The resale price index fell 0.8 per cent in the first quarter.

‘This price rebound shows that demand for HDB flats is still very strong despite current economic challenges,’ said Eugene Lim, ERA Asia Pacific’s associate director.

ERA, which says it has a 45 per cent market share of the HDB resale market, observed that its transaction volume surged some 52 per cent in Q2 over Q1.

Buyers are returning to the HDB market because sellers have become more realistic about asking prices – especially those selling five-room and executive flats, analysts said. Rather than holding out for higher cash-over-valuation (COV) amounts, most are now willing to sell at valuation or with a slight COV.

Analysts expect the property market recovery to continue – but cautioned against over-exuberance.

OCBC Investment Research analyst Foo Sze Ming said that property prices in Singapore are unlikely to surge to 2007 levels, even with the current recovery.

Then, prices were boosted by global real estate funds that bought up homes here for investment. ‘Since the economic crisis is still ongoing, I doubt that there will be that much interest from funds in the Singapore property market to drive prices up to 2007 levels this year,’ Mr Foo said.

‘We retain our cautious outlook for the Singapore residential market,’ said Nomura analysts Tony Darwell and Min Chow Sai in a June 29 report.

‘In our view, the directional trend in the market will be driven by the competing forces of inventory clearance and buyers motivated by current ‘value’ rather than expectations of a sustained recovery in asset prices.’

The analysts see the likelihood of a W-shaped recovery in asset prices, rather than their previous expectations of a U-shaped recovery, the note said.