Tuesday, November 17, 2009

CPF interest rate stays at 2.5% in Q1 next year


Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

CENTRAL Provident Fund members will continue to receive 2.5 per cent a year interest on savings in their Ordinary Account for the first three months of next year.

The CPF board said yesterday the interest rate as derived from those of the major local banks from August to October this year worked out to 0.42 per cent a year. But interest of 2.5 per cent will be paid, as this is the minimum rate provided for under the CPF Act.

With the Housing & Development Board, the CPF Board also said the concessionary interest rate for HDB mortgage loans will remain at 2.6 per cent a year from January to March next year.

For the Medisave, Special and Retirement accounts, the interest rate will be announced in December, after the 12-month average yield of the 10-year Singapore Government Security has been computed.

The CPF interest rate for the Special, Medisave and Retirement Accounts is pegged at one per cent above the yield rate. The current rate of 4 per cent for the October-December period will be kept as the floor until Dec 31 next year, to ‘help members adjust to this floating rate’. In addition, an extra one per cent interest will be paid on the first $60,000 of a member’s combined balances, with up to $20,000 from the Ordinary Account.


More HDB flats in Punggol with two new BTO projects


Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

Punggol Sails and Punggol Ripples will have a total of 1,078 new flats

THE Housing & Development Board (HDB) yesterday launched new build-to- order (BTO) projects at Punggol with a total of 1,078 flats.

And four more BTO projects – with 2,700 flats in all – can be expected next month in Bukit Panjang, Sembawang and Dawson.

Including the two latest Punggol projects – Punggol Sails and Punggol Ripples – HDB has offered about 10,800 flats under BTO and other exercises so far this year. Last month HDB announced plans to ramp up the supply of new flats to meet increased demand for public housing.

HDB also said that with effect from this BTO exercise, 95 per cent of the supply of two, three, four and five-room flats will be set aside for first-timers.

‘This will give greater priority to first-timers, who generally have more urgent housing needs than second-timers,’ it said.

Punggol Sails and Punggol Ripples will have 130 studio apartments and 436 three-room, 403 four-room and 109 five-room flats.

Studio apartments will be priced from $65,000 to $92,000; three-room flats will sell for $158,000 to $185,000; four-room flats for $249,000 to $305,000; and five-room flats for $332,000 to $377,000.

PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail expects strong interest in the new projects.

‘Plans are already underway to construct the 4.9km Punggol Promenade linking the estate’s two activity clusters,’ he said. ‘As part of the Punggol 21 Master Plan, this will enliven the area and increase the value of homes there.’

He expects the two BTO projects to be at least five times subscribed on the back of the increasing HDB resale price index.

BTO projects are typically cheaper than resale flats. The typical selling prices of new units are 10-20 per cent cheaper than those of comparable resale units in the area, Mr Ismail said.

HDB expects first-time flat buyers will need to use 23-27 per cent of their monthly household income to meet their monthly loan commitments for these two projects.

The agency says this is well below the 30 per cent international benchmark for affordable housing.

Posted in General, HDB News | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CPF interest rate stays at 2.5% in Q1 next year

Posted by luxuryasiahome on November 17, 2009

CENTRAL Provident Fund members will continue to receive 2.5 per cent a year interest on savings in their Ordinary Account for the first three months of next year.

The CPF board said yesterday the interest rate as derived from those of the major local banks from August to October this year worked out to 0.42 per cent a year. But interest of 2.5 per cent will be paid, as this is the minimum rate provided for under the CPF Act.

With the Housing & Development Board, the CPF Board also said the concessionary interest rate for HDB mortgage loans will remain at 2.6 per cent a year from January to March next year.

For the Medisave, Special and Retirement accounts, the interest rate will be announced in December, after the 12-month average yield of the 10-year Singapore Government Security has been computed.

The CPF interest rate for the Special, Medisave and Retirement Accounts is pegged at one per cent above the yield rate. The current rate of 4 per cent for the October-December period will be kept as the floor until Dec 31 next year, to ‘help members adjust to this floating rate’. In addition, an extra one per cent interest will be paid on the first $60,000 of a member’s combined balances, with up to $20,000 from the Ordinary Account.


HSR to list on SGX via reverse takeover


Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

The property firm’s owners will sell their entire stakeholding to Catalist-listed Wepco for $40m

PROPERTY agency HSR International Realtors said yesterday it plans to list on Singapore Exchange (SGX) through a reverse takeover (RTO).

Husband-and-wife team Patrick Liew and Kellie Lim, who own 100 per cent of HSR, will sell their entire stakeholding to Catalist-listed Wepco Ltd for $40 million.

Wepco now provides electroplating services to the electronics, automotive, aerospace and medical industries. But once the RTO is completed, it will focus on real estate.

The company is likely to be renamed and re-branded. It will also apply for a transfer from the Catalist board to the mainboard.

Established in 1981, HSR is one of the largest homegrown real estate agencies in Singapore, with more than 7,000 agents listed.

Last year, it had a 32 per cent share of the HDB resale market and 40 per cent of the private residential market, said chief executive Mr Liew, who will head the enlarged Wepco.

HSR reported a drop in 2008 net profit to $1.4 million, from $4.9 million in 2007.

The weaker property market caused revenue to fall to $55.2 million from $80.6 million.

Mr Liew intends to use HSR’s listed status to grow the company.

‘We see tremendous opportunities for growth in Singapore as well as regionally and globally,’ he said.

In particular, HSR is looking to partner other real estate firms in South-east Asia to break into more markets.

It has marketed property in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Canada and the United States, but currently operates mainly in Singapore.

Being a listed company will boost HSR’s brand equity and give it more ways to tap the capital markets for growth, Mr Liew said.

Wepco will pay the $40 million to Mr Liew and Ms Lim by issuing 80 million new shares at 50 cents each.

The issue price represents a premium of about 117 per cent over Wepco’s closing price of 23 cents last Friday.

Upon completion of the acquisition, Mr Liew and Ms Lim will own 83 per cent of Wepco’s enlarged share capital.

Wepco said that in the past few years many of key customers have shifted their operations overseas, resulting in a substantial loss of revenue.

This, plus increased raw material prices and other operating costs, has had a substantial negative impact on profitability, Wepco said. ‘While the company continues to strive for high growth in its current business, the directors are of the opinion that in view of the challenging business climate in which the group operates, there is a need to look for other business opportunities to increase shareholders’ value,’ it said.

Wepco’s stock gained 10 cents to close at 33 cents yesterday.


Sales of new private homes down again


Source : Straits Times – 17 Nov 2009

SALES of new private homes plunged last month to just 811 units – well down on September’s numbers and a clear sign that the Government’s cooling measures have taken hold.

The decline also marks the third straight monthly contraction since August.

October’s sales were down from the 1,143 units sold in September and 1,805 in August, although they were still about six times the sales done in the same month last year, according to the Urban Redevelopment Authority yesterday.

‘Although the number of units launched and sold in October was the lowest since January, it should not be treated with alarm as it reflects that the property market is subsiding into a more sustainable level of activity,’ said DTZ’s head of Southeast Asia research Chua Chor Hoon.

October’s sales came close to the average monthly take-up of 845 units since June 2007, she said.

Property experts were already expecting the slump as sales at launches started to slow down not long after the Government introduced measures to calm the market in mid-September.

Price resistance has also set in, particularly for mass market homes, they say.

Developers launched only 566 units last month, a far cry from the 1,413 launched in September.

About 60 per cent of the launches were prime projects, which accounted for slightly more than one-third of the sales. There were no new major mass market launches.

PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail believes the pent-up demand that accumulated during the financial crisis has largely been met. He noted that 66 per cent of the units sold last month were mid-range homes that went for between $1,000 psf and $1,999 psf – a result of developers selling smaller units at higher prices per square foot.

One of last month’s best sellers was Far East Organization’s 278-unit Cyan in Bukit Timah Road. It launched 90 units and sold 81 at a median price of $1,821 per sq ft.

Last month’s figure brings sales so far this year to 13,639 units, just 8 per cent short of the record 14,811 units sold in 2007. Total sales of new homes will likely surpass the 2007 total, experts say.

Jones Lang LaSalle said the Government’s measures to curb speculative behaviour seem to have taken effect, going by sub-sales, which fell to 7.9 per cent of total sales last month from the 12 per cent recorded in September.

Still, the low level of new launches last month suggests that developers were more affected by the measures than buyers, say experts.

‘While one would expect developers to capitalise on the buying trend, they were surprisingly more cautious and anticipated a bigger demand pull-back,’ said Jones Lang LaSalle’s head of research for South-east Asia, Dr Chua Yang Liang.

It suggests the market could be ‘closing in on its peak as developers are no longer as confident of the sustainability of the current market movement’, he said.

New home sales are expected to slow this month and next to between 600 and 700 units. Dr Chua expects sales of non- landed homes to contract by a further 10 per cent to 20 per cent.

But if the rise in house prices continues to surge ahead of economic fundamentals, tougher anti-speculative measures could be introduced. These could include a capital gains tax, perhaps for those who flip within a two-year period of the first purchase, added Dr Chua. Ngee Ann Polytechnic lecturer Nicholas Mak believes the next wave of buying may come when the two integrated resorts open next year.

Home prices, said CBRE Research executive director Li Hiaw Ho, are likely to ‘hold firm at current levels’, though the imminent launch of Marina Bay Suites will give a good indication of how the prime and high-end segment will perform.


Higher, 95% of flats reserved for first-timers


Source : Straits Times – 17 Nov 2009

THE Housing Board (HDB) has moved to address mounting concern about inadequate flat supply by upping the first-timer’s success rate for getting a flat and by launching more than 1,000 homes for sale in Punggol.

With immediate effect, the Board has increased the number of flats reserved for first-timers at its sales launches from the current level of 90per cent to 95 per cent.

This applies to both its build-to-order (BTO) scheme – which provides the bulk of HDB flats and where units are built when a certain demand is reached – and the sale of balance flat (SBF) exercise, which typically offers ready flats across the island.

Flats offered in the latter exercise are highly popular given that buyers do not have to wait for homes to be built and are given access to a wide variety of locations.

HDB said yesterday its move was designed to ‘give greater priority to first-timers, who generally have more urgent housing needs than second-timers’.

‘HDB will monitor the demand situation closely and make adjustments where necessary,’ it added.

The Board first introduced this scheme for first-timers in August 2007 to prevent them from being crowded out of the then-booming market.

Prior to that, there was no quota and first-timers were balloted along with everyone else.

The scheme also gave a leg-up to applicants who had tried and failed in four or more ballots by favouring them in BTO project ballots. (see below)

Yesterday’s move by the HDB is a response to those first-time home buyers who fear missing out on the chance to buy a property because of historically high resale flat prices – they rose 3.8per cent in the first nine months of the year – and a perceived supply shortage.

Ngee Ann Polytechnic real estate lecturer Nicholas Mak, an industry observer, believes the HDB is likely responding to feedback that young couples cannot afford resale flat prices.

‘In this case, they are reserving so many flats for first-timers so they can ensure affordability,’ said Mr Mak, who added that the HDB’s decision might help shift some demand away from the resale market to demand for new flats directly from HDB.

PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail does not see the HDB’s five-point increase having a major impact on the market, but said it clearly demonstrated that first-timers and not upgraders were being given priority for new flats.

‘It is a clear signal that the current concern is to provide a roof for all young couples,’ he said.

The HDB yesterday unveiled 1,078 new standard flats for sale at Punggol Sails and Punggol Ripples. The units range from studio apartments to five-room flats and prices range from $65,000 to $377,000.

Punggol Sails offers 279 three-room, 218 four-room and 109 five-room flats, while Punggol Ripples has 130 studio apartments, 157 three-roomers and 185 four-roomers for sale.

Both projects are located along Punggol field, are served by the Punggol MRT and LRT stations, and are near the future Punggol Town Centre.

PropNex’s Mr Ismail noted that the typical selling price of the new flats was 10 to 20per cent cheaper than those of comparative resale units in the area.

With the vision for Punggol as Singapore’s waterfront town starting to become a reality, flats in the area will become increasingly popular, said Mr Ismail, who expects the projects to be five times over-subscribed.

Home buyers need to submit their applications before the closing date of Nov30.

Including yesterday’s sale, HDB has offered 10,800 flats for sale this year. It said that 2,700 more flats will be offered next month in Bukit Panjang, Sembawang and Dawson.


A leg-up for young couples

YOUNG couples now have a greater chance of securing a flat, with the Housing Board setting aside 95per cent of all its sales exercise – BTO and sales of balance flats – for first-timers.

The HDB’s priority scheme was first introduced in August 2007 and, prior to that, no quota existed so first-timers were balloted along with everyone else.

The revised scheme additionally gives a leg-up to applicants who have tried and failed in four or more ballots.

On their fifth attempt they will be accorded one extra chance, with their name being entered for the ballot one more time.

For their sixth try, they get entered two more times, and so on. However, this only applies to BTO projects in non-mature areas.

Couples already receive a helping hand under the Married Child Priority Scheme, which gives them double the chance during the balloting.


Oct home sales dip, but prime area defies mood of caution

Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

The number of private homes that developers launched and sold in October slowed to their lowest levels since housing sales began their revival in February, according to latest official figures. While the outcome was expected, the big question is how long it will take for home sales to rev up again.

Buyers, especially in the price-sensitive mass-market segment, had begun to be fatigued by price increases in the third quarter – even before the government acted on Sept 14 to cool the market. Developers are also running out of mass-market projects which are launch-ready.

‘Everybody’s more cautious now,’ said Knight Frank chairman Tan Tiong Cheng, summing up the current mood among buyers and developers.

DTZ executive director (consulting) Ong Choon Fah said: ‘Buying is likely to continue to be slow for the rest of the year. There’s not much to launch; and people are away. Activity will probably return after Chinese New Year.’

While developers of a few projects are expected to proceed with launches soon – including Marina Bay Suites and City Developments’s new condo on Thomson Road – others have decided to postpone their launches until Q1 next year or even later, when they hope there will be clearer signs confirming the recovery in the Singapore economy that will see buyers emerging from the sidelines again.

Data released by Urban Redevelopment Authority yesterday showed that developers sold 811 private homes in October, down 29 per cent from September’s sales of 1,143 homes. This is the third consecutive monthly decline after home sales peaked at 2,772 units in July.

In the first 10 months of this year, developers have sold 13,639 units. Views in the market are mixed whether developers will manage to sell another 1,172 units in the final two months of 2009 to match the record of 14,811 units in 2007.

The 566 units developers launched in October was 60 per cent lower than in the previous month.

The Core Central Region (CCR) – where higher-priced homes are located – fared relatively better in October than the Rest of Central Region (RCR) and Outside Central Region (OCR).

CCR saw a doubling in sales from 152 units in September to 311 units in October; the number of private homes launched in the region also increased 67 per cent over the same period.

In contrast, the number of units launched as well as sold by developers fell in the other two regions. For instance, the number of homes sold in OCR fell 55.2 per cent month on month to 251 units in October. And the number of homes launched in RCR declined to just 40 units in October from 631 in September.

Last month, a total of 250 units were sold in the $1,500 psf to $2,000 psf range, accounting for 31 per cent of total sales in October and representing a big jump from the 92 units sold in this price range in September, Colliers International research director Tay Huey Ying noted. ‘This shows that as of October, filtering-up of demand from the mass-market to the high-end has not been derailed by the September cooling measures,’ she added.

CB Richard Ellis executive director Li Hiaw Ho noted that interest in luxury projects continued in October despite the slowdown felt in the rest of the market. ‘ A unit at Boulevard Vue sold at $4,150 psf; a unit of Seven Palms fetched $3,429 psf in October after six units were sold in September at $3,091 to $3,353 psf. Over at Nassim Park Residences, five units were sold last month at a median price of $3,089 psf following the sales of nine units in Q3 at $2,800 to $3,450 psf,’ he added.

Jones Lang LaSalle’s head of SE Asia research Chua Yang Liang said the impact of the September announcement was felt most in OCR and RCR as these markets were driven mostly by HDB upgraders who are more sentiment driven.

October’s top-selling project was Far East Organization’s Cyan at Bukit Timah (81 units transacted at a median price of $1,821). Other chart toppers in CCR last month included Trilight (58 units) and Lincoln Suites (53 units) – both in the Newton area.

In RCR, the top sellers included Suites @ Guillemard (66 units) and City Loft (40 units). Both projects featured shoebox units. In OCR, sales were contributed mainly by Hundred Trees in West Coast (52 units) and Mi Casa in Choa Chu Kang (43 units), noted Savills Singapore.


Private home sales down 29% in October to 811 units


Source : Channel NewsAsia – 16 Nov 2009

Sales of uncompleted private homes continued to fall in October, making it the third month of decline in a row. Just 811 units were sold last month, a 29 per cent slide compared to September.

This is also the first time since January that private home sales have dipped below 1,000 units. However, October saw a pickup in the number of high-end units being sold.

While mass market homes have been dominating the sales records since February, more than a third of the units sold in October had median prices above S$1,500 per square feet.

In fact, the top-selling property last month was Cyan at Bukit Timah Road, where 80 units were picked up by buyers at a median price of S$1,821 per square foot.

The most expensive unit sold was at Boulevard Vue at Cuscaden Walk, which went for S$4,150 per square foot.


Property agent jailed for acting as fall guy


Source : Straits Times – 17 Nov 2009

A PROPERTY agent who took the rap for an unlicensed driver’s offence of running a red light was jailed for three months yesterday.

Leung Man Kwan, 34, accepted $1,000 to take the fall for Ms Evangeline Tay Su Ann, 21, who took a Bulgarian business manager’s car out for a spin without his consent while he was abroad in January last year.

Leung is appealing against her sentence.

Ms Tay, who had been staying in the house belonging to the owner of the car, skipped the lights in Lornie Road. She knew she had been caught as she saw the camera flash go off.

Worried because she was driving without a licence and without the permission of the car’s owner, she turned to friends for help.

One of them, former police officer Kelvin Choo Yew Beng, 38, secured Leung’s complicity for $1,000.

When the car’s owner received a summons asking for the driver’s particulars, he asked Ms Tay about the offence. She gave him Leung’s particulars.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Andrew Tan said one reason Leung agreed to take the fall was her own driving record: At the time, she had pending drink driving-related charges, so the extra demerit point for running a red light would have been of little consequence to her.

In November last year, she was jailed for two months, fined $4,800 and banned from driving for 18 months for hurting a public servant, drink driving, failing to give a breath specimen and disorderly behaviour.

Neither Ms Tay nor Mr Choo have been charged over their roles in the bribery.

It is not known whether Ms Tay has been charged over her traffic offences.

Leung could have been jailed for up to seven years and fined for subverting the course of justice.


HSR property firm set to list on SGX


November 17, 2009

PROPERTY firm HSR announced yesterday that it will list on the Singapore Exchange via a reverse takeover of electroplating company Wepco.

As part of the move, Wepco will apply to be transferred from the Catalist board, where it is now listed, to the SGX mainboard.

The move involves Wepco acquiring the real estate giant and issuing 80 million shares at 50 cents a piece, a total of $40 million, to HSR owners Patrick Liew and his wife Kellie Lim.

Mr Liew, who is HSR’s chief executive, and Ms Lim will hold 83 per cent of Wepco’s enlarged share capital. There will then be a placement exercise of Wepco shares to comply with listing requirements.

Mr Liew said the reverse takeover will allow the firm to list faster than if it were to go the initial public offering route.

He added that the listing will give HSR access to the capital markets as well as liquidity and branding for expansion.

HSR will focus on growing in niche areas such as cross-border property transactions and licensing its structured training programmes for new agents.

The company has marketed properties in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States as well as in its home market.

HSR has about 7,000 property agents in its fold and claims to have captured 40 per cent of the private residential resale market and 32 per cent of the HDB resale market last year.

It will be only the second listed property agency, after mainboard-listed Hersing Corporation, which owns ERA.

The reverse takeover needs backing from the authorities as well as from Wepco shareholders.

UK home sellers cut asking prices 1.6% in Nov


Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

UK home sellers reduced asking prices in November for the first time in three months as demand for property dwindled before the Christmas holidays, Rightmove Plc said.

Average prices fell 1.6 per cent to £226,440 from October, when they rose 2.8 per cent, the owner of the UK’s biggest residential property website said in a statement yesterday. Prices have now dropped 6.6 per cent from the peak in May 2008.

‘In all but the most buoyant of markets, home moving comes second to Christmas festivities,’ Miles Shipside, Rightmove’s commercial director, said in the statement.

‘While the market has recovered from some dreadful lows, this month’s price fall proves that it does not yet have the strength to buck seasonal trends.’

Britain’s property-market pickup from the slump may reflect an ‘unusual’ imbalance between demand and supply which is unlikely to last, the Bank of England said last week.

Policymakers expanded their bond-purchase plan to £200 billion (S$462 billion) this month and Bank of England governor Mervyn King says he has an ‘open mind’ on whether to increase it further to aid the economy.

The pound was little changed against the US dollar yesterday, trading at US$1.6713 as of 9:10am here.

Asking prices fell the most in the Yorkshire and Humberside area, where they dropped 4.4 per cent from October, and in the North West, where they slid 3.8 per cent, Rightmove said.

London prices fell 3.1 per cent on the month, led by a 5.3 per cent decline in Barking and Dagenham.

Kensington and Chelsea, the city’s most expensive area, was the only one to show an increase. The 3.9 per cent gain there put the average price of a home at £1.97 million.

Kensington and Chelsea ‘is favoured by foreign buyers who have benefited from the weakness of the pound’, Mr Shipside said.

Last year, asking prices in England and Wales fell 2.9 per cent in November and declined further in December and January, according to Rightmove. Prices have risen in seven of the 10 months since then.

The Bank of England said last week that the outlook for the housing market ‘will depend, in part, on the supply of mortgage credit’.

UK mortgage approvals climbed to their highest level for 18 months in September. Loan approvals are still only half what they were when the credit crisis started in September 2007.

A separate report yesterday by the British Chambers of Commerce showed UK companies have found it harder to obtain credit since June as banks withhold loans.

The survey of 400 companies also found 64 per cent of them said their biggest obstacle to growth in the coming years was a lack of demand.


More celebrity homes going on the market


Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

Actors, sports stars and writers are just some of the rich and famous selling off their luxurious homes

Former University of Southern California tailback turned New Orleans Saint Reggie Bush has listed his Hollywood Hills home at US$5,099,000.

The tri-level contemporary sits at the end of a cul-de-sac and has 360-degree views encompassing Long Beach, Santa Catalina Island, Malibu and nearby mountains. There are four bedrooms and 51/2 bathrooms in 4,831 square feet. Glass entry doors open to a soaring living room.

Designed for entertaining, the property has a home theatre, a swimming pool and a spa. The house even has a red plush-lined elevator bearing the monogram RB, making the digs move-in ready for actress Roseanne Barr, actor Robby Benson or Milwaukee Brewer Ryan Braun.

The entire penthouse level is devoted to the master bedroom suite with his and her bathrooms, an oversized closet and a deck.

The running back, 24, has been with the Saints since 2006, when he left USC before his senior year as the No 2 pick in the NFL draft.

The 2005 Heisman Trophy winner purchased the home for US$4.7 million in 2007 for use as his off-season home, according to reports at the time.

Actor Larry Hagman and his wife, Maj, have listed their longtime mountaintop home in Ojai, a 43-acre spread befitting Dallas oilman JR Ewing, for US$11 million.

The nine-bedroom, 141/2-bathroom Mediterranean-style estate was designed and built for the couple in 1992.

The off-the-grid property 60 miles northeast of downtown LA has separate solar systems providing energy for the main residence, the well and the caretaker’s home, while creating surplus power. When Hagman installed the first system in 2003, his annual electric bill went from US$37,000 to US$13.

Sitting behind iron gates, the 18,000-square-foot main house has an open floor plan with walls of sliding glass doors, painted murals, an indoor grotto-style spa and a retractable roof over a 40-foot saltwater lap pool in the grand room, which has accommodated parties of up to 200 people. Glass walls on three sides provide unobstructed views from the bed in the master suite. There are ocean, mountain and valley vistas.

The compound includes a two-bedroom guesthouse, a separate office, an outside pool connected by streams to two ponds, a private helipad and more than 200 avocado trees.

A television, film and stage actor for more than five decades, Hagman was twice nominated for Emmys for his work on Dallas (1978-91). He starred as Major Anthony Nelson in the sitcom I Dream of Jeannie (1965-70). Hagman, 78, was inducted into the Texas Film Hall of Fame in March.

The Hagmans are selling because they are ready to downsize. They own another home in the LA area.

The Antonio Moreno estate, a 1930 mansion named for the film star who lived in it until 1935, has sold for US$4.2 million.

The Mediterranean Revival has a two-storey living room, five separate bedroom wings and 71/2 bathrooms in 8,081 square feet. The home sits on more than half an acre in gated Laughlin Park in LA’s Los Feliz neighbourhood. There is a period kitchen, original tile bathrooms, a guesthouse and a recording/editing studio.

The house and its two-storey detached garage cost US$27,300 to build during the Depression, according to building biographer Tim Gregory. It last sold for US$1.66 million in 1996, public records show.

Moreno, an actor from the silent- film era through the 1950s, was the home’s first owner. Although he was married to oil heiress Daisy Canfield Moreno when he moved into the Los Feliz estate, they were estranged. She died in a 1933 car accident.

The suave matinee idol was often cast as a ‘Latin lover’ in his early films and played opposite Greta Garbo and Clara Bow, among others. With the advent of talking pictures, he directed and starred in several Spanish-language films made in Mexico before returning to Hollywood as a character actor. His later work included Thunder Bay (1953) and Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954). He died in 1967 at age 79.

Author and screenwriter Brian Garfield has sold his Beverly Hills Post Office-area home for US$1,795,000, the Multiple Listing Service shows.

The traditional single-storey house has a skylighted entry, a family room with a bar, wide-plank distressed hardwood floors and formal living and dining rooms.

French doors open to a brick patio with a swimming pool, spa and canyon views. There are four bedrooms and 31/2 bathrooms in 3,232 square feet.

About a quarter of Garfield’s 70- plus books have been the basis for movies, including Death Wish, which was made into the 1974 Charles Bronson action film and its sequels, and Hopscotch, the 1980 comedy-adventure film starring Walter Matthau, Glenda Jackson and Sam Waterston.

The recently released Sela Ward thriller, The Stepfather, is based on his 1987 novel of the same name. Garfield, born in 1939, bought the house in 1999.


Time to break free from the cult of homeownership


Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009

Studies have shown the risks of owning a home in the US

Here’s a radical notion: Let’s rethink the cult of homeownership in America.

Why, a sensible person might ask, do we need to do this when millions of homeowners faced foreclosure in the last year alone, and an estimated 15 million more own homes worth less than their mortgages?

Clearly, one might conclude, the bloom is already off the homeownership rose.

The answer is simple. Even in the middle of this collapse, when people were asked about their expectations for house price appreciation over the next year, the answers shock.

Zillow.com reports that at the end of 2008, with prices falling, 70 per cent of those surveyed said they did not think their house price would decline over the next six months, and more than a quarter expected it to actually increase.

Many people also still rely on outdated measures in deciding whether to buy or rent. For example, they often base the decision to own on how long they will be in a home.

But people predictably understate the chance that they will be forced to move because of a job loss, divorce, death of a spouse or disability.

Furthermore, the focus of efforts under the federal national stabilisation programme to deal with foreclosures is to recycle them back into the hands of homeowners or, in the case of small, multi-unit apartment buildings, resident landlord/owners.

We are a country still in the thrall of homeownership.

Nearly a decade ago, a colleague and I edited a book about the promotion of low-income homeownership, with the subtitle Examining the Unexamined Goal.

Study after study pointed out the risks of homeownership. One used repeat sales data to look at what properties bought from 1982 through 1999 sold for in Boston, Denver, Philadelphia and Chicago.

In Chicago – which never had much price fluctuation, even in 1995, its worst year – only 9 per cent of houses on the market sold at a loss.

But in Boston, which had a larger price correction, 45 per cent of houses sold in 1993 and 1994 sold at a loss. Worse still, 69 per cent of houses in Denver sold in 1988 and 1989 sold at a loss.

In places such as Los Angeles, which was not part of the study but where house prices cycle a great deal, high percentages of owners during periods of decline have had to hand the keys back to their lenders to get out of underwater mortgages, or fork over a lot of cash at the closing table when they sold.

Ironically, to some people, owning may make more sense today than when housing markets were booming.

After all, chances are greater now that people will buy at or near the bottom.

But should Americans assume that homeownership is always the right choice?

We should spend as much time thinking about how public policy can encourage intelligent housing choices as we have thinking about how it can encourage intelligent mortgage choices. The choice to own or rent comes first.

Let’s assume that the way to get out from underneath the weight of foreclosures is to not let speculators and homeowners at risk of falling behind again roll the dice.

Let’s instead consider programmes that aggregate ownership of properties, especially two- to four-unit ones, in the hands of non-profits that can rent them out.

These small complexes are estimated to account for up to two in five foreclosures.

It might make more sense to get these properties into the hands of nonprofits that own many properties, so that a single rental vacancy constitutes the loss of only a small fraction of rental income.

By contrast, one vacancy could constitute up to 100 per cent of the rental income needed to make the mortgage payment for a resident/owner of a single small property, making that a less stable investment.

It’s time we make homeownership just one alternative in a more innovative, affordable and broader housing market.

By ERIC S BELSKY, executive director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University


Monday, November 16, 2009

More flats in Punggol with two new BTO projects


Source : Channel NewsAsia – 16 Nov 2009

HDB has launched two new Build-To-Order (BTO) projects in Punggol Town, with another four BTO projects planned by late 2009 in Bukit Panjang, Sembawang and Dawson.

The latest pair of BTO projects named Punggol Sails and Punggol Ripples offer a total of 1,078 standard flats.

The units will be located along Punggol Field and will be served by the Punggol MRT, LRT stations, bus interchange, and the future Punggol Town Centre with shops, a childcare centre, as well as primary and secondary schools in the area.

They comprise of 130 units of Studio Apartments, 436 units of 3-room, 403 units of 4-room and 109 units of 5-room flats.

The Punggol BTO units will be priced between $65,000 and $92,000 for a Studio Apartment, and $332,000 to $377,000 for a 5-room flat.

The Housing and Development Board said in its news release that most of the latest BTO flats, except for the Studio units, will be set aside for first-time applicants as they generally have more urgent housing needs.

It adds that in addition to a market subsidy on the selling price, eligible
first-timers with an average monthly household income of $5,000 or less may also apply for the Additional CPF Housing Grant (AHG) of up to $40,000 which can be used to offset the initial down-payment.

This leaves first-time flat buyers using between 23 and 27 percent of their monthly household to service their monthly mortgage commitment, which the HDB says is well below the 30 percent international benchmark for affordable housing.


Foreign buyer’s Sentosa Cove deal falls short


Source : Business Times – 16 Nov 2009

One of his two adjoining plots was resold at same price, other up for grabs

A FOREIGN investor who bought two adjoining bungalow plots on Sentosa Cove in 2008 did not complete the transactions, it has emerged.

Sentosa Cove has since re-sold one of the plots to a local buyer at the same price that the foreign investor had offered for it – $1,688 per square foot (psf) of land. But the other land parcel is still up for sale.

The plot that was re-sold has a land area of about 9,700 sq ft, which means that the total amount paid for the site is about $16.4 million.

The land parcel was first put on the market in March 2008, and sold at the end of that year through a private treaty. But after the foreign investor, who is understood to be a Chinese national, did not make payment according to schedule, the plot was put on the market again. It was sold to the local buyer about two months ago.

Sentosa Cove’s general manager Jason Yeo said that the fact that the plot was re-sold for the same price as in 2008 shows that the fundamentals of the residential enclave on Sentosa island are intact.

His firm, which handles State land sales at Sentosa Cove, received offers to buy the property at lower prices. But he held on to it until someone offered the right price.

However, the second plot, which is slightly bigger, has not yet received an offer deemed to be acceptable. The parcel, which is around 12,000 sq ft, was sold for about $1,650 psf to the foreign investor. The total quantum works out to around $19.8 million.

‘There has been interest from the market for the site, but they are not able to meet our reserve price,’ said Mr Yeo. Sentosa Cove is not aggressively marketing the site, he said.

The land parcel is the only one to remain unsold in the entire Sentosa Cove residential precinct, which will have 8,000 residents by the time all homes there are completed by 2014.

Mr Yeo said that all earlier land transactions – including condominium sites sold to developers as well as landed plots sold to individuals and investors – have been completed. Work on the island is progressing well and some 3,000 residents will be living on the island by the end of this year, he added.

Sentosa Cove has also found takers for some of the commercial space on the island. Two tenants – 7-Eleven, which will open a convenience store with a new-to-Singapore concept, and a launderette – have taken up about 30 per cent of the commercial space available at the arrival area of the Sentosa Cove residential enclave. The arrival plaza has a total lettable area of about 10,000 sq ft.


Foreign property buyers go outside prime areas


Source : Straits Times – 16 Nov 2009

FOREIGN property investors are venturing out of traditional prime areas to snap up homes in other parts of the island.

A new study has found overseas buyers have become keen on district 12, which includes the Balestier area and which is associated with karaoke bars and lighting shops.

A Savills Singapore study found that districts 9, 10 and 15 have remained the top spots for foreign buyers over the past three years.

District 9 includes the Orchard and River Valley areas; 15 covers Katong, Joo Chiat and Amber Road, and 10 includes the posh Ardmore area, and the Bukit Timah, Holland Road and Tanglin neighbourhoods.

Districts 11 and 22 have become more popular thanks to the higher number of launches there, Savills said.

In the past three years, there have been at least 30 major launches in district 11 – Novena and Thomson – alone, including Viva, Park Infinia at Wee Nam, and Miro at Lincoln Road.

District 22 – it is centred on Jurong – has hosted launches of The Centris, The Caspian and The Lakeshore.

Savills said district 12, which includes the Balestier, Serangoon and Toa Payoh areas, has emerged as one of the top new choices among foreigners this year.

Its new projects include The Arte, Trevista, Vista Residences, Nova 48, Nova 88 and Domus.

‘These city-fringe projects are near to the city and yet relatively more affordable compared to core central projects,’ said Savills’ senior manager of research and consultancy, Ms Christine Sun.

Consultants say that in district 12, average prices have been lower, at about $900 psf compared with the over $1,000 psf that Novena, only a few hundred metres away, can fetch. However, the gap is closing, partly due to district 12’s increased popularity as well as the small units offered which have a higher per unit asking price.

A closer look at the sales data from the three most popular districts of 9, 15 and 10 shows that most of the foreign buyers came from Malaysia, Indonesia, mainland China and India.

In fact, they accounted for 73.9 per cent of total foreign private property purchases in the first nine months, compared with 59.1 per cent for the whole of 2007 when the market was booming.

A lot of foreigners came to Singapore to buy back then.

Many of the high net-worth buyers from Europe, Russia and elsewhere have not quite returned, property experts said.

But Malaysian buyer numbers have risen by 10per cent this year compared with 2007, although Indonesian investor numbers have fallen by 4per cent.

Mainland Chinese buyers are also up 7.4 per cent, while Indian buyers rose 1.1 per cent.

A recent Savills study showed that foreigners, especially those from China were returning to the market.

Foreigners formed about 22.7 per cent of private home sales in the third quarter – above the 19.7 per cent average since the start of 2000.

‘Malaysians and Indonesians prefer prime districts 9 and 10, which tend to be higher-priced projects,’ said Ms Sun.

She added that mainland Chinese and Indian buyers bought more homes in the city fringe and outside of central regions, such as districts 15, 16, 18 and 22.

The properties in these regions tend to be relatively less pricey and more mass market.

Western buyers, including those from Australia, Britain and the United States, tend to congregate in certain districts, such as districts 9, 10 and 15.

The Japanese prefer district 9, while the Koreans are keen on districts 9 and 10, as well as 16, which includes Bedok and Upper East Coast.

District 9 has the highest concentration of foreign buyers, at 31 per cent.

The other top districts popular with foreigners had a proportion of between 19 and 25 per cent.


Better value for older homes


Source : PropertyGuru – 16 Nov 2009

While the local property market plunged in late 2008 along with the global economy, home values have since bounced back to its normal level. Since the second quarter of this year, a larger number of interested home buyers have lined up outside the showrooms of new condominium launches.

Property developers have responded quickly by pushing their launches to attract potential home buyers despite the high-prices. Houses in the heartlands are being sold higher than those in prime districts 9, 10 and 11. The 99-year leasehold Centro Residences at Ang Mo Kio was sold quickly at a starting price of $1,150 per square foot (psf).

“We have been seeing a bottom-up recovery in Singapore’s property market since February. Buying was initially driven by HDB upgraders who benefited from resilient HDB prices and price-cutting by developers. Subsequently, buying spilled over to the mid-end segment, with local and foreign investors returning to the market,” said Foo Sze Ming, an investment analyst from OCBC Investment Research.

The improvement in the property market was fuelled by the increased demand from home buyers who postponed their purchases last year, the recovery of the economy, high consumer liquidity, low interest rates and the possible en-bloc sellers who cashed out two years ago.

While the fast recovery of the property market must be applauded, home prices have driven up too quickly to a level that experts agree is unsustainable. CB Richard Ellis’ analysis showed that the price quantum of non-landed homes between Q1 and Q2 this year have increased by 28 percent. Between Q2 and Q3, prices escalated 11 percent from $825,000 to $916,000 for apartments ranging from 400 square feet to 700 square feet.

“In the first quarter, most of the new freehold homes sold were shoebox-sized units in mid- to high-end projects like 
Alexis, Newton Edge, Parc Sophia, RV Suites and The Mercury at a median price of $1,000 psf to $1,200 psf. In the second quarter, a significant proportion were larger family-sized suburban projects like I Residences, The Arte and Versilia On Haig, which reflected a median price of $830 psf to $925 psf,” explained Joseph Tan, executive director of CB Richard Ellis.

The buying pattern for the property market shows that recession fears are over. The latest figures from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) indicates a total of 2,767 sold private houses in July, showing a 52 percent jump from 1,826 units in June.

By the end of September, Viva sold 203 units at $1,537psf, Volari @ Balmoral sold 82 units at $2,059 psf and Sophia Residences sold 210 units at $1,590 psf. As developers push their prices, the resistance from home buyers sets in. “There appears to be a small upward trend. While the number of transactions declined, those that went through achieved slightly higher prices,” said Colin Tan, the international director for research consultancy firm Chesterton Suntec.


China property prices to rise in 2010: govt think-tank


Source : Business Times – 16 Nov 2009

Housing prices in China will keep rising next year, helped by a renewed surge in bank lending and stronger inflationary expectations, the government’s top think-tank said on Monday.

However, the property market may ebb slightly and stabilise in the second half of 2010 after China moves to tighten monetary policy, said Ni Pengfei, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (Cass).

‘Our judgement is that property prices will keep rising in 2010, but that there will be some volatility,’ he said at a press conference to launch Cass’s annual housing market report.

The traditional rush by banks to lend at the start of the year would be on full display in early 2010, with monetary policy still relatively loose, providing ample cash for property acquisitions, Mr Ni said.

On top of that, rising inflation expectations would prompt Chinese investors to put more of their cash in assets that benefit from rising price levels, with property a prime choice, he added.

Housing prices in China’s 70 biggest cities rose 3.9 per cent in October from a year earlier, the fastest rate of property inflation since September 2008 and confirming a solid rebound from a slump that began late last year.

While China’s long-term urbanisation trend has underpinned the property market, housing affordability remains a concern for many ordinary Chinese. Local media regularly debate whether current prices, at record highs in some markets, are sustainable.

Beijing introduced a range of policies to support the real estate market late last year, from reducing down payments and mortgage rates to making it easier for residents to sell homes.

A burst of bank lending, not government policies, had been the main factor driving the recovery in the real estate market, Mr Ni said.

But he added that Beijing should keep its property stimulus policies in place, fine-tuning them to ensure they benefited ordinary citizens trying to buy homes and not speculators seeking to make a quick profit.


Few people buying into luxury home expo


Source : China Daily - 16 Nov 2009

A showcase of luxury Beijing properties aimed at the country’s most wealthy inhabitants has so far failed to draw the crowds organisers hoped for.

The four-day Beijing International Top Property and Luxury Show kicked off on Thursday at the Beijing World Trade Center, the capital’s financial hub and home to a mall selling luxury goods.

The show featured high-end homes with price tags of at least 30,000 yuan ($6,091) per sq m.

But some among the sparse crowd were not impressed.

“These houses are too expensive not only for working people, but also for the middle class,” said Lily Wu, a 40-year-old visiting the show with her German husband.

“And their locations are usually in the suburbs. I think they would not be a suitable and smart choice for most Chinese.”

Many homes featured at the show were 10-million-yuan luxury houses complete with the world’s leading brands in household goods, cars, jewellery, pianos, wines and other items, said show organisers.

The most expensive property was the 50,000-yuan-per-sq-m Legacy Home located near Olympic Forest Park in Chaoyang district.

Its neighbours include last year’s Olympic icons, the Bird’s Nest stadium and Water Cube. Villas there cost more than 20 million yuan.

But if organisers were hoping for a crush of super-rich people in the grand exhibition hall they may have been disappointed.

Most were property agents hoping to make a sale.

Some pointed to the stiff admission fee as one of the reasons why so few people visited the event.

Usually, people gain entry to property exhibitions in Beijing for around 5 yuan.

The Beijing International Top Property and Luxury Show was charging a 100-yuan entrance fee.

The ticket price was slashed to 50 yuan for the second day. Ticketing agents refused to link the price cut to the show’s slow start.

A Hurun Report on China’s wealthiest people said there are 143,000 multimillionaires and 8,800 billionaires in Beijing.

The report said China has 825,000 individuals worth more than 10 million yuan and 51,000 individuals with more than 100 million yuan.

Despite the lukewarm reception during the show’s opening days, high-end property developers remain optimistic.

Tristan Marshall, director of the Kinetic Group from Australia, was among several overseas developers promoting homes in their home countries.

Others came from countries such as the US and Malaysia.

“We have 50 houses here for Chinese customers and 22 of the 50 have been sold so far,” Marshall said.

Dong Zouji, director of the Ministry of Land and Resources’ planning department, said prices of ordinary commercial property had gained value too fast in China.


Commercial property woes seen threatening US recovery


Source : Business Times – 16 Nov 2009

Slow recovery may hit exposed banks, leading to more credit tightening

Even as some sectors of the US economy see a return to growth, woes in commercial real estate are deepening, raising fears that the fragile recovery could falter.

Unlike the US home market, which has shown signs of rebounding, recovery is elusive in commercial real estate, a sector which includes apartments, offices and industrial and retail properties.

The Moody’s commercial property index fell 3 per cent last month, and remains 32.8 per cent down from a year earlier and 40.3 per cent lower than two years ago.

‘Although prices have declined steadily over the past year, the rate of decline has slowed in recent months after falling by about 8.0 per cent in both April and May,’ Moody’s said.

According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, loans for commercial and multi-family property activity fell 54 per cent in the third quarter from a year ago. Loan originations were off 12 per cent from the second quarter.

San Francisco Federal Reserve president Janet Yellen said that the prospects for the industry are ‘worrisome’. ‘Commercial property didn’t turn down until well after housing did,’ she said.

‘The sector’s problems appear to stem in large part from the effects of the recession and the credit crunch, rather than the type of building boom and lax underwriting standards that tripped up housing.’

The market for commercial mortgage-backed securities, Ms Yellen said, ‘remains deeply distressed and issuance is meagre despite support from the Fed’.

A survey by consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Urban Land Institute suggests that the market may continue to slide into next year.

The survey respondents predict that commercial real estate vacancies will continue to increase and rents will decrease across all property sectors before the market hits bottom next year.

It projects value declines of 40 per cent to 50 per cent off 2007 market peaks, setting up the potential for big bargains.

Some economists say that the slow pace of recovery in commercial real estate may dent the overall economy, by hitting banks exposed to the sector and leading to further credit tightening.

A survey by Foresight Analytics found that 53 per cent of commercial real estate mortgages due by 2014 – or some US$770 billion – were ‘underwater’, meaning the borrowers owe more than the value of the property.

Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lockhart said that he is concerned that ‘there could be an impact resulting from small banks’ impaired ability to support the small business sector – a sector I expect will be critically important to job creation’.

Mr Lockhart said that small banks hold a large portion of commercial real estate loans, which could mean a tightening of lending as defaults rise.

Kent Engelke, chief economic strategist at Capitol Market Securities, said that although the situation appears dire, banks have been through this kind of crisis before.

‘Based upon first-hand experience, I believe banks will work their borrowers (by) extending maturities . . . as long as the project is cash flowing waiting for asset values to recover,’ he said.

‘While I do believe commercial real estate is an issue I don’t think it will become the event many fear . . . Moreover once banks become more confident about the recovery, banks will then begin lending, hence adding further support to commercial real estate.’


Most of Macau resort to open by 2011


Source : Business Times – 16 Nov 2009

Las Vegas Sands Corp, the casino company controlled by billionaire Sheldon Adelson, will open most of its stalled resort in Macau by December 2011 after raising enough funds to restart construction, chief operating officer Michael Leven said yesterday.

The project is a ‘quantum leap for Macau’ as Las Vegas Sands bets that more convention space, hotel rooms and shopping malls will entice visitors to prolong their stay in the world’s biggest gambling hub, Mr Leven told reporters in a videoconference from Las Vegas.

Las Vegas Sands is selling a stake in its Macau unit for as much as HK$26 billion (S$4.65 billion) in a Hong Kong initial public offering, in what could be the city’s second-biggest this year.

The offer, together with a separate US$1.75 billion in bank financing, would help the Macau subsidiary, Sands China Ltd, resume building the 13.3-million-square-foot resort. The project and its flagship Venetian Macao would strengthen the challenge Sands China poses to billionaire Stanley Ho in the only Chinese region where casinos are legal.

Sands joins rival Wynn Macau Ltd in selling shares in Hong Kong after other locally traded casino operators surged this year. Sands China’s shares, priced between HK$10.38 and HK$13.88 each, values the company at 16.6 times next year’s estimated earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Las Vegas Sands has gained 193 per cent in market value this year, after dropping 94 per cent in 2008. The stock rose 2.2 per cent to US$17.39 on Nov 13.

Wynn’s sale valued it at 14.5 times on the same basis, according to banks involved in the sale. Its shares have fallen 3.9 per cent since they debut on Oct 9.

Sands China could restart construction on the sites known as parcels 5 and 6 on the Cotai Strip in Macau as early as January, Steve Jacobs, chief executive of Sands China, said in an earlier briefing. Mr Adelson stopped construction on the two-thirds-built structures last year as credit markets froze, revenue growth slowed and the risk of loan defaults swelled.

Sands China, which has the second-biggest market share in Macau, will hire as many as 13,000 workers to finish the construction, Mr Leven said.

The company will open the second part of the project by December 2011, Mr Leven said. The phase, consisting of one of two Sheraton-branded hotel towers and some retail centres, will add to the 3,700 hotel rooms and a casino with 670 tables which would open in June 2011.

Sands hopes to generate 30 per cent of its Macau revenues from non-Chinese customers after 2011 when it completes the two stalled projects in the territory, Mr Jacobs said.

The company also expects core profits from its Macau business to grow by 15 per cent to US$803 million in 2009, from US$696 million in 2008, Mr Jacobs said.

Investors haven’t expressed concern about China’s travel restrictions on its citizens to Macau that were put in place in October, Mr Jacobs said yesterday.

‘The feedback from investors is not one of concern’ because of the ’sheer size’ of the Chinese market and recognition that the individual travel scheme is ‘an effective way to govern’ Macau’s growth, he said.


Sunday, November 15, 2009

Why singles opt for shoebox apartments


Source : Sunday Times – 15 Nov 2009

I refer to last Sunday’s editorial, ‘Tiny flats a good buy?’

The main reason such private shoebox units have taken off is that many singles who want to live on their own are unable to afford resale HDB flats because of the high cash over valuation (COV) amounts which sellers demand.

Singles who generally have savings of between $20,000 and $30,000 will thus opt for a private shoebox apartment because that sum can cover around 5 per cent of the purchase price.

Going for a resale three-room HDB flat, for instance, would require one to set aside some $30,000 to $50,000 for renovations.

Buying a new private unit would mean less hassle with, and expense on, renovations as almost all fixtures are provided.

One may just need to spend on some simple electrical works or decor for a new ‘mickey mouse’ studio.

Single Singaporeans also compete with permanent residents for resale HDB flats. The demand for such flats outstrips their supply, thus pushing up their prices even more.

I live with my parents in the Bedok Reservoir area. Finding a resale HDB flat that is within my means is not a problem, but those available would likely be located much farther away – such as in Jurong West or Woodlands.

Considering the heavy first-time cash outlay for a resale HDB flat and an undesirable location, I would rather get a private shoebox apartment, where I would be at least near my parents and have my own space as well.

Tan Chun Meng


Serangoon Gardens: Garden variety


November 15, 2009

Well-loved foodie haunt Serangoon Gardens is getting hotter, with new food and beverage outlets opening in the area.

No fewer than six eateries, including branches of Nara Japanese Restaurant at Goldhill Centre and Yum Cha Restaurant in Trengganu Street, would have opened in the area by the end of the year.

And come next November, when the former shopping centre Serangoon Gardens Village reopens as myVillage at Serangoon Garden, more than 20 new food and beverage (F&B) shops will join the fray.

Eateries opening in the redeveloped shopping mall include Japanese ramen restaurant Menya Manpei, dessert cafe Bakerzin and ice cream parlour Udders Ice Cream.

The mall will also be home to a FairPrice Finest outlet, which stocks a wide range of premium produce.

Restaurateurs who choose to open in the neighbourhood say they are drawn to the area because of its reputation as a popular dining hub.

Mr Ben Teo, 41, one of the partners of Nara Japanese Restaurant, which is opening in Maju Avenue next month, says: ‘We were looking at a few possible locations for our second outlet, including Bedok and Bukit Timah. But we liked Serangoon Gardens best because it is known as a F&B hot spot among diners and this helps pull in the crowds.’

Mr Adrian Choi was so adamant about having his dessert shop, Dessert Origins, in Serangoon Gardens that he waited almost a year for a vacant spot.

The store opened last month on the first floor of a shophouse in Serangoon Garden Way.

Mr Albert Tan, 30, general manager of Yum Cha Restaurant, which is opening an outlet at the Serangoon Gardens Country Club this month, adds: ‘There is a significant number of private properties in the area and its residents have the spending power, so they make a good customer base.’

The laid-back charm of the cosy estate also adds to its appeal.

Mr David Yim, 39, one of the owners of Udders Ice Cream, says: ‘Serangoon Gardens has a casual, village-like ambience that is hard to find in Singapore. This atmosphere is ideal for customers to savour ice cream.’

Indeed, the demand for retail space in the area is so strong that it prompted the developers of Serangoon Gardens Village, Chye Lee and Sons, to redevelop the mall, first built as Paramount Theatre in the 1950s.

Mr Edmund Chye, 47, director of Chye Lee and Sons, says: ‘We constantly received leasing inquiries from interested businesses even though we were fully leased, so we decided to redevelop the building to accommodate more tenants.’

The building was demolished in February and the new complex will boast 40 per cent more space. To date, almost 80 per cent of the mall space have been leased out.

Because the area is coveted as a F&B enclave, rents for shops there have been increasing.

Mr Philip Wong, 36, owner of dessert cafe Ice3 in Kensington Park Road, says: ‘My shop has been here for six years and the rent has gone up over time, but the landlord has been reasonable and the increase has been gradual.

‘I have heard of rents going as high as $25,000 a month for a two-storey shophouse unit along the main stretch of Serangoon Garden Way.’

According to tenants in the area whom LifeStyle interviewed, rents for a single floor of a shophouse ranges from $6,000 to a high of $12,000, with shops facing the main stretch of Serangoon Garden Way commanding higher rents.

The growing number of restaurants in the cluster of shophouses around the Serangoon Garden Circus, however, means competition is keen.

For example, just a stone’s throw away from the coffee shop stall of Aston’s Express, a grilled meats eatery, is the month-old casual steakhouse, Ministry Of Steak, which is opened by Mr Kleiser Lee, 26, a former manager of the Aston’s Express stall.

He says: ‘Having worked and lived in Serangoon Gardens for a few years, this place feels like home to me so I wanted my brand to take off here.’

On possible competition from Ministry Of Steak, which offers similar items to Aston’s Express, Mr Ivan Loo, 46, who owns the franchise for the Aston’s Express stall there, says: ‘Because of our brand, we have been able to keep our customers and we will work hard to maintain the quality of our food.’

The increase in dining options in the estate, however, is reason for cheer for residents such as sales manager Jerry Yeo, 56. ‘I am looking forward to a better variety of dining outlets here, including the opening of Harry’s bar, which I used to patronise in the city area.’

For resident Irene Low, 57, a testing laboratory manager, her main concern is if there will be traffic congestion and sufficient parking.

Mr Chye says the new mall will have more parking lots than before. It will also offer a free valet service for customers.

A spokesman for the Aljunied Town Council, which maintains public estates within the Aljunied Group Representation Constituency, including those in Serangoon Gardens, says private estate residents who encounter public disturbances such as traffic congestion can call its Aljunied Connect for Estates hotline for assistance.

What’s up at the bay


Source : Sunday Times – 15 Nov 2009

Marina Bay, Singapore’s crown jewel, is slowly but surely taking shape

In 1992, there were plans for a landmark twin tower – Singapore’s tallest office buildings – just at the water’s edge in Marina Bay, soaring to as high as 80 storeys.

A model of the towers was even on exhibition in 1996 when plans were unveiled for the area.

Those monumental structures never quite materialised on the fringe of the waterfront. And it was probably a good thing: Imagine how people in the other buildings behind the two mammoth structures would have felt.

The new plan by Singapore’s urban planners was much more equitable: Let everyone have a piece of the bay views.

It was a rethinking that meant throwing out the original blueprint of densely developed buildings along the waterfront, and creating districts rather than block after block of commercial buildings.

And so it was mandated that waterfront developments should not rise above 50m in height, while buildings will step up gradually, much like how seats are arranged in a theatre.

When the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) was tasked with the job of planning for Singapore’s future land needs, it was not just about dumping soil into the sea to create more land.

The bigger challenge was sculpting the skyline, making sure it looks picture perfect on every postcard and tourist snapshot.

Meticulous planning

Marina Bay is, undoubtedly, Singapore’s crown jewel – arguably the most ambitious and longest-in- planning development the Government has ever undertaken.

An enormous amount of contemplation, engineering and investments has been poured into this prime plot, which the public had a glimpse of when Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong shared a fly-by video of it at his National Day Rally speech this year. In his rally speech in 2005, he gave a preview of the new Marina Bay, which was still at the drawing stage.

The Government has already pumped in $7.5 billion in infrastructure cost to make the land ready for investors, while total private investments tally up to $20.2 billion to date.

Around 24ha of land within Marina Bay has already been sold for development, including sites for One Raffles Quay, the Marina Bay Financial Centre and Marina Bay Sands.

It is where everyone will congregate and where everything will happen: the annual night-time Formula One race, New Year’s Eve countdown, National Day Parade, big-scale conventions, an upcoming casino, the new financial centre and the city’s highest luxury residential blocks.

With the bay’s most iconic development – integrated resort Marina Bay Sands – about to open for business in the first quarter of next year, anticipation and excitement are at an all-time high.

But it has taken more than 30 years to get to this point. At the beginning, there was nothing – not even land.

Land reclamation exercises from 1969 to 1992 produced about 370ha in the bay area and 80ha in Marina Centre, in anticipation of the nation’s economic growth and, with it, the extension of the Central Business District (CBD).

Unlike, say, Canary Wharf in East London, which was developed as a huge office and shopping precinct that is separate from the city’s traditional financial centre in The Square Mile, Marina Bay’s advantage is in its integration with the current financial district.

‘It is not the old downtown and the new downtown. Marina Bay is planned as a seamless extension of the existing CBD,’ said Mr Andrew Fassam, deputy director of URA’s urban planning department.

All new roads branch off from existing road networks at Raffles Place and Shenton Way.

Singapore’s urban planners also made a conscious decision to frame the bay, and ensure that the area would have a mix of uses where there would be life after dark – 24/7, in fact.

Another design principle was that it had to be a place for everyone and ‘not just the affluent’, said Mr Fassam.

So the Government decided to put in public-pleasing facilities: A 3.4km promenade linking the major public attractions like the Merlion, Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay and the upcoming ArtScience Museum; underground links lined with shops; and 100ha of land set aside for three waterfront gardens.

But it also decided to zone the area as a ‘white site’, which means that developers have the flexibility to build according to their vision.

When property tycoon Kwek Leng Beng bid for a plum piece of land fronting the bay, he had initially wanted the project to be half-commercial.

He later changed his mind and developed The Sail instead, two residential blocks towering at 63 and 70 storeys which saw no lack of takers, even though property analysts were initially sceptical and felt only that an office building would work on that site.

The URA also allotted larger parcels in the area so developers could build bigger buildings based on the needs of financial institutions, such as trading floors.

An upcoming development, Asia Square, is hoping to plug the gap for Grade A office space in town, especially those that have column-free floor plates.

When completed, the two towers will add 2 million sq ft of office space to the mix.

‘What clinched the deal for us was the availability of a huge parcel of land that could be developed into premium grade A+ office space, sitting in a prime location that is well-connected to the business hub,’ said project director Jeremy Choy.

The development’s parent company, Macquarie Global Property Advisors, bid more than $2 billion for the land.

The integrated development also houses a 280-room five-star hotel, and has space for retail and food and beverage, in addition to office space.

Mr Choy added that one of the critical deciding factors was the long-term plan for the area.

That the area was supported by the latest advances in infrastructure, like access to a district cooling system, also helped seal the deal.

Buildings in the area are served by common services tunnels which carry sewerage, water and telecommunication pipes typically buried under the road. These tunnels can be accessed without digging up the roads.

This is the first such network in South-east Asia.

The district also has its own cooling system, which makes for better economies of scale. In the pipeline is a centralised pneumatic refuse collection system that sucks all rubbish to one central location and saves the garbage truck from having to go door to door.

Even the greening of the area has been planned to a T. Planting plans include green, pink and yellow themes for different districts within the area. Coupled with this is a night lighting plan, which was originally designed for the Civic District but has since been extended to the CBD and Marina Bay.

Under the plan, buildings are required to be lit as part of the sale conditions, while the Government gives a cash grant to existing buildings around the bay to light up.

‘We can put good hardware in place, but that doesn’t mean that the place will be successful. The right software is important to make it come alive,’ acknowledged Mr Fassam.

So it went and wooed private investors by going to overseas fairs, some of which have translated into successful land sales.

Good long-term prospects

Likewise, the clincher for Marina Bay Sands has been the long-term prospects of the area and the growing exhibition and convention business, said its chief executive officer and president Thomas Arasi.

‘The company’s investment and commitment were based on the fact that Singapore has breadth and depth across all the major travel segments to make the integrated resort thrive. Few global gateways offer everything that Singapore can offer tourists from around the region and around the world,’ he said.

Over the years, the plan has been constantly refined – from when it first appeared as a concept plan in the 1970s, to 2000, when the first site was launched – which has since been developed into what is now One Raffles Quay.

At one point, Marina South was thrown up as a possible site for the Singapore Management University campus, but it was decided that the university should go back to where the schools traditionally were, in the Bras Basah area.

Marina South’s interim tenants have since all gone, and infrastructure works are taking place there now. That land had been sold on short-term leases of between 21 and 24 years after it was reclaimed. Those leases expired last year.

But the fervent development of Marina Bay as the new financial hub has also thrown up some concerns, among which is whether there will be an oversupply of office space, especially since the economy has been hit so badly.

The authorities do not seem worried.

Some office leasing agents have reportedly seen an increased number of leasing enquiries over the last quarter as rental rates became more competitive, and lease packages offered by landlords became more attractive, said URA.

And this could spur demand and help absorb some of the office space that is coming on stream.

Some developers have also continued to delay the completion of their projects, while a few others are considering converting existing office buildings in the CBD to residential use.

This would help regulate the supply of office space, they reason.

There has been quite a bit of international interest, said Mr Fassam, with investors asking when the next parcel will be released for sale.

But the authorities are in no hurry to open the floodgates and let buildings sprout.

After all, it has taken three decades for Marina Bay’s transformation, and it could well take another three decades to fill up the rest of the land.


14 HDB blocks in Jurong East to undergo lift upgrading


Source : Channel NewsAsia – 15 Nov 2009

Fourteen HDB blocks in Jurong East will undergo lift upgrading.

This was announced by Senior Minister of State for National Development, Grace Fu, at a community event on Sunday.

Ms Fu said blocks 103 to 116, which were built in the early 80s, will get their lifts upgraded.

She said: “For Jurong East Yuhua, this will be our second last precinct; we have one more precinct to go, we hope we are able to get it next year.”

Ms Fu had earlier joined some 1,000 residents, grassroots leaders and volunteers in the precinct in a mass cleanup of the neighbourhood as part of this year’s Clean and Green Week.

Ms Fu, who is also MP for Jurong GRC, said residents can do more to keep the estates clean.

The town council was asked to stop cleaning for one day to see the effect.

Ms Fu said: “It showed there was a lot of littering, especially high rise littering. So I think that is an area we can really focus on in terms of public education, as well as getting residents to play their part.”

The mass cleanup was the largest so far in Yuhua, taking place in seven zones involving 14 blocks.


Impact of new sites won’t be felt yet


Source : Sunday Times – 15 Nov 2009

Sites for tender will yield 2,925 units but they won’t be ready for at least 1.5 years

The Government came out about a week ago to say that there is no shortage of residential supply and thus no need for buyers to rush. That was when it announced its decision to tender out eight residential sites for sale in the first half of next year.

The eight sites are in non-city areas such as Choa Chu Kang, Simei and Tampines.

It also has a long reserve list of residential sites that are available for sale, if developers are to show interest by committing to a minimum bid the Government finds acceptable.

This potential supply comes from the twice-yearly government land sales programme and means buyers will have more choices while property owners may benefit.

HDB upgraders in particular will be glad to know that the latest sales programme – for the first half of next year – will see a slew of suburban residential sites.

Property owners who live near the eight sites can expect to see a new project in their neighbourhood in the next few years.

If the economy improves steadily, they can even look forward to a rise in their home values when the new project is released for sale.

‘Generally, when a new project is launched, it will have a bearing on the developments in the vicinity,’ said Colliers International’s research and advisory director, Ms Tay Huey Ying.

‘If a project is launched at bullish price levels, it could push up the prices of surrounding developments, though a lot can depend on project attributes.’

Ngee Ann Polytechnic lecturer Nicholas Mak said: ‘In a buoyant market, developers would launch at a higher price on a per sq ft basis than surrounding projects. In a less buoyant market, the premium would be smaller.

‘The launch price does give some support to the asking prices of individual sellers in the area.’

In January, three sites will be put up for sale, including two executive condominium (EC) sites.

The first EC site in Buangkok Drive, near The Quartz condo and Buangkok MRT station, can accommodate an estimated 520 units while the second in Yishun Avenue 11, next to the Lilydale EC, can take 385 units.

The EC scheme was launched in 1996 to help Singaporeans who could afford more than new HDB flats yet found the prices of private housing too high.

The biggest of the eight sites is at the junction of Tampines Avenue 1 and Avenue 10, next to The Tropica condo and Bedok Reservoir. It can take 605 units.

The site in Choa Chu Kang Road, suitable for 200 units, sits above the Bukit Panjang LRT Depot and Ten Mile Junction, and is near the future Bukit Panjang MRT station.

The Sembawang Road site is near Sembawang Shopping Centre and can take about 290 units.

In the west, the Boon Lay Way site for 525 units is next to the sold-out The Caspian and near Lakeside MRT station.

Property consultants also singled out the site at Simei Street 3 and the one at the junction of Upper Serangoon Road and Pheng Geck Avenue as choice ones because of their proximity to the Simei and Potong Pasir MRT stations respectively.

‘As Singapore becomes more populated, characterised by a relatively fast-paced lifestyle, accessibility and proximity to mass transit stations will be a key consideration for future home buyers,’ said CBRE Research director Leonard Tay.

On the reserve list, there are also sites near MRT stations: The Bartley Road site, which can take about 500 units, faces Bartley MRT station and the Stirling Road site, which can have 405 units, is near Queenstown MRT station.

Both sites are seen as highly attractive and thus likely to be triggered for sale next year. Even if they are not, the eight sites to be tendered out next year will yield 2,925 units, which is nearly as high as the 3,000 units put out in the se-cond half of 2007.

In addition to the reserve list sites, the Government is making available 10,550 private residential units – the largest supply since the second half of 2001.

Still, the impact of this will not be felt immediately.

It will take at least 1.5 years before a project on the eight sites can be launched, said Mr Mak.

And depending on how the market pans out, developers may choose to launch their projects later, he said.