Saturday, May 30, 2009

The Clift unit fetches 36% less just after a year

Bought for $1.65m by the seller, the 19th floor unit is auctioned for $1.047m

A TWO-BEDROOM apartment on the 19th level of The Clift, at the corner of Telok Ayer and McCallum streets, was sold at a DTZ auction this week for about $1,350 per square foot (psf) – 36 per cent lower than the $2,129 psf the seller is said to have paid for it barely a year ago.

The 99-year-leasehold unit was put up for auction by the mortgagee, understood to be Citibank.

Analysts reckon the $1.047 million the 775-sq-ft unit fetched was probably not enough to cover the loan the seller took for the property when he bought it for $1.65 million in the sub-sale market in July 2008.

At Thursday’s auction at Amara Hotel, there were initially no takers when the auctioneer called for an opening price of $1.08 million. A lower counter offer was made by a bidder and after close to 20 bids from about five parties, an Indonesian investor walked away with the property.

This was not the first time the 19th floor unit featured at an auction. It was offered in March and April this year, with price expectations of $1.1 to $1.2 million, BT understands.

However, the mortgagee bank’s reserve price could not be met then. Market watchers reckon the bank probably cut its reserve price for this week’s auction.

Since March, three other units on the 21st and 22nd levels of The Clift, which is still under construction on the former Natwest Centre site, have changed hands at between $1,111 and $1,218 psf, according to caveats information.

The 43-storey tower – with shop units at street level and apartments above – was designed by the renowned Japanese design firm Super Potato.

Two other mortgagee properties also changed hands at DTZ’s auction. A couple of adjoining first-storey shop units at Grandlink Square in Guillemard Road each fetched $300,000 or $1,546 psf of strata area. They were sold with vacant possession to a Singaporean investor who already owns units in the freehold development, BT understands.

DTZ managed to find a buyer prior to this week’s auction for another mortgagee sale property that was listed for the auction. The 5,188-sq-ft ramp-up factory unit on the second level of Northlink Building in Admiralty Street, Sembawang sold for $520,000. The property is on a site with a remaining lease of about 50 years.

Source : Business Times – 30 May 2009

S’pore home prices slide down the ladder

FROM around the top of the heap to near the bottom of the pile in just 12 months!

A year ago, Singapore was ranked as the fourth best-performing market in the world under Knight Frank’s Global House Price Index based on the first-quarter’s year-on-year price change. This week, it emerged as the third-worst in a table that listed a total of 46 markets.

The house price index for Singapore slipped 23.8 per cent in Q1 2009 over the same year-ago period. And with the index declining 16.2 per cent quarter-on-quarter in the first three months of this year, Singapore emerged as the second worst-performing market based on a quarter-on-quarter ranking, compared with its ninth position a year ago.

Knight Frank’s index for Singapore was pegged to the official Urban Redevelopment Authority’s price index of non-landed private homes in the Core Central Region.

Israel was the top performer over the 12-month period ending Q1 2009, recording price growth of 10.9 per cent, followed by the Czech Republic with a 9.9 per cent increase. The worst performers were Latvia, Dubai and Singapore with declines of 36 per cent, 32 per cent and 23.8 per cent respectively.

On a quarter-on-quarter comparison, Dubai posted the worst performance with a fall of 40 per cent, followed by Singapore.

Hong Kong, saw its Q1 ranking (based on a year-on-year comparison) slip from third spot last year to 40th position, with a price drop of 15.7 per cent. United Kingdom was ranked 42nd on an annual-change comparison (the price slide was 16.5 per cent) while the US was in 43rd position with a 16.9 per cent decrease.

India made it to the top 10 list; it was ordered fifth with a 5.1 per cent year-on-year price appreciation in Q1 2009.

The percentage changes are calculated in local currency terms and are hence not affected by fluctuations in exchange rates.

‘There is sporadic evidence of buyers snapping up relative bargains. However, of those buyers in a position to move, many are still waiting for clearer signs that markets are approaching the bottom of the cycle,’ Knight Frank said.

Fourteen of the 46 markets covered by the index had not reported Q1 data at the time of the writing of the report.

‘The latest data suggest some easing in the plight of markets. On a quarterly basis, 48 per cent of the countries from whom we received Q1 data reported a drop in prices, compared to 88 per cent in our Q4 2008 index.

‘On an annualised basis, 48 per cent of countries also showed a fall in values compared to 77 per cent in Q4. Given the high proportion of ‘absentees’ for Q1, however, it would be potentially misleading to jump to too many hasty conclusions, although over half had shown annual and/or quarterly price falls at the last time of reporting. Nonetheless, the shorter-term future direction of most underlying economies suggests that the world’s residential markets are likely to continue to suffer for some while,’ Knight Frank’s report said.

The consultancy’s director of research and consultancy in Singapore, Nicholas Mak, said that while there has been a pick-up in private home sales lately (with developers managing to inch up prices for better-selling projects), a sustained price recovery will hinge on an improvement in the jobs market. ‘If expats are not coming into Singapore, the strength of the rental housing market will be affected and that will, in turn, affect investment demand for residential properties,’ he added.

A developer said: ‘While we are seeing price stability in the mass-market segment, I think the high-end sector will not stabilise until the perception of DPS-buyers defaulting clears away’.

The government scrapped the Deferred Payment Scheme (DPS) in October 2007.

The 30 to 40 per cent slide in high-end residential prices, coupled with more cautious bank lending to property investors, could mean that some DPS-buyers may not complete payments for units bought during the 2007 peak. A surfeit of such properties making their way back to the market could depress prices. While developers could take legal action against local buyers, they may have a harder time pursuing foreign buyers, especially companies registered in the world’s tax havens.

Source : Business Times – 30 May 2009

Frasers opens residence project in Edinburgh

FRASERS Hospitality has extended its footprint in the United Kingdom with the opening of Fraser Suites Edinburgh, a serviced residence project on the city’s ‘Royal Mile’. The property is Singapore-based Frasers’ second in Scotland. The first was the 100-unit Fraser Suites Glasgow, which opened in 2007.

Fraser Suites Edinburgh comprises 75 studio and one-bedroom apartments in the 200-year-old former Edinburgh City Council building.

Frasers said the building’s historic Victorian facade was preserved, while the interior was renovated to cater to the needs of business and leisure travellers.

Standard features include iPod docking stations and broadband Internet access, an on-site gym, breakfast suite, restaurant and a complimentary city shuttle service.

Frasers said the property marks a ‘homecoming’ of sorts for the group, whose founders, Scotsmen John Fraser and David Chalmers Neave, came to Singapore in 1883 and formed Fraser & Neave. The group is now a conglomerate with businesses worldwide.

‘Edinburgh is a major centre for business and tourism and is an integral part of our growth strategy in Europe,’ said Guus Bakker, Frasers Hospitality’s chief operating officer for Europe and the Middle East. ‘Globally, we are on track to grow from our current 4,727 serviced residences to more than 9,000 units by 2011.’

With the opening of Fraser Suites Edinburgh, Frasers now operates a total of 12 properties in Europe including eight in London, one in Glasgow and two in Paris.

Frasers currently operates 31 serviced residence properties in the Far East, Australia and Europe and will open properties this year in Bahrain, Budapest, China, Dubai, Malaysia and Singapore.

Source : Business Times – 30 May 2009

Packed dorms: Owners rapped

A HOME is not a dorm, hostel or boarding house and the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) has sent enforcement notices to owners of at least 87 units in People’s Park Complex to make sure this remains the case.

The owners have two weeks to comply, or risk court action that can lead to jail and fines.

More such URA notices are expected to go out to other unit owners in the Chinatown building in the coming weeks.

Already, the 87 or so units which serve as hostels and dorm comprise 30 per cent of the flats there. So far, owners of three units have complied with the order, said a URA spokesman.

If convicted of unauthorised use, owners or landlords of the premises may be fined up to $200,000 or jailed up to 12 months or both. If the offence continues after conviction, a fine of up to $10,000 per day may be imposed.

Earlier this month, The Straits Times reported that many of the 288 residential units there appeared to have been partitioned. Other residents have complained of overcrowding, frequent lift breakdowns, noise and litter.

The URA spokesman said leasing out the flats on a short-term basis – such as daily, weekly or monthly – is an infringement of the Planning Act.

Owners might have run afoul of several regulations stipulated by agencies.

Separately, the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) has issued at least 18 notices this month to unit owners at the complex asking for unauthorised structures to be taken down and extra occupants cleared.

The SCDF’s Fire Code stipulates the number of people that can reside in a certain space. A regular 1,119 sq ft or 104 sq m apartment unit in People’s Park Complex should not have more than seven occupants.

But residents there have observed that some units were packed to the rafters with up to 20 or 30 people in each unit.

The Manpower Ministry can go after employers if their workers are living in unsuitable conditions while the National Environment Agency can act on public health issues such as mosquito breeding.

The government officers have been making their presence felt over the past weeks. Residents say the officers have been knocking on doors and taking photographs of flat interiors.

This week, when ST revisited the People’s Park Complex – now repainted bright green and yellow – many of the units still looked like they were being occupied by more people than in a typical family unit.

While some residents say there has not been much change, others have noticed slight improvements: fewer lift breakdowns, and less rubbish in the common areas. But some ’spring cleaning’ appears to be taking place, with mattresses or partition pieces left at the common lift landings.

Mr Jeff Teo, 33, has noticed that his neighbouring unit, which housed an estimated 20 foreign workers at one time, is now quieter.

But he said: ‘The tide may come back when the storm dies down.’

Source : Straits Times – 30 May 2009

Regent Garden majority owners’ appeal rejected

ONE of Singapore’s most unusual collective sale disputes, over Regent Garden, has been settled by the Court of Appeal even though the sale has been done and dusted for 12 months.

In a strange twist, a total of 23 out of 25 majority owners of the West Coast Road condo had opposed the sale even though they initially supported it.

One of the reasons: They were upset that buyer Allgreen Properties had paid six minority owners a total of $2 million in a ’side deal’ to share among themselves in return for withdrawing their objections to the $34 million sale.

Yesterday, the Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal seeking clarification on this point, saying such payments are not prohibited. ‘We acknowledge that the practice of some developers in making direct payments to minority owners to secure their consent can be potentially divisive and may even sometimes be ethically challenging,’ it said in its judgment. ‘This, nevertheless, does not mean that the law, as it now stands, prohibits such incentive payments.’

The High Court had ruled in April last year – before the project’s May sale completion – that the sale of the 31-unit Regent Garden to Allgreen must go ahead.

The majority owners also wanted to know if the minority owners are entitled to retain the extra payments without sharing the sum with them.

Allgreen issued a statement saying it was an ‘unprecedented and curious case’ of a collective sale being opposed by the majority who had initially agreed to sell.

Although the majority owners had opted for a fixed $34 million price, they were unhappy that a development charge payable by Allgreen to the authorities turned out to be much lower than expected. The majority owners then sought to renege on their agreement, after finding out about the side deal. Before the High Court, they had complained that because Allgreen had paid extra sums to the minority, the sale price to the majority owners was too low. They refused to complete the deal, until ordered to do so by the High Court.

The Court of Appeal said the sale committee sowed the seeds of its unhappy predicament when, to save $11,000, it made a deliberate decision not to accurately ascertain the development baseline of the property. ‘Since they opted to seize and keep the proverbial bird in the hand, it is only just that they cannot now be allowed to complain that the bird is not what they thought it was,’ said its judgment.

Credo Real Estate managing director Karamjit Singh said the practical lesson is that the sale committee must ensure it has all important information needed before selling a property collectively so as not to under-sell it.

The Regent Gardens case was also unusual in that it went to the Strata Titles Board, which heard the merits of the case and threw it out even though there were no objections.

Allgreen was represented by Senior Counsel Davinder Singh of Drew & Napier while the majority owners were represented by Senior Counsel Molly Lim.

Source : Straits Times – 30 May 2009

Next change at Icon Village: A food haven

THE Icon Village, a shopping mall occupying the ground level of the Icon Condominium, is undergoing renovations and a rebranding exercise, less than two years after opening its doors.

Originally billed as a mall offering stress relief, the 30,000 sq ft retail space about five minutes away from the Tanjong Pagar MRT station now wants to remodel itself as a food haven.

Its developer, Far East Organization, said this rejuvenation will allow the mall to meet greater demand from several new developments such as hotels and residential estates.

Tenants are looking forward to the revamp as business has been poor, leaving many of them floundering. They chose to set up shop at the Icon Village because of its good location. But most tenants said they have ‘yet to cover costs’ and that there are days when they do not see ‘a single customer’.

From late last year, the mall’s tenants have dwindled from 50 to the current 14.

The main reasons for the low traffic, tenants said, are the confusing layout – many shops are hidden from plain view – and the lack of publicity.

Checks with 20 people working or living near the mall show that most do not know where or what Icon Village is.

Ms Jeanine Ang, 28, a clerk, said she knew of the condominium but did not realise there was a mall in the building. Others said the shops did not appeal to them.

Tenant mix is another reason residents at the Icon, which has 646 units, have given the mall a miss.

Mr Simon Buechi, 25, a bank consultant, said: ‘The shops are not very exciting. Many are also closed on weekends when I am free to shop.’

A 40-year-old banker said he prefers shopping in town and would have appreciated a place where he could buy his groceries.

Ms Irene Tan, a realty adviser, added: ‘The mall is in a very prime location so it is a pity it isn’t popular. The tenant mix is important – people need a reason to visit.

‘They could bring in a supermarket as an anchor tenant to cater to the residents in the condominium.’

To bring in more foot traffic, Far East Organization is spending $2 million to improve the layout and ambience of Icon Village. The rebranding will have a tenant mix of 65 per cent food and beverage outlets, with the rest devoted to lifestyle and service shops.

Other than the tenant mix, renovations – which started this month and will be completed in the latter part of the year – will also make the mall brighter. Plans are to transform an existing 7m walkway into a stretch of food outlets. Promotional activities are in the pipeline.

Mr Steven Toh, owner of the Advance Shoe Repair & Locksmith Services, recently signed another three-year lease: ‘I am staying on because I am looking at the long run.

‘There are offices, flats and other estates coming up in Tanjong Pagar. With the right tenants and promotional activities, I see a good glimpse of hope.’

Source : Straits Times – 30 May 2009

Friday, May 29, 2009

Martin Place Residences near Orchard launched

Cheang Kok Kheong, chief operating officer of Frasers Centrepoint Homes, says he will be “camping out” at the Martin Place Residences showflat over the weekend tomorrow and on Sunday, the first weekend of the official launch of the high-end project.

After two weekends of private previews, which saw a total of 150 units snapped up, Frasers Centrepoint Homes officially launched its high-end condominium, Martin Place Residences on Friday, May 29.

Including the 28 units sold last year, as of last Thursday, 178 of a total of 302-units in the freehold development have been taken up. “We’ve actually increased the average price by 5% last weekend [May 23-24],” says Cheang, but adds that the developer will not be adjusting prices upward this weekend for the official launch. Even after the 5% adjustment, the selling price is still 20% lower than the $1,800 psf selling price that units were pegged at a year ago.

While having adjusted price downward by around 20%, the developer had not cut back on the development’s original specifications in terms of design, layout, finishing, kitchen and bathroom fittings. He’s noticed that in the past five to six months, some developers who had slashed prices had also cut back on the quality of their finishes and materials used, and “it’s quite a common industry practice,” he concedes.

“But we feel that if you’re planning to rent your apartment to expatriates, and if you’re a Singaporean who’s well-travelled, you would expect a certain level of finishes – good-quality timber flooring, natural marble instead of compressed marble, and kitchen fittings with top-end German brands.”

Given the location on Martin Road, which is a short driving distance to both the Central Business District and Orchard Road, the area is a sought-after residential enclave among expatriates. Apartments in the area tend to fetch good rental, says Cheang, citing that a two-bedroom apartment in the newly completed 545-unit RiverGate across the street from Martin Place Residences showflat was recently leased for $5,500 per month.

Source : The Edge – 29 May 2009

15 out of 40 units at Martin Place Residences sold

High-end private homes have seen renewed interest among buyers recently and the trend looks set to continue.

Developer Frasers Centrepoint said 15 out of 40 units launched on Friday at its Martin Place Residences have been sold.

Frasers said it has lowered prices by about 20 per cent to between S$1,350 and S$1,600 per square foot.

It said the homes sold were a mix of studios, two- to four-room units and penthouses.

Half of the buyers are Singaporeans.

The latest batch of apartments put up for sale are from the second tower of its 302-unit freehold development.

Frasers said to date, 95 per cent of the first tower has been fully sold.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 29 May 2009

Leasehold Botannia condominium project at West Coast fully sold

City Developments (CDL) and CapitaLand have fully sold their joint venture Botannia condominium project, located near West Coast Park.

The majority of the 493-unit development with a 956-year leasehold was bought by Singaporeans. Foreigners purchased about a quarter of the units.

In a statement, CDL said the strong sales is a clear indication that homeowners and investors have become more upbeat, especially in the mass to mid-market segments.

Botannia was soft-launched at an average price of S$680 per square foot and CDL said it has since achieved an average price of S$742 psf.

The development comprises two- to four-bedroom units and penthouses.

Encouraged by the good showing, CDL said it is fast tracking its plans to launch another private residential development in the West Coast vicinity, sited at the former Hong Leong Garden condominium.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 29 May 2009

Rents for industrial properties could drop by as much as 30%

The rental cost for industrial properties in Singapore could come down by as much as 30 per cent this year. Property consultants said this is due to a drop in demand as companies scale back their space as well as increased supply.

A slump in demand for Singapore’s exports has led to factories running at excess capacity and this has prompted companies to either put expansion plans on hold, or even scale down plant sizes.

Tay Huey Ying, director, Research & Advisory, Colliers International, said: “I guess it’s really a combination of both. On one hand, the global downturn has really affected the demand for exports for the regional countries and that includes Singapore.

“And with that, we have seen lots of manufacturing concerns operating at excess capacity and this has encouraged or prompted a lot of these firms to either scale back their expansion plans, or to even put their expansion plans on hold, or even scale down their manufacturing plants altogether.

“A combination of these would really have affected demand. And for the first quarter of this year, demand for industrial properties had softened by 50 over per cent as compared to the demand for last quarter of last year.

“And if we do a year-on-year comparison, demand for industrial space have really declined by around 70 per cent compared to the same period last year.”

On top of falling demand, a strong supply pipeline is compounding the situation. Colliers is expecting about 11.5 million square feet of space coming on board this year compared to about 10.6 million square feet last year.

However, a steep rental decrease is unlikely.

Ms Tay said: “I would also like to highlight that perhaps about 40 per cent of this upcoming supply is attributed to single user industrial space, which most of the time is purpose-built.

“So I think this scenario would really help to cushion rental decline for this year and then the other scenario would be that increasingly, Singapore’s industrial properties are being ‘REITed’ and a lot of these are being leased back for long periods at incremental rental contract being fixed into the contracts.

“And again, these are some of the factors that will help to cushion rental decline for this year.”

Average rents for manufacturing plants have come down by about 12.8 per cent in the past six months, compared to an increase of 6.4 per cent previously. On the other hand, rents for warehouse space have declined by about 13 per cent.

Still, while rents are trending down, some companies renewing their leases may see higher rates. This is especially so for firms who signed their current leases in 2006.

Ms Tay continued: “For a tenant or a company which has committed to a two-year lease, they would probably have committed to their rental contracts sometime in 2007.

“And for this group of tenants, there is a high likelihood that they could look at lower renewal rate when they are negotiating their lease renewal during this period. But for those companies which have committed to a three-year lease, that would mean that they have committed their lease sometime in 2006.

“That would be the period when industrial rent started to pick up. And this group of tenants may still have to contend with about 10 to 30 per cent … rental increase upon renewal. It very much depends on when the rental contract was entered into in the earlier phase and at what kind of rates it was entered into.”

PestBusters, which has an office at A-Z Building in Paya Lebar, saw rents go up by five per cent.

Thomas Fernandez, chairman & CEO, PestBusters, said: “Times are bad and they actually increased the rent by five per cent. In fact, they wanted to increase more but we had to negotiate and beg them to look at the fact that we are long-term tenants and the entire situation of the financial crisis.

The landlord Ascendas said the lease was renewed at a time when rents were still relatively positive, hence the rate. However, it said that it plans to give rebates to its tenants.

In a statement, Ascendas said: “Upon renewal of every tenancy agreement, it is Ascendas’ practice to engage each tenant in dialogue to negotiate rental rates. All the leases in AZ building were due and renewed last year when the Singapore property market was still relatively positive.

“We always ensure that our rental rates are pegged to the market and priced appropriately as other similar buildings in the same location.”

Analysts said an uptick in industrial rents will only occur in 2012 after bottoming out in 2011.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 29 May 2009

Is property becoming king again?

EVERYBODY wants to believe that the light at the end of the tunnel of the current economic crisis is now discernible. And why not? After almost two years of persistently gloomy news, it is certainly time for a change, even if most economic indicators say otherwise.

One of the places in which this optimism is reflected is the property market. Earlier this month, the Urban Redevelopment Authority released data revealing that developer sales in April hit over 1,200 transactions, following two consecutive months of exuberant sales. Indeed, the developer sales for the January-April period with 3,867 units sold now represents almost 90 per cent of all developer sales in 2008 (4,382 units). And unlike earlier months, the transactions in April were done across various market segments, which could suggest a broad base recovery.

Yet, the last time we checked, the Singapore government had revised its GDP forecast downward, unemployment had risen, and exports had fallen. And while there is persistent talk of ‘green shoots’ of recovery, even if one buys into the rhetoric, what is curious is that the property market appears to have jumped the gun. Yes, the stock market has recovered somewhat of late, but at least for the last week, property stocks have outperformed the overall market.

So is it blind optimism that is driving the property market? Some believe that these buyers are just following the herd. Property prices of new homes have begun to moderate downwards and while new homes are still by no means cheap, some argue that buyers are afraid of ‘missing the boat’. But can this really be a concern? After all, as has been well reported, there is expected to be a glut of new housing supply next year.

One reason could be that investors are buying into forecasts, now coming in thick and fast, of an economic recovery next year. Therefore they don’t want to lose out on the discounts being offered now, even at the risk of having to hold on to their new properties for a longer time in the future before the recovery really gets underway and the market turns decisively.

Another plausible reason for the surge in sales could be that fixed deposit rates have fallen to near five-year lows, inducing many to move their savings into property instead – which implies that as the deflationary environment abates, property is replacing cash as king.

Whatever the reason, the ongoing surge in property transactions certainly warrants some study. Singapore is unique in many ways, but if the property market here is an anomaly, it would be useful to know why – if only to help the market function more efficiently and help those who really need a home to get a clear picture of where property prices are headed.

Source : Business Times – 29 May 2009

Developers readying for launches as activity rises

MORE developers are preparing to launch new properties in response to a marked improvement in sentiment in Singapore’s property market, experts say.

Activity has picked up in the past two to four weeks, they observe.

Some developers are now rushing to prepare projects for launch, but they face some inevitable delays. They may lack promotional materials, for instance.

Starting today, Frasers Centrepoint Homes will be releasing more units at its 302-unit freehold Martin Place Residences in the River Valley area. It recently sold more than 100 units of the project after it cut prices. The units were released at $1,260 per sq ft (psf) to $1,700 psf, compared with $1,700 psf to $2,000 psf last year.

Chief operating officer Cheang Kok Kheong said prices ranged from $1.5 million for a two-bedder to about $2 million for a three-bedder. He said Frasers was aiming to sell the remaining units at $1,350 psf to $1,700 psf.

Other weekend launches include Balcon East in Upper East Coast Road. Tong Eng Group started sales at its 37-unit development on Thursday last week and managed to sell 28 units. Prices ranged from just below $500,000 to $1.39 million, with the one- to two-bedders costing about $850 psf, and three-bedders at $780 psf, said Savills Residential director Phylicia Ang.

Next month, new re-launches could include the 91-unit Nathan Residences in Nathan Road and Frasers’ 330-unit leasehold project near the Woodleigh MRT station. The former’s preview last September at an average of $2,000 psf met with no success.

Frasers has reconfigured the layout in the Woodleigh project, which previously had 300 units, to accommodate the more affordable one-bedders of 400 sq ft. The rest will be two-, three- and four-bedders. Prices will be ‘at the upper end of $750 psf to $780 psf’, said Mr Cheang.

There are still many projects waiting to be launched and certainly not all will be on the market soon.

‘Those developers who are ready will see this as a good window period to launch, but the really high-end projects won’t come out soon,’ said Ms Ang.

Developers will launch if they can accept today’s pricing, as the recent re-launches are easily 25 per cent to 30 per cent below the peak, said Knight Frank executive director Peter Ow.

Source : Straits Times – 29 May 2009

Long-run retail space supply sustainable

SOME 5.8 million square feet of new retail space expected to be completed from 2009 until 2013 – the bulk of it this year – will cause temporary oversupply and put downward pressure on rents but will be sustainable in the long run, property consultancy DTZ says in a research alert.

Among other factors, it cites its projection of a slight fall in retail space per capita, assuming Singapore’s population grows at the same 2.3 per cent pace it has averaged over the past 10 years.

If the population continues to grow at this rate, total retail space per capita will ease from 10.1 sq ft last year to 10 sq ft by 2013. It eased from 12 sq ft in 1999 to 10.6 sq ft in 2007.

DTZ also reckons leakage of retail spending is not significant. ‘Although there is leakage of domestic spending, this is more than made up by an increase in foreigners spending in Singapore,’ says the firm’s senior director and head of South-east Asian research Chua Chor Hoon.

For example, she notes that although the spending by Singapore visitors to Thailand and Hong Kong rose 36 per cent and 177 per cent respectively between 2003 and 2007, this was not significant at only 3 per cent of total retail sales in Singapore in 2007.

DTZ’s figures show 3.3 million sq ft of new retail space will be completed this year, comprising 1.3 million sq ft in the Orchard/Scotts area, 1.7 million sq ft in Other City areas and the rest in the suburbs.

‘Occupancy and rents of retail space in 2009 will be under downward pressure, particularly in Orchard/Scotts Road and Other City areas, where the majority of new supply in 2009 will be located,’ the firm says. ‘There will be opportunities for retailers to negotiate for lower rents or relocate and expand to better premises this year.’

Ms Chua predicts the average first-storey monthly fixed rental value of prime space in Orchard/Scotts roads will ease 7 to 13 per cent for the whole of 2009 and post ‘a minus-5 per cent to zero per cent change in 2010′. Last year, the figure initially rose, but the entire gain was given up, to end the year unchanged at $41.80 psf.

DTZ says 2009 will be a challenging year for Orchard/Scotts and Other City areas, as retailers face consumption cutbacks while landlords worry about securing tenants in view of the imminent supply and falling visitor arrivals.

However, beyond 2009, when the US and Singapore economies are expected to recover, the new supply is not excessive, according to DTZ.

It believes the addition of 1.3 million sq ft of shop space in Orchard Road this year will give new retailers the chance to gain a foothold on the local scene.

And it sees the rejuvenation of Singapore’s premier shopping belt through new malls, new retail concepts and new brands as vital to maintain the island’s status as a world-leading shopping destination.

In Other City areas, DTZ notes that besides the new retail space from projects like Marina Bay Shoppes, the completion of new offices and hotels will mean the ratio of retail space to offices and hotel rooms will fall by 2013. Major sources of shoppers for retailers in these areas are the local working population and guests in nearby hotels.

Source : Business Times – 29 May 2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Kaki Bukit CarMart site available for application

THE Urban Redevelopment Authority yesterday made available for application a 30-year leasehold industrial site next to Ruby Warehouse Complex at Kaki Bukit Road 2 on the government’s reserve list.

The property is expected to generate a fair amount of interest given its location in a mature industrial estate and low capital outlay involved, says Colliers International director (industrial) Tan Boon Leong.

The 1.07-hectare plot is currently occupied by Kaki Bukit CarMart but its operator will return the site to the state when its current Temporary Occupation Licence expires at the end of this month.

Colliers’s Mr Tan reckons that likely parties that may trigger the site’s release for tender could include contractors/develo- pers, car dealers and workshop owners, and those involved in the logistics, hardware, marine and oil and gas industries.

Being on the reserve list, the site will be launched for tender only upon successful application by a developer with an undertaking to place a minimum bid acceptable to the state.

URA noted on its website that the plot is located within the established Kaki Bukit Industrial Estate and next to the industrial estates at Kampong Ubi and Eunos Techpark.

Prominent uses in the vicinity include warehousing and automobile industries. Surrounding developments include Gordon Warehouse, Borneo Motor and Kah Motor.

Mr Tan reckons that the site could be released for tender if interested parties undertake to bid at least $40 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr), although the actual tender for the property could see top bids of $50-70 psf ppr.

Even at the higher end of that range ($70 psf ppr), the investment in the site – which has a 1.0 plot ratio (or ratio of maximum potential GFA to land area) – will amount to around $8 million, making the site affordable to a bigger pool of potential investors.

The plot is zoned for Business 2 use, suitable for a range of uses such as clean/light industry, general industry and warehousing.

Two years ago, when the industrial property market was buoyant, a site along Kaki Bukit Road 3, a 30-year leasehold plot with Business 1 zoning, fetched $71.86 psf ppr.

Separately, the Singapore Land Authority yesterday announced the successful auction of a two-hectare site at 20 Eunos Road 4 for use as a heavy vehicle park. The successful bidder is Lim Chai Kiui, the 62-year-old chairman of Kim Soon Lee group, which currently operates the existing heavy vehicle park on the site.

Based on his winning bid at yesterday’s auction, he will pay SLA a monthly sum of $63,000 – which works out to about 29 cents per square foot of site area. The plot was offered for tenancy on a three-year term with an option to renew for a further two years.

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

Consider top-up rule when selling below valuation sale rule

OWNERS of Housing Board flats, already hit by a softening market, may now have to stump up cash if they are selling their properties below valuation.

This is the result of a longstanding rule by the Central Provident Fund Board which property agents say was enforced loosely until recently.

Under this rule, a property owner who had used his CPF funds to pay for his property is required to refund the principal withdrawn and interest accrued into his CPF account after settling any outstanding debt. If there is a shortfall, he needs to make good on that amount if he is ‘unable to provide good reasons for selling his flat at a price below the fair market value’.

This clause was not an issue when the market was booming as recently as a year ago, but could hurt transactions now that property prices are sliding and more flats are being sold below valuation.

Overall resale prices dropped 0.8 per cent from January to March this year, after climbing 14.5 per cent over the whole of last year. Meanwhile, the median cash over valuation amount – an indication of how coveted a particular property is – was just $4,000 from January to March, less than a third of the $15,000 registered in the previous quarter.

Property owners selling their flats below valuation say they are being advised by Housing Board staff that they may have to top up any shortfall in their CPF refunds – or get the CPF Board to accept their reasons for pricing the flat below valuation – before the transaction can go through.

The situation is making people such as civil servant S. Salim fret. The 44-year-old father of one signed an agreement early this year to sell his Jurong West maisonette for $10,000 below its valuation of $358,000.

‘I don’t have the money (for the top-up). But if I don’t go through with the sale, who knows, the buyer may sue me for breach of contract.’

He has written in to the CPF Board listing the reasons for his flat’s price – like the fact that it is on the second storey and his kitchen does not get much sunlight – and is still waiting for a reply.

The CPF Board, when asked how many people have been asked to make a top-up over the years, would only say: ‘Of those who sold their property over the last 12 months, fewer than 10 members had to top up the difference in cash to make up the full required CPF refund.’

This figure, however, does not include home owners who may have altered the selling price of their flat to match valuations in order to avoid hassle.

The CPF Board said: ‘These members understood the Board’s rationale for this requirement, which is to preserve their retirement savings. They have since made the necessary arrangements to put back the amounts into their own CPF accounts for their retirement needs.’

Last year, 28,419 flats changed hands, with the majority paying for them with CPF savings.

Mr Eric Cheng, executive director of HSR Property Group, reckoned that the CPF Board was tightening up on policing transactions after having learned their lessons from before.

‘Perhaps they see the trend of cashback coming back, and they could be trying to pre-empt it,’ he said.

‘Cashback’ practices were rampant about five years ago. Under this illegal arrangement, buyers and sellers collude to inflate the price of a flat so that the buyer can get a bigger home loan than is allowed.

As home loans are usually paid through CPF savings, this allows a buyer to prematurely ‘withdraw’ money from his retirement savings account before reaching age 55.

Mr Cheng said cashback practices in this climate would differ slightly: A buyer and seller could collude to understate the price of a flat – with the difference paid to the seller in cash – so that the seller need not refund the full amount to his CPF account.

Despite the concerns over fraud, the chief executive of property agency PropNex, Mr Mohamed Ismail, feels that the CPF Board should waive the rule altogether for flats which are sold not less than 10 per cent below valuation.

He reasoned: ‘There is always a lag time for valuation to catch up with the actual price of flats. Having the buffer would mean that people need not be so anxious waiting for approval.’

Meanwhile, the director of Dennis Wee Properties, Mr Chris Koh, advised sellers who are selling their flat below valuation to write to the CPF Board before signing on the dotted line. Or else, ‘they may be caught in a situation whereby not only are they not making from the sale of their flat, but they have to further cough up cash’, he warned.


A PROPERTY owner who had used his CPF to pay for his property is required to refund the principal withdrawn and interest accrued into his CPF account after settling any outstanding debt.

If there is a shortfall, he needs to make good on the amount if he is unable to provide good reasons for selling his flat at a price below the fair market value.

Source : Straits Times – 28 May 2009

Circle Line opens with 5 stations

THE Circle Line was launched yesterday by Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean, at the Bishan station.

However, only five of the 29 stations – namely Bartley, Serangoon, Lorong Chuan, Bishan and Marymount – will be operational.

Estimated daily ridership will be about 55,000 and will rise to 500,000 when the remaining 24 stations open.

The Land and Transport Authority (LTA) declined to give any dates for the opening of the remaining stations except that ‘the rest of the Circle Line will open progressively from next year onwards’.

Currently, tunnelling work is about 98 per cent complete and will be fully completed by September this year. Transport Minister Raymond Lim also reassured the media that the ongoing work is ‘on track’.

With just five stations in operation, Saw Phaik Hwa, president and CEO of SMRT Corp, does not expect the Circle Line to be profit-generating yet. However, she said that the main focus would be to promote the line and familiarise the public with the line.

Ms Saw also thinks that it is inevitable that ridership on all other lines will be affected by the opening of the Circle Line, which is expected to shorten travelling time between several stations on the current lines. As a result, Ms Saw predicts that average fare per journey should fall.

However, she also believes that the Circle Line will attract new commuters from areas that were previously not served by any train lines – namely the catchment areas.

When asked if the company has plans to add retail space to the Circle Line stations, Ms Saw told BT that most of the Circle Line stations may not be large enough to accommodate retailers.

She did, however, single out the Buona Vista station – which is not yet operational – and stations around the Bugis and Suntec areas as possible sites for retail.

Mr Teo, who is also Defence Minister, said: ‘From now until 2020, the government will spend more than $40 billion to double the length of the rail network. There will be new lines or sections of new lines opening every other year.’

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

Distressed properties may flood markets

But Asia is in better shape than mature markets, says GIC Real Estate chief

Distressed property assets may emerge in developed markets in the next two years or so, GIC Real Estate’s president Seek Ngee Huat said yesterday.

‘Refinancing difficulties will force many property owners to sell their assets into an already weakened market,’ he said at the first public seminar organised by the National University of Singapore’s Institute of Real Estate Studies.

According to Dr Seek, not many distressed sales have surfaced in the troubled property markets of the US and UK yet. Nevertheless, a ‘flood’ may come if credit markets remain tight as large volumes of loans mature.

Professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania Joseph Gyourko shared some worrying numbers on this at the seminar. He cited estimates from Goldman Sachs, which found that US$1.2 trillion of commercial property debt will come due in the US from 2009 to 2011.

With the near shutdown of the commercial mortgage-backed securities market, some property owners will not be able to obtain refinancing, he said.

In fact, distressed property assets in the US have just started to appear and will increase in number over the next few years, Prof Gyourko told reporters on the sidelines of the seminar. These assets can come from any property segment depending on owners’ ability to roll over debt.

There will be a ‘historic investment opportunity not seen in the US since the early 1990s’ and investors are setting up funds for this, he said.

GIC Real Estate’s Dr Seek said that most property markets in developing Asia are in better shape because they relied less on leverage. While mature markets are more likely to offer opportunistic acquisition deals, emerging Asia seems to be attracting strategic long-term acquisitions, he said.

There are also investment opportunities in undervalued real estate investment trusts (Reits), Dr Seek said.

The downturn has affected Reits globally, which are now separated into ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ – the ‘haves’ are those with sound asset bases, manageable debt levels and the ability to raise new funds, he said.

‘Further consolidation of the Reit market is inevitable,’ he added. The ‘haves’ will survive this downturn and become stronger, while the ‘have-nots’ will languish and some may eventually fail or be absorbed.

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

US Home resales gain 2.9% in April

Home resales in the United States gained in April as foreclosure auctions and improved affordability spurred bargain hunters.

Purchases increased 2.9 per cent to an annual rate of 4.68 million, close to forecasts, from 4.55 million in March, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) said yesterday in Washington. The median price slumped 15 per cent from a year earlier, the second-biggest drop on record, and distressed properties accounted for 45 per cent of all sales.

Record-low mortgage rates, tax credits and falling prices may keep boosting demand and trim the glut of unsold homes. In turn, a pick-up in sales will help stem the slump in property values, which is key to shoring up household finances and construction as the economy begins to emerge from the recession.

‘An increase in affordability has seemingly enticed potential homebuyers,’ Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barclays Capital Inc in New York, said before the report. ‘We believe home sales have stabilised.’

Economists forecast resales would rise 2 per cent to a 4.66 million annual rate from a previously reported 4.57 million pace in March, according to the median of 72 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from rates of 4.47 million to 4.8 million. Sales were down 3.5 per cent compared with a year earlier.

The number of houses on the market climbed 8.8 per cent to 3.97 million in April, reflecting the gains usually associated with this time of the year, NAR said. At the current sales pace, it would take 10.2 months to sell those homes, up from 9.6 months in March.

Resales of single-family homes increased 2.5 per cent to an annual rate of 4.18 million. Sales of condos and co-ops rose 6.4 per cent to a 500,000 rate.

The gain last month was led by a 12 per cent jump in the Northeast and a 3.5 per cent gain in the West. Purchases also climbed in the South and fell in the Midwest.

Foreclosure filings in the US rose to a record in April for the second consecutive month, Realtytrac Inc, a seller of foreclosure data, said on May 13, as the jobless rate climbed to its highest in more than a quarter century. Foreclosure filings jumped 32 per cent from a year earlier, the group added.

The share of distressed sales last month was down from March, reflecting normal volatility, NAR said. First-time buyers accounted for about 40 per cent of April sales, also down from March, the group noted.

Still, ‘it’s a non-regular market in terms of so much distressed sales activity’, Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the agents group, said in a press briefing. The market is led by gains in sales of lower-priced properties, while there is ‘very little’ activity at higher price points, Mr Yun said.

Multiple bids are now common on foreclosure sales, while properties selling for US$750,000 or more are taking 40 months to sell on a median basis, Mr Yun said. Higher mortgage rates for jumbo loans are one reason for the disparity, he added.

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

More Green Marks for Ascendas

Its commitment starts at design stage, runs to maintenance and operations

INDUSTRIAL developer Ascendas Land has been incorporating environmentally friendly features in its projects since 2005, says CEO Tan Yew Chin.

It is no wonder then that seven of those projects have achieved the Green Mark recognition, including four this year.

Two of the four – Standard Chartered @ Changi and Citi, both at Changi Business Park – received the platinum award. The other two – DBS Asia Hub at Changi Business Park and Icon@IBP at the International Business Park – received gold and gold plus awards respectively.

Ascendas Land, which has 1,800-plus customers in more than 30 cities in 10 countries, is also proud that Icon@IBP was commended for its unique architecture and eco-friendliness at the inaugural CityScape Asia Real Estate Awards 2007.

Ascendas develops ‘green’ buildings because it wants to minimise the impact that its business has on the environment.

‘We recognise that this is an area in which we can re-imagine and innovate,’ says Mr Tan.

The company’s commitment to ensuring that its projects are energy-efficient and eco-friendly starts at the design stage and runs right through to building maintenance and operations.

These initiatives include integrating and centralising chiller plants and improving heating, ventilating and air-conditioning systems, as well as regular energy audits to check that everything is running at optimal efficiency.

Ascendas’s own headquarters at The Galen, Singapore Science Park, was awarded eco-office certification this year by the Singapore Environmental Council, recognising its overall environmental performance including waste reduction and water conservation practices, among other things.

Hoping to build on its eco-friendly culture, Ascendas launched a month-long Green Movement campaign to promote good environmental practices among tenants and employees.

Green Month will be extended to the developer’s business parks and buildings in China and India this year.

Ascendas does not think that going green is a burden. On the contrary, it reckons that doing so makes business sense.

‘Demand for green architecture and development is growing, says Mr Tan. ‘Many companies – in particular, multinationals – have corporate requirements to set up shop only in green buildings.

‘Besides reducing energy consumption, environmental and energy-saving features also enable our customers to conduct business in a healthier indoor environment. It makes business sense because it brings long-term returns – for us and our clients.’

Beyond dollars and cents, Ascendas sees eco-friendly practices as part of its corporate social responsibility.

‘We believe in good corporate citizenship, using our core competencies to help improve the quality of life in communities we serve, in an economically, socially and environmentally responsible manner,’ says Mr Tan.

Ascendas feels ‘honoured and excited to have received awards’ and will continue to strive for higher benchmarks so ‘customers enjoy a delightful experience’, he says.

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

More builders going green

BCA’s 2009 awards tally jumps to 151 and its Green Mark scheme draws more interest

INTEREST in green building is growing in Singapore. The Building and Construction Authority (BCA) gave out a whopping 151 awards this year – up from 97 last year – reflecting the industry’s growing commitment towards building a safe, high-quality, sustainable and friendly built environment.

In particular, BCA’s Green Mark certification scheme, which was launched in 2005, attracted more interest. Some 103 buildings were certified ‘green’ this year, up from 69 last year.

And following keen interest from both public and private sectors in ‘greening’ their properties, BCA this year expanded the Green Mark scheme to offer certifications in three more categories: infrastructure, office interior, and landed houses. Previously, the Green Mark scheme was only offered to buildings.

The Marina Barrage won a Green Mark Platinum award under the infrastructure category. The development, which spans the mouth of the Marina Channel to create Singapore’s 15th reservoir and the first in the city, was praised as a showcase of environmental and water sustainability.

Four office tenants were awarded the Green Mark for Office Interior while two landed homes were given the BCA Green Mark for Landed Houses award.

Analysts said there has been a spike in the number of projects with Green Mark certification, as demand from corporations is motivating developers and construction companies to build green buildings.

‘Most multinational corporations have some level of commitment to the environment, whether as a result of mandatory reporting in their home country or through voluntary involvement in corporate social responsibility indices,’ said Paul Baxter, Colliers International’s director for corporate services in Asia-Pacific.

For these organisations, choosing a Green Mark-certified building helps them achieve their corporate sustainability objectives, he said.

Tenants are also showing an increased willingness to pay more for green space. A survey done by CoreNet Global and Jones Lang LaSalle late last year showed that 60 per cent of Asia-Pacific companies are willing to pay a premium rent to occupy sustainable space – despite the tighter economic environment.

The main obstacle to building green buildings – the higher cost for developers – still remains. However, the cost premium to build a green building has shrunk from as much as 10 per cent to around 4 per cent as construction companies and developers become more comfortable with sustainable design, products and technology, said Colliers’ Mr Baxter. Also, maintaining the property once it is built is cheaper, and tenants can reap cost savings of as much as 15-30 per cent as compared to buildings with conventional designs.

Other than the Green Mark scheme, companies last night also received awards under five other categories – including two categories introduced this year.

Under the pre-existing categories, eight projects won the Construction Excellence Award – including the St Regis Hotel and residential developments Icon, Citylights and The Tresor. Another eight projects picked up the Design and Engineering Safety Excellence Award. Developments lauded in this category include The Sail @ Marina Bay and Parc Emily.

Ten projects, including Anchorvale Community Club and Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre, and VivoCity, won the Universal Design Award.

Two new award categories were introduced this year as the building industry becomes more green.

The inaugural Green and Gracious Builder Award was developed to recognise progressive builders who take the effort to address environmental and public concerns arising from construction works.

Some 14 construction companies – including familiar industry names such as Poh Lian Construction, Tiong Seng Contractors, Woh Hup, Tiong Aik Construction, Lum Chang Building Contractors and Lian Beng Construction – won the award this year.

The other new award, the Built Environment Leadership Award, was launched to recognise outstanding industry firms such as developers, builders, and architectural, structural, and mechanical and electrical consultants that have demonstrated excellence and leadership.

The Platinum award in this category was given to City Developments, and seven Gold Class awards were given out to other outstanding firms such as CapitaLand, RSP Architects Planners & Engineers, Surbana International Consultants, Woh Hup and Tiong Seng Contractors.

Looking ahead, interest in green building is likely to remain strong, analysts said.

CB Richard Ellis, for example, has embarked on a comprehensive study to evaluate the wide range of benefits that sustainability has for commercial real estate holdings. More such studies can be expected as developers and contractors look to ‘green’ more upcoming projects.

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

Much uncertainty’ in real estate

GIC Real Estate president Seek Ngee Huat believes the global property sector still faces much uncertainty and that more distressed assets in the developed world are likely to emerge in the next two years.

Real estate values in developed markets have been written down rapidly due to falling rents and rising capitalisation rates.

Further declines are expected, particularly as investors who face refinancing difficulties are forced to sell their properties, Dr Seek told an audience at the National University of Singapore’s Institute of Real Estate Studies public seminar at InterContinental hotel yesterday.

Professor Joseph Gyourko of The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, said: ‘There’s a lot of debt coming due across all sectors in the United States.’

He said housing prices should stabilise in the bubble markets of the US sunbelt region such as Arizona but sharp price downturns in key coastal markets including New York City can be expected this year.

‘Deleveraging has begun in earnest in the West and we are yet to see the full impact of that on commercial real estate,’ he said. ‘The next five years are looking even more challenging than what we have just gone through in the debt market.’

A number of over-leveraged markets have yet to bear the brunt of maturing debt that will occur in the next one to two years, said Dr Seek. Distressed private equity has yet to surface, he added.

Most of developing Asia has been hit by contracting demand but fortunately, as it is not as overly leveraged as the US, it will probably not suffer massive writedowns and depressed values, he said.

There are positive signs of financial markets stabilising but it is too early to tell if the global economy is out of the woods yet. ‘Until we see a sustainable economic recovery… (only then) will growth and rents rise again,’ said Dr Seek.

‘Opportunities abound, more immediately in undervalued Reits and distressed debt, and perhaps in the next year or two, in undervalued or distressed assets particularly in the developed world,’ he said.

Reits, or real estate investment trusts, without a sound asset base and manageable debt levels will continue to languish, and eventually some will fall or be absorbed. ‘I certainly do not want to leave you with the impression that real estate, even in developing Asia, is already on a growth path. There are still a great deal of uncertainty,’ said Dr Seek.

Source : Straits Times – 28 May 2009

STC offers short-term office leases

Six-month lease offer at 18 Cross St part of move to attract clients to China Sq Central

THE Straits Trading Company (STC) is offering short-term leases at 18 Cross Street for companies in search of transitional office space.

Tenants can sign up for leases of at least six months at the 15-storey Grade A office tower, which is part of China Square Central, and asking rents range from $8 to $10 psf.

Some 50,000 square feet of space spread across the 7th to 10th floors are available for this arrangement.

According to STC executive vice-president Eric Teng, short-term leases will be useful for companies which are waiting for office rents to fall further before committing to new leases.

There are also situations where firms need a bit more time before they can move out, but their landlords are not keen to give short-term lease extensions, he said.

Companies guarding against the possible spread of the H1N1 virus can also consider moving some work teams to 18 Cross Street for the time being, he added.

STC hopes that the experience of working at China Square Central may attract some tenants to stay on longer. This is a way to ‘encourage ’sampling’ of our product’, said Mr Teng.

STC said that it can help tenants by footing some refitting or renovation costs first. Tenants will then repay the company through higher monthly rentals.

Knight Frank director of business space (office) Agnes Tay felt that STC’s move to attract tenants is creative.

If STC aims to entice them to stay, it can consider offering attractive renewal packages after their short-term leases end, she added.

Around 75 per cent of office space at 18 Cross Street is currently occupied, STC said.

The company previously owned 18, 20 and 22 Cross Street but completed a sale and leaseback deal with Allco Commercial Reit (now known as Frasers Commercial Trust) in 2006.

STC now has a master lease on these properties which ends in 2012.

Source : Business Times – 28 May 2009

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Ascott opens latest property in northern China

CapitaLand’s wholly-owned service residence business unit, Ascott, has opened its newest property in northern China.

The property – called Somerset YouYi, Tianjin – is located in the heart of the downtown Hexi commercial district.

The serviced apartment in Tianjin is the fifth property that Ascott has opened this year.

Another eight will follow for the rest of this year, including three in China.

Ascott said the opening of the latest property strengthens its leadership position as the largest international serviced residence operator in China.

Earlier this month, Ascott also secured a contract to manage a serviced residence property in Shanghai.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 27 May 2009

Woodlands industrial plot up for auction

THE industrial property market may be weak but the Urban Redevelopment Authority has received a successful application for the release of a 2.5-hectare plot at Woodlands Industrial Park E5.

The minimum $12.5 million that the successful applicant has undertaken to bid at tender for the 60-year leasehold plot works out to $18.57 per square foot of potential gross floor area (GFA).

The plot has a maximum 2.5 plot ratio, which means it can be built up to a GFA of 673,077 square feet. The maximum building height is 10 storeys.

The site is zoned for Business 2 development, suitable for a range of uses such as clean/light industry, general industry and warehousing.

Colliers International director (industrial) Tan Boon Leong reckons that the plot is likely to draw a handful of bidders, with the top bids at around $20-23 psf per plot ratio (psf ppr).

Developers that are also involved in the construction business are best placed to bid for the site as they have better control of construction costs, he reckons.

Mr Tan estimates that construction costs to build an industrial project on the site could be around $100 psf of GFA – about five times the minimum land bid.

‘The more space the developer builds, the bigger his outlay will be relative to his investment in the land. Because of the poor economic outlook translating to weaker demand for industrial space, and construction costs being so high in relation to land cost, it may not make sense to fully maximise the plot ratio.’

The site is next to an earlier plot sold at a state tender that closed in July last year (before Lehman’s collapse) to Soilbuild Group Holdings for $30.10 psf ppr.

Soilbuild is expected to launch for sale later this year a flatted factory and terrace factory project on the plot.

An industrial property market watcher, observing SMEs’ penchant for landed factories, quipped: ‘I guess that just like our towkays like to live in their own landed homes instead of condos, they also fancy owning their own landed factory with a carpark lot in front.’

Flatted factories in the Woodlands area are said to be fetching a median price of about $180-190 psf of net saleable area (NSA), while terrace factories are worth about $170-190 psf of NSA.

About 11.5 million sq ft of net new industrial space is expected to be completed this year, or 8.5 per cent higher than last year’s net new supply of 10.6 million sq ft.

Given the easing in demand, the higher supply will put downward pressure on rents.

‘However, this downward pressure on rentals will be cushioned by the fact that about 40 per cent of 2009’s new supply is of the single-user type, of which most is built-to-suit and hence already committed,’ said Colliers director for research and advisory Tay Huey Ying.

The average gross monthly rental value for ground-floor prime factory space eased 12.2 per cent quarter-on-quarter to $2.16 psf in Q1 2009, while the average ground-floor prime warehouse rent slid 10.2 per cent over the same period to $2.20 psf a month.

The average monthly rental for high-specification industrial space dipped a smaller 5.7 per cent to $3.82 psf.

Source : Business Times – 27 May 2009

Lawyer missing with $68k from property sale

TWO men meet discreetly in a dark carpark of an obscure building, and money changes hands. One man passes the other $20,000, promising that the rest of the $88,000 will be handed over later. The man disappears, and the $68,000 is never handed over.

This happened at the carpark of Kim Seng Plaza one Friday night in August 2007. The missing man: lawyer David Khong, 42, who met his client, Mr Brian Loo, to confess that he had swiped the latter’s $88,000 deposit. He even gave Mr Loo a note, acknowledging that he had committed a crime by taking the money. A day after the meeting, though, Mr Khong had already skipped town.

On Monday, a Disciplinary Tribunal appointed by the Chief Justice published its report recommending that Mr Khong be tried by a Court of Three Judges for professional misconduct.

The tribunal, the first set up since the laws were changed late last year to reduce the composition of the tribunal from four to two members, was made up of former judicial commissioner Goh Joon Seng and lawyer Harish Kumar. Mr S. Wijaya prosecuted the case for the Law Society.

The tribunal found that the $88,000 was a 4 per cent deposit paid by a seller for Mr Loo’s $2.2 million apartment in Kim Seng Walk. When the lawyer received the cheque in June 2007, he placed it in the office account of his own firm, David Khong & Associates. This was against the rules for how lawyers handle clients’ money as the cheque should have been deposited in the client’s account instead.

The following month, Mr Khong wound up his firm and joined law firm Sim & Wong. But he did not transfer the $88,000 into either the client’s account or Sim & Wong’s office account.

The shortfall came to light in August 2007 when Mr Loo complained to the firm about the missing funds at the time the property sale was completed.

It emerged that Mr Khong was riddled with debts amounting to more than $200,000 involving credit card debt, bank overdrafts and loans from friends. His long-time financial difficulties arose from gambling and excessive spending, and the $68,000 was meant to pay off his creditors.

Mr Khong subsequently sent an e-mail message from an unknown source to his firm apologising for his actions. A check with court records showed that he managed to stave off a Citibank bankruptcy petition against him in March 2007 for a $27,000 debt he owed the bank. But five months later, he was made bankrupt for not repaying a $17,000 United Overseas Bank loan.

Hong Kong-based Mr Loo, 47, said it was a ‘very big shock’ to learn that Mr Khong had run away. ‘As a lawyer, it is a small amount for him and it is not worth it as he has lost a career, family and friends. I did not expect him to run away at all.’

Contacted by The Straits Times yesterday, Mr Loo, who is a senior financial markets executive, said he had known Mr Khong for more than a year at that time and was an occasional mahjong-playing partner. He added he was ‘disappointed and frustrated’ that till today, he has not received any compensation for the $68,000 lost from any quarter. He said he had written to the Law Society a fortnight ago to seek a claim.

The Law Society manages a compensation fund which it may use to help defray losses incurred by a client arising from a lawyer or his staff’s dishonesty. For the financial year 2007/2008, the Society paid out some $631,000 from this fund, which all lawyers contribute to annually.

Source : Straits Times – 27 May 2009

Reserve-list industrial site in Kaki Bukit up for application

Urban Redevelopment Authority has made available for application a 30-year leasehold industrial site at Kaki Bukit Road 2 through the reserve list.

The site has a land area of 1.07 hectares and a plot ratio of 1.0. It is zoned for Business 2 use. Reserve list sites are launched for tender only upon successful application by a developer with an undertaking of a minimum bid acceptable to the state.

Source : Business Times – 27 May 2009

US housing market seen hitting bottom soon

But weak rebound likely, with housing starts near WW2 low

The slump in the US housing market that caused the median value of homes to decline 24 per cent since 2006 may bottom next month without any prospect of a rebound for another year, according to estimates from chief economists at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Mortgage Bankers Association and national realtors and homebuilder groups.

Existing home sales probably won’t reach pre-boom levels until the third quarter of 2010 and housing starts won’t surpass one million until 2011, a barrier last broken six decades ago, the economists said.

‘There are very few V-shaped recoveries in the history of real estate, and this one is likely to be even slower because of the size of the bubble,’ said Robert Shiller, the Yale University professor who, with economist Karl Case, created home price indexes in the 1980s now used by Standard & Poor’s.

The rebound will be so anaemic that 2009 building starts will total about 496,000 homes, the lowest since the end of World War II in 1945, according to the economists’ forecasts.

Foreclosures on pay option adjustable-rate mortgages and a backlog of bank-owned properties will slow any revival and keep housing from playing its traditional role of boosting economic recovery.

Residential construction and home sales led the way out of the previous seven recessions, with housing starts improving an average seven months and resales gaining strength about four months before the economy picked up.

The world’s largest economy probably will grow 1.9 per cent next year, according to the average estimate of 56 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. After each of the last seven contractions, it expanded more than 3 per cent on average in the first year of recovery.

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas president Richard Fisher said earlier this month that the US is on the verge of rebounding with ‘healthy signs – the stirrings of what I call green shoots.’ So did former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, who cited ’seeds of a bottoming’ in housing during a May 12 speech at a National Association of Realtors conference in Washington.

‘If you are looking at prices relative to income and rents, you could argue that we are at the bottom, and I’m cautiously optimistic that we may be,’ said Thomas Lawler, a former Fannie Mae economist in Leesburg, Virginia. ‘It’s possible, however, that we could have a second wave of foreclosures and the very small amount of support the economy might have gotten will turn into the reverse.’

The recession started after US banks and Wall Street firms securitised mortgage loans made to the riskiest borrowers to earn fees only to see homeowners default, prices fall and the value of the bonds dwindle.

Homeowners like Craig Mitchell of Boise, Idaho, said they’re paying the price for Wall Street’s greed. Mr Mitchell, 66, said his video-editing business has dwindled in the recession. He said he’s now being forced to sell his truck to make his mortgage payment while he seeks a buyer for the three-bedroom home he owns in a state with the fifth-highest foreclosure rate in the US.

The house is priced at US$289,000, about US$140,000 less than what it would have fetched three years ago.

Mr Mitchell may be waiting a long time for a buyer as the housing market tries to recover from the worst slump since the Great Depression.

While new-home sales traditionally lead all other indicators in a recovery, it may not be the case this time because the drop has been unlike any other since the 1930s, Mr Lawler said.

‘History suggests that new-home sales bottom long before unemployment peaks, and perception of the economy starts to improve long before we see actual economic improvement,’ Mr Lawler said. ‘This time around we don’t know if that will hold true.’

Prices in California fell for six years during the last major housing slump in the 1990s, and didn’t return to their 1991 peak until 2006, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

About US$40 billion of mortgages at US banks have payments 90 days or more overdue, more than triple the US$11.5 billion of homes the banks already hold, according to data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp in Washington. Another US$78.8 billion are 30 to 89 days overdue, the FDIC said.

Source : Business Times – 27 May 2009

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

MAS consults on proposal to make AGMS mandatory for REITS

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has released a consultation paper on a proposal to require real estate investment trusts (REITs) to hold annual general meetings (AGMs).

The proposal will affect all REITS which are regulated as Collective Investment Schemes in Singapore.

Potential changes include requiring REITS to hold AGMs every calendar year, with an interval not exceeding 15 months from the last AGM, and within four months of the end of their financial year.

The proposal will also require REIT managers to seek mandates from unit-holders for equity raising activities.

If approved, the proposal will take effect on 1 January, 2010.

The Singapore central bank said the aim is to enhance corporate governance and improve communication between REIT managers and stakeholders.

Interested parties have until June 26 to provide their input.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 26 May 2009

Developers dangle rent guarantees

Some developers here are turning to rental guarantees to lure buyers in the current down-market.

Under such schemes – which are offered only for certain units within selected projects – developers help buyers secure tenants, and also ensure that the owner gets a minimum pre-determined yield.

Far East Organization, for example, offers rental guarantees for selected units in selected projects such as Orchard Scotts, Vida, River Place, Tanglin View and Icon.

‘Through our marketing efforts over the years, we found that investors do not have the time to lease out or manage the tenancy of their apartments that they have bought from us,’ said Chia Boon Kuah, chief operating officer for property sales at Far East Organization.

‘Therefore, in 2006, we rolled out the rental guarantee scheme to assist our investment buyers in leasing out their properties. With our own in-house leasing and estate management teams, we are able to provide a seamless one-stop service to our buyers.’

For Vida, which is located in Cairnhill Rise, Far East is now offering a guaranteed rental yield of 5 per cent a year. This, according to Far East, can potentially work out to a return on invested equity of about 10-13 per cent a year.

‘Vida is a superior investment as we are offering a yield or return on invested equity of around 10-13 per cent per annum,’ said Far East in a recent letter to potential buyers.

Several other developers are offering schemes along the same vein.

At Belle Vue Residences, Wing Tai Holdings is offering a guaranteed return of 20 per cent on the downpayment a buyer makes if he picks up a unit using the deferred payment scheme. (DPS). Under the scheme, the buyer will have to pay 20 per cent of the property’s price as the downpayment. For a property worth $4 million, for example, this works out to $800,000.

But under Wing Tai’s scheme, he will get some of that money back.

Buyers who use the DPS to buy units in Belle Vue will get a guaranteed income of 10 per cent a year for two years on their downpayments. The guarantee will kick in once Belle Vue receives its temporary occupation permit (TOP) at the end of 2010. Using the same example as earlier, the buyer will get some $160,000 two years after TOP.

Market watchers said yield guarantee schemes are generally well-received in a down-market.

Investors, for example, snapped up units at high-end residential development Gallop Gables after The Straits Trading Company offered a two-year guaranteed rental yield of 7 per cent on 10 units there in April. All 10 units at the freehold Farrer Road estate sold in three days.

Elsewhere, at its preview for The Mezzo, Soilbuild Group Holdings offered a 6 per cent annual rental guarantee for two years, apart from the interest absorption scheme. The rental guarantee kicks in right after the TOP date. Soilbuild said recently that the launch of the first phase of The Mezzo was ‘met with an encouraging response’.

Market sources told BT that at least a few more new upcoming projects will offer variations of such schemes. Developers have historically offered such schemes to entice buyers when the property market is weak.

Hong Leong Group’s 71-unit luxury development Cuscaden Residence had such a scheme when it was launched in 2004 shortly after the Sars scare. Wing Tai Holdings also offered something similar for Duchess Crest in Bukit Timah in 1998, during the Asian financial crisis.

However, yield guarantees are a popular option for developers, said Joseph Tan, CB Richard Ellis’ executive director for residential. This is because such schemes force developers to manage units once they have been sold.

A check with Singapore’s three largest listed developers – CapitaLand, City Developments and Keppel Land – showed that none of them are currently offering any kind of rental guarantee schemes.

Units with yield guarantees could also come at a higher price, said Peter Ow, executive director for residential at Knight Frank. For example, developers who offer the interest absorption scheme at their properties usually charge a price premium of 2-3 per cent for units sold under the scheme, Mr Ow pointed out. This is because the developers have to absorb the interest costs that would otherwise have been borne by the buyers. The same principle applies for units offering yield guarantees, he said.

Source : Business Times – 26 May 2009

Firm demand boosts sales of private homes

DEVELOPERS continued to report encouraging private home sales last week, and some have upped prices on firmer demand.

BelleRive on Keng Chin Road and Martin Place Residences on Kim Yam Road are among the projects where prices have been raised. BelleRive’s average price is now 13 per cent higher than when it was previewed in mid-April.

Frasers Centrepoint sold 60 more units last week at Martin Place Residences; new units were released over the weekend at prices that were about 5-7 per cent higher.

Chia Boon Kuah, Far East Organization chief operating officer, property sales, told BT that ‘in recent weeks, we’re seeing growing broad-based demand for our products across our portfolio in every price bracket, from upgrader market to the upper-middle segments to high-end luxury projects’.

Last week, the property giant sold more than 40 units, up from the 30 a week earlier. Far East’s home sales for the May 18-24 week include two units at Vida on Peck Hay Road which fetched an average price of $2,030 psf; the buyers did not take up the rental guarantee offered by Far East for the recently completed condo. The developer also sold nine units at Floridian in Bukit Timah at an average price of $1,220 psf.

In the upgrader housing segment, it sold seven units at Mi Casa in Choa Chu Kang, nine units each at Lakeshore near Jurong Lake and Waterfront Waves near Bedok Reservoir. Waterfront Waves is a joint development with Frasers Centrepoint.

Frasers Centrepoint also sold four units each at its Caspian condo in the Jurong Lake location and Woodsville 28 last week.

At Martin Place Residences, the developer released fresh units below the 14th floor sky terrace in the second and final block in the 33-storey condo.

Prices of the freshly released units start from $1,350 psf, higher than the $1,260 psf starting price in the earlier block during the preceding weekend’s marketing campaign.

However, the latest pricing is still below the $1,700 psf starting price for the 33-storey freehold project when it was previewed last year. Inclusive of the units sold last week, 168 units in the 302-unit condo are now sold.

Frasers Centrepoint is offering an interest absorption scheme (IAS) for all its four projects on the market – in exchange for a 3 per cent price premium for Caspian and a 2 per cent premium for the rest.

Over in Bukit Timah, a Sing Holdings subsidiary is understood to have sold five units last weekend at BelleRive, taking total sales to 39 units in the 51-unit freehold project. BelleRive was initially priced at $1,350 psf average when it was previewed in mid-April; this was raised to $1,430 psf last week and upped further to $1,530 psf this week. This translates to a 13 per cent price hike in about six weeks.

The average pricing is for the apartments in the 15-storey project, and excludes the two penthouses. About 75 per cent of BelleRive buyers have taken up the IAS offered by the developer at no extra cost.

The units were picked up predominantly by Singaporeans. BelleRive’s draws include its proximity to Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) on Barker Road and Singapore Chinese Girls’ School along Dunearn Road.

In the Balestier area, Soilbuild is understood to have sold another 25 units at Mezzo over the weekend. The project is priced at about $850-900 psf on average; the cost is 2 per cent more for IAS.

Property giant City Developments also sold 14 units last week for The Arte at Thomson condo. The average price in the project is now $900-930 psf, compared with $880 psf when previews began in March. The 336-unit condo is 84 per cent sold.

Near Botanic Gardens, Straits Trading has upped the price of the remaining few units at Gallop Gables to $1,400 psf, from the $1,188 psf average achieved for units sold in the past six weeks. The price increase comes after the developer achieved the sale of its 40th unit in the completed freehold condo.

In the secondary market, some 50-plus units are said to have been sold last week at RiverGate condo near the Singapore River. These are out of 88 units listed in a sales campaign last week. The average price is about $1,400 to $1,500 psf.

The 88 units were from an original pool of 100 units purchased in 2005 by a fund managed by Ferrell Asset Management.

Source : Business Times – 26 May 2009

Gradual rise in home prices seen

PRIVATE home prices in most sectors could start to rise gradually this year but high-end property will stay in the doldrums until later next year, according to tycoon Kwek Leng Beng.

Mr Kwek – executive chairman of the Hong Leong Group – said there are many cash-rich buyers waiting for the right time to buy.

‘Every time the market turns, some people would get caught out,’ he added.

The key question that many buyers are asking is: Has the market turned?

Urban Redevelopment Authority data shows that 1,207 new private homes were sold in April, making it the third consecutive month that sales have crossed the 1,000-unit mark.

It is a level reminiscent of the boom period and one that some analysts believe is unlikely to be sustained for long.

But Mr Kwek, who was speaking to The Straits Times on the sidelines of a recent hotel investment conference, feels that these levels of sales can be maintained ‘if the world economy stabilises’.

‘Confidence is the quick key to recovery. When you have confidence, you will invest,’ he said.

Mr Kwek said developers are sometimes wrong but the key is to be more often right than wrong.

He also reiterated that property is an investment over the medium to long term, anywhere from three to 10 years.

Developers got the market message this year and have cut prices to meet buyers’ expectations, following a stand-off that saw just 100-plus units sold in January.

‘If you’re listed, you’ll have to sell something. Otherwise, every quarter, you have no sales,’ said Mr Kwek.

Some developers have actually started to raise their asking prices slightly from their adjusted lows.

The strong sales so far this year have largely prompted two foreign investment houses to turn more positive on the residential market.

A recent UBS report points out that the sales momentum has been stronger than expected, with the possibility of higher prices in the second half of this year and next year.

It had already in a late April report called a ‘buy’ on the property sector, saying that demand from domestic upgraders – not foreign buying – will jump-start the recovery, as with previous recoveries in the 1990s.

Goldman Sachs has also projected a 5 per cent gain in Singapore private home prices next year, reversing its earlier tip of a 10 per cent fall.

‘We think the alignment of developers’ asking prices and buyer expectations would be key for generating sustainable demand,’ said the UBS report.

Nevertheless, not all are optimistic about the market.

‘This wave of purchases, once it’s over, won’t come back until the economy has recovered and embarked on its way up,’ said a property fund manager who declined to be named.

The pent-up demand is coming mostly from owner-occupiers or small investors and these people usually cannot afford to buy more than one unit, he said.

‘Foreigners are still leaving Singapore. When there are not enough real users for all the supply, prices will continue to fall.’

What is happening now in the real estate sector could be similar to the bear rally some analysts foresee for the stock market, he said, adding that the only good news is that mass-market prices are likely to hold at current levels.

Unlike high-end prices, which have fallen at least 35 per cent to 40 per cent from their all-time peak, the mass and mid-market sectors have had falls that are much less steep.

The price fall in high-end homes – which shot to more than $5,000 per sq ft during the boom from around $1,800 psf – is thus steeper, he said.

Average high-end prices may dip to around $2,300 psf, which is still higher than pre-boom levels.

Mr Kwek said the Hong Leong Group – which includes listed Hong Leong Finance, developer City Developments, Hong Leong Asia and London-listed Millennium & Copthorne Hotels – will hold off high-end home launches for now, preferring to start building first.

City Developments, the developer behind projects such as The Sail @ Marina Bay, has in its pipeline The Quayside Isle Collection in Sentosa Cove, a 99-year leasehold enclave where values have more or less collapsed.

High-end home prices were to a large extent boosted by foreign buying. ‘Foreigners will slowly come back but not so soon,’ said Mr Kwek.

The Indonesians, he said, are very slowly returning. Although the trend is barely discernible, it is a change from the previous downturn where they had all but disappeared.

Still, he cautioned against comparing prices with levels done a decade ago: ‘Ten years ago and now, Singapore has changed. Fundamentals are good.’

The country will soon benefit from two integrated resorts, for instance.

‘Worldwide, it is the worst downturn ever. But you see the amount of stimulus around. You can’t see the effects immediately. It will take some time,’ he said.


MAIN INGREDIENT

‘Confidence is the quick key to recovery. When you have confidence, you will invest.’- Mr Kwek, on the recent improvement in property sales

Source : Straits Times – 26 May 2009

Firm demand boosts sales of private homes

DEVELOPERS continued to report encouraging private home sales last week, and some have upped prices on firmer demand.

BelleRive on Keng Chin Road and Martin Place Residences on Kim Yam Road are among the projects where prices have been raised. BelleRive’s average price is now 13 per cent higher than when it was previewed in mid-April.

Frasers Centrepoint sold 60 more units last week at Martin Place Residences; new units were released over the weekend at prices that were about 5-7 per cent higher.

Chia Boon Kuah, Far East Organization chief operating officer, property sales, told BT that ‘in recent weeks, we’re seeing growing broad-based demand for our products across our portfolio in every price bracket, from upgrader market to the upper-middle segments to high-end luxury projects’.

Last week, the property giant sold more than 40 units, up from the 30 a week earlier. Far East’s home sales for the May 18-24 week include two units at Vida on Peck Hay Road which fetched an average price of $2,030 psf; the buyers did not take up the rental guarantee offered by Far East for the recently completed condo. The developer also sold nine units at Floridian in Bukit Timah at an average price of $1,220 psf.

In the upgrader housing segment, it sold seven units at Mi Casa in Choa Chu Kang, nine units each at Lakeshore near Jurong Lake and Waterfront Waves near Bedok Reservoir. Waterfront Waves is a joint development with Frasers Centrepoint.

Frasers Centrepoint also sold four units each at its Caspian condo in the Jurong Lake location and Woodsville 28 last week.

At Martin Place Residences, the developer released fresh units below the 14th floor sky terrace in the second and final block in the 33-storey condo.

Prices of the freshly released units start from $1,350 psf, higher than the $1,260 psf starting price in the earlier block during the preceding weekend’s marketing campaign.

However, the latest pricing is still below the $1,700 psf starting price for the 33-storey freehold project when it was previewed last year. Inclusive of the units sold last week, 168 units in the 302-unit condo are now sold.

Frasers Centrepoint is offering an interest absorption scheme (IAS) for all its four projects on the market – in exchange for a 3 per cent price premium for Caspian and a 2 per cent premium for the rest.

Over in Bukit Timah, a Sing Holdings subsidiary is understood to have sold five units last weekend at BelleRive, taking total sales to 39 units in the 51-unit freehold project. BelleRive was initially priced at $1,350 psf average when it was previewed in mid-April; this was raised to $1,430 psf last week and upped further to $1,530 psf this week. This translates to a 13 per cent price hike in about six weeks.

The average pricing is for the apartments in the 15-storey project, and excludes the two penthouses. About 75 per cent of BelleRive buyers have taken up the IAS offered by the developer at no extra cost.

The units were picked up predominantly by Singaporeans. BelleRive’s draws include its proximity to Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) on Barker Road and Singapore Chinese Girls’ School along Dunearn Road.

In the Balestier area, Soilbuild is understood to have sold another 25 units at Mezzo over the weekend. The project is priced at about $850-900 psf on average; the cost is 2 per cent more for IAS.

Property giant City Developments also sold 14 units last week for The Arte at Thomson condo. The average price in the project is now $900-930 psf, compared with $880 psf when previews began in March. The 336-unit condo is 84 per cent sold.

Near Botanic Gardens, Straits Trading has upped the price of the remaining few units at Gallop Gables to $1,400 psf, from the $1,188 psf average achieved for units sold in the past six weeks. The price increase comes after the developer achieved the sale of its 40th unit in the completed freehold condo.

In the secondary market, some 50-plus units are said to have been sold last week at RiverGate condo near the Singapore River. These are out of 88 units listed in a sales campaign last week. The average price is about $1,400 to $1,500 psf.

The 88 units were from an original pool of 100 units purchased in 2005 by a fund managed by Ferrell Asset Management.

Source : Business Times – 26 May 2009

Developers dangle rent guarantees

Some developers here are turning to rental guarantees to lure buyers in the current down-market.

Under such schemes – which are offered only for certain units within selected projects – developers help buyers secure tenants, and also ensure that the owner gets a minimum pre-determined yield.

Far East Organization, for example, offers rental guarantees for selected units in selected projects such as Orchard Scotts, Vida, River Place, Tanglin View and Icon.

‘Through our marketing efforts over the years, we found that investors do not have the time to lease out or manage the tenancy of their apartments that they have bought from us,’ said Chia Boon Kuah, chief operating officer for property sales at Far East Organization.

‘Therefore, in 2006, we rolled out the rental guarantee scheme to assist our investment buyers in leasing out their properties. With our own in-house leasing and estate management teams, we are able to provide a seamless one-stop service to our buyers.’

For Vida, which is located in Cairnhill Rise, Far East is now offering a guaranteed rental yield of 5 per cent a year. This, according to Far East, can potentially work out to a return on invested equity of about 10-13 per cent a year.

‘Vida is a superior investment as we are offering a yield or return on invested equity of around 10-13 per cent per annum,’ said Far East in a recent letter to potential buyers.

Several other developers are offering schemes along the same vein.

At Belle Vue Residences, Wing Tai Holdings is offering a guaranteed return of 20 per cent on the downpayment a buyer makes if he picks up a unit using the deferred payment scheme. (DPS). Under the scheme, the buyer will have to pay 20 per cent of the property’s price as the downpayment. For a property worth $4 million, for example, this works out to $800,000.

But under Wing Tai’s scheme, he will get some of that money back.

Buyers who use the DPS to buy units in Belle Vue will get a guaranteed income of 10 per cent a year for two years on their downpayments. The guarantee will kick in once Belle Vue receives its temporary occupation permit (TOP) at the end of 2010. Using the same example as earlier, the buyer will get some $160,000 two years after TOP.

Market watchers said yield guarantee schemes are generally well-received in a down-market.

Investors, for example, snapped up units at high-end residential development Gallop Gables after The Straits Trading Company offered a two-year guaranteed rental yield of 7 per cent on 10 units there in April. All 10 units at the freehold Farrer Road estate sold in three days.

Elsewhere, at its preview for The Mezzo, Soilbuild Group Holdings offered a 6 per cent annual rental guarantee for two years, apart from the interest absorption scheme. The rental guarantee kicks in right after the TOP date. Soilbuild said recently that the launch of the first phase of The Mezzo was ‘met with an encouraging response’.

Market sources told BT that at least a few more new upcoming projects will offer variations of such schemes. Developers have historically offered such schemes to entice buyers when the property market is weak.

Hong Leong Group’s 71-unit luxury development Cuscaden Residence had such a scheme when it was launched in 2004 shortly after the Sars scare. Wing Tai Holdings also offered something similar for Duchess Crest in Bukit Timah in 1998, during the Asian financial crisis.

However, yield guarantees are a popular option for developers, said Joseph Tan, CB Richard Ellis’ executive director for residential. This is because such schemes force developers to manage units once they have been sold.

A check with Singapore’s three largest listed developers – CapitaLand, City Developments and Keppel Land – showed that none of them are currently offering any kind of rental guarantee schemes.

Units with yield guarantees could also come at a higher price, said Peter Ow, executive director for residential at Knight Frank. For example, developers who offer the interest absorption scheme at their properties usually charge a price premium of 2-3 per cent for units sold under the scheme, Mr Ow pointed out. This is because the developers have to absorb the interest costs that would otherwise have been borne by the buyers. The same principle applies for units offering yield guarantees, he said.

Source : Business Times – 26 May 2009