Archive for March 28th, 2008

Singapore Choa Chu Kang residential parcel up for sale

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore Real Estate News.

Singapore Choa Chu Kang residential parcel up for sale

Analysts think the 99-year leasehold site may fetch $230-$270 psf ppr
By UMA SHANKARI

THE Urban Redevelopment Authority yesterday launched a 1.9-hectare residential site in Choa Chu Kang Drive for sale by public tender.
Analysts reckon the 99-year leasehold site could fetch $230-$270 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr), or $131.7 million to $154.6 million in all.

The site has a maximum gross floor area of 572,600 sq ft.

It is within walking distance of Choa Chu Kang MRT station and should prove attractive to developers, analysts say.

‘Judging by the healthy response to recent government residential land sale tenders in West Coast Drive and Yishun, this site should attract a fair number of bidders - possibly two to three genuine bids and two to three other opportunistic bids,’ said Tay Huey Ying, director of research and consultancy at Colliers International.

‘Bidders may include Far East Organization, Allgreen and Centrepoint,’ she said.

Going by the response to nearby Yew Tee Residences when it was launched last year, a project on the latest site should be popular with mass-market buyers, she feels.

Ku Swee Yong, director of marketing and business development at Savills Singapore, agrees that the project will be popular: ‘Mass market private homes are still in good demand because of the strong HDB market, where many sellers are getting large amounts of cash-over-valuations (COVs) for their flats. There is also a ready pool of HDB upgraders in Choa Chu Kang.’

Colliers’ Ms Tay says that at a bid price of $230-$250 psf ppr, the breakeven price will come to about $560 to $580 psf. According to her, ‘Developers would be looking to sell the new units at prices ranging between $620 and $650 psf’.

Units in The Warren condominium have transacted at an average of $570 psf between July 2007 and now, while units in Yew Tee Residences are changing hands at an average of $535 psf, she said.

Mr Ku, on the other hand, believes units on the upcoming site could go for about $700 psf. Some 500-550 homes can be built on the land, he said.

The plot is one of four new residential sites to be launched for sale as confirmed sites under the government land sales programme for the first-half of 2008.

Source : Business Times  - 28 March 2008

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Mindy Yong

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mindy@mindyyong.com

S’pore CapitaLand to build Viet condo

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore Real Estate News.

S’pore CapitaLand to build Viet condo

It’ll hold 60% stake in US$500m project in Ho Chi Minh City
By UMA SHANKARI

CAPITALAND said yesterday that it will build a US$500 million project in Ho Chi Minh City with a Vietnamese partner.
 
Mr Lui: We are confident of strong sales, especially for well-designed homes 
CapitaLand will take a 60 per cent stake in the proposed joint venture. Thien Duc, one of CapitaLand’s strategic partners in Vietnam, will hold the other 40 per cent.

Thien Duc is a shareholder of CapitaLand’s The Vista condominium in Ho Chi Minh City.

For the latest project, CapitaLand, as lead development manager, will build a 28-storey condo with about 1,400 apartments and commercial and retail space on a 6.7 hectare site.

Most of the apartments will enjoy sweeping views of the Saigon River and skyline, CapitaLand said. It aims to launch the first phase of the project by the second quarter of 2009.

‘Ho Chi Minh City continues to be a key focus for our residential and other investments in Vietnam,’ said Lui Chong Chee, chief executive of CapitaLand Residential.

‘For residential, given the rapid growth in population, increased affordability and tight supply, we are confident of strong sales, especially for well-designed homes.’

CapitaLand will continue to look for prime development sites in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi to build quality homes, he said.

Including the newest project, CapitaLand will be building more than 4,200 homes in Ho Chi Minh City.

Vietnam’s residential property market is booming, with queues of buyers in 2007 for CapitaLand’s The Vista and Keppel Land and Tien Phuoc’s The Estella, property firm CB Richard Ellis (CBRE) said in a recent report.

But buyers are becoming more discriminating. CBRE said: ‘Increased development in some sectors will relieve the supply crunch in the future. (But) well-priced quality developments are, and will remain, the top sellers.’

CapitaLand’s shares closed 14 cents higher at $6.40 yesterday. The stock has climbed 2.1 per cent this year.

Source : Business Times  - 28 March 2008

Singapore Property - Buy , Sell , Rent , Invest

Mindy Yong

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mindy@mindyyong.com

$484m gain in value of ASCENDAS Real Estate Investment Trust properties

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore Real Estate News.

$484m gain in value of ASCENDAS Real Estate Investment Trust properties

The trust attributes the 14.2% surge to improving industrial property market
By UMA SHANKARI

ASCENDAS Real Estate Investment Trust (A-Reit) said yesterday the book value of its investment properties rose $483.6 million - about 14.2 per cent - during the latest annual valuation exercise.
 
Post-revaluation, the annualised net property income yield of the property portfolio is about 6.4 per cent, which is in line with the prevailing market, according to A-Reit
 
 
A-Reit attributed the increase - from the previous book value at Feb 29, 2008 - to an improving industrial property market, which has led to higher occupancy and higher rents across its portfolio.

The latest valuations will be reflected in A-Reit’s financial statements for the year ending March 31, 2008, the trust said.

Valuations were revised upwards across all sectors, with the business & science parks sector registering the largest appreciation of $244.4 million.

Properties in the high-tech industrial sector appreciated $116.5 million, while those in the light industrial sector (including flatted factories) and logistics & distribution centres registered gains of $60.2 million and $63.2 million respectively.

A-Reit’s third development property - HansaPoint@CBP, which was completed in January 2008 - appreciated by $43.2 million, or 166 per cent, from its development cost. Post-revaluation, the annualised net property income yield of the property portfolio is about 6.4 per cent, which is in line with the prevailing market, A-Reit said.

The adjusted net asset value, based on the Dec 31, 2007 balance sheet, will be $1.85 per unit.

The valuations were done by DTZ Debenham Tie Leung, CB Richard Ellis, Chesterton and Jones Lang LaSalle, A-Reit said.

The trust said the increases in valuation are testament to the ‘manager’s proactive asset management strategies in maintaining high occupancy rates and the manager’s ability to deliver value to unit-holders by pursuing attractive acquisitions and development opportunities while maintaining a disciplined approach to ensure risks are mitigated’.

A-Reit’s shares closed nine cents higher at $2.29 yesterday. The stock price has shed 6.9 per cent since the start of the year.
Source : Business Times  - 28 March 2008

Singapore Property - Buy , Sell , Rent , Invest

Mindy Yong

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mindy@mindyyong.com

CCT gets option to buy Singapore 1 George Street for $1.17b

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore Real Estate News.

CCT gets option to buy Singapore 1 George Street for $1.17b

Deal comes with income support from seller CapitaLand till 2013
By KALPANA RASHIWALA

(SINGAPORE) Big office investment sales deals have not ground to a complete halt. CapitaCommercial Trust announced yesterday that it has an option from sponsor CapitaLand to buy 1 George Street for $1.165 billion or $2,600 psf of net lettable area, showing that income support may be the way to make acquisitions palatable to Reits.
 

This is especially so when it comes to office blocks with a substantial portion of leases signed a few years ago when rentals were weak. Never mind that income support for such deals may once have been frowned upon.
 
The deal for 1 George Street involves a five-year rental guarantee, with seller CapitaLand ensuring a minimum net property income of $49.5 million per annum, translating to a net property yield of 4.25 per cent per annum on the purchase price till 2013.

This means that CapitaLand will top up any shortfall in net property income to ensure that the $49.5 million floor is achieved every year for the period. The acquisition will be funded entirely through debt; there will be no equity raising.

1 George Street is a 23-storey Grade A commercial building that was completed three years ago. It is fully leased and its tenants include The Royal Bank of Scotland, WongPartnership and Lloyd’s of London (Asia).)

Most of the leases were signed around 2004/2005, when office rents were weak, which is why CapitaLand is providing yield protection for the asset’s acquisition by CCT. The $49.5 million annual minimum net property income implies gross monthly rentals of $10.50 psf. Given that the current average market rental in the Raffles Place area is about $16.30 psf, this spells upside for 1 George St as leases are renewed, CapitaCommercial Trust Management CEO Lynette Leong said.

Leases for about 50 per cent of the net lettable area in the property will come up for renewal in 2008 and 2009. Recently, a new lease for a small space in the building was signed for $19 psf, Ms Leong revealed.

‘With the yield-protection given by CapitaLand, CCT will be able to attain minimum returns from this asset. The five-year yield protection eliminates all the downside risk and whatever upside there is from the asset, it will all flow through to CCT. That’s a pretty compelling offer,’ Ms Leong said.

The deal drew an inevitable comparison with K-Reit Asia’s acquisition of a one-third stake in One Raffles Quay from its parent, Keppel Land. The two deals have similarities - they involve income support and are at prices seen as lower than market.

However, Ms Leong, at a media and analyst briefing yesterday, argued that there were important differences between the two deals.

For one, CCT will get 100 per cent direct ownership of 1 George Street, and the asset will enjoy full tax transparency as a result of being owned by a Reit. This means that CCT would not have to pay tax on income from this asset, unlike K-Reit Asia’s acquisition of a one-third stake in ORQ which is being effected through the purchase of shares in the company that owns ORQ. Hence, the income that K-Reit will receive from the asset would be net of 18 per cent corporate tax.

Another difference is that KepLand will provide income support only till 2011 whereas CapitaLand is doing so till 2013, beyond the 2011/2012 timeframe when a spike in Grade A office space is expected.

CapitaLand Commercial CEO Wen Khai Meng explained that the reason for ‘providing the floor for five years is to address the view that there will be a huge supply in 2011/2012′.

Another difference: CCT has secured 100 per cent committed debt funding for its proposed acquisition of 1 George Street and will not have any equity raising exercise. K-Reit, on the other hand, is seeking unitholders’ approval for a rights issue to help partly refinance a bridging loan taken from Keppel Corp to complete the acquisition of the one-third stake in ORQ.

The $2,600 psf of net lettable area at which CapitaLand is proposing to sell 1 George St to CCT is lower than the $2,700 psf at which the asset was valued at in a deal last August when CapitaLand bought the remaining half share in the asset to gain full ownership of the award-winning property.

CapitaLand expects to book a gain of about $47.1 million after taking into account the yield protection and the company’s 30.5 per cent interest in CCT.

Mr Wen said that the group had to pay $2,700 psf in last August’s deal for control premium. ‘We feel $2,600 psf, plus income support, is a good deal given that CapitaLand still has about 30 per cent stake in CCT and given that we are the manager of the Reit and have a certain responsibility to help our sponsored-Reit to grow.

‘I personally dislike income support, because it conjures up all sorts of wrong impressions. But it would be challenging for a Reit to justify non-yield accretion for the first few years in an acquisition. Based on current rental rates at 1 George Street, the yield would be below 4.25 per cent, but we are seeing very strong rental reversion,’ he said

‘The yield-protection arrangement of 4.25 per cent pa for five years makes the acquisition compelling, given the current blended yield of CCT’s Grade A office assets is 3.2 per cent,’ Ms Leong said.

Even with 100 per cent debt funding for the acquisition, CCT’s gearing will rise to only about 40 per cent from the current 27 per cent, the trust’s manager highlighted.

The deal will be subject to CCT unitholders’ approval at an extraordinary general meeting to be held by June 30, as it is deemed an interested party transaction. CapitaLand is not allowed to vote. The acquisition is slated for completion by end-July.

Source : Business Times  - 28 March 2008

Singapore Property - Buy , Sell , Rent , Invest

Mindy Yong

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mindy@mindyyong.com

Low point of crisis may be over, feels Singapore Temasek unit

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore News.

Low point of crisis may be over, feels Singapore Temasek unit

Investors have reached the point of maximum fear, says Fullerton CEO
(SINGAPORE) Temasek Holdings’ fund management unit says investors have passed ‘the point of maximum fear’ amid the global credit squeeze. Fullerton Fund Management sees the US Federal Reserve’s decision to rescue Bear Stearns as a turning point in the crisis.
‘The Fed coming in to facilitate JPMorgan Chase & Co’s purchase of Bear Stearns is a watershed event, and most bottoms are found during watershed events,’ Fullerton CEO Gerard Lee said in an interview here yesterday. ‘From that perspective, we could have already crossed the point of maximum fear.’

The Fed stepped in with JPMorgan on March 14 to provide emergency funding to Bear Stearns in the biggest government bailout of a US securities firm. The move is now being probed by the Senate.

Before the announcement, Bear Stearns’ clients withdrew US$17 billion in two days amid speculation that the firm was running short of cash.

Templeton Asset Management’s Mark Mobius said he ‘generally’ agrees with Temasek’s assessment that the markets have reached a bottom.

‘If we haven’t achieved it, we’re damn close,’ Mr Mobius, who oversees US$47 billion in emerging- market equities, said in a phone interview from Hong Kong yesterday.
 
‘With the kind of liquidity that’s pouring into the system, with the Fed, and now the European Central Bank and others putting more money into the system, we think stock prices are not going to remain down. We think there’s a good chance of growth going forward.’

Some funds are already planning to buy shares in Asia, where stocks have tumbled this year even as economies in China and India continue to grow. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index trades at 14 times estimated earnings, after slumping 13 per cent the past six months as fallout from the US sub-prime crisis spread through Asia, making stocks in the benchmark 36 per cent cheaper than the five-year average.

Value Partners Group, Asia’s second-largest hedge fund manager, is buying stocks in the region that were battered by the collapse of the US sub-prime mortgage market, chief investment officer Cheah Cheng Hye said this week. The Hong Kong-based asset manager aims to start a new fund in the second quarter to invest in Greater China property stocks, Mr Cheah said.

Funds such as Clariden Leu AG, which manages US$300 million, said the recovery from the US housing crisis may take 1-2 years.

‘What we have seen in the last couple of weeks culminating in the rescue of Bear Stearns by the Fed and a further pump of liquidity in the market may somewhat signal an inflexion point in the crisis - but this bottoming-out phase, we reckon, will take a long time,’ Michael Foo, head of Asian portfolio management at Clariden, said in an interview yesterday.

Fullerton, which oversees US$2.5 billion of third- party money, is still bullish on prospects in Asia, where it has most of its assets. It said the goal to manage US$3 billion excluding Temasek’s funds by mid-year is achievable. Temasek manages a portfolio worth more than US$100 billion.

‘The fundamental reasons for this secular growth are all in place,’ Mr Lee said. ‘The few of the big economies are found in Asia. I’m talking about China, India, Vietnam and South Korea. So Asia, being a destination for investment money from the developed world, will continue to grow.’

Fullerton’s main customers are wealthy individuals in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and institutions in Singapore, where it became a separate unit of Temasek in 2003. It aims to expand in the US, Europe, Australia and the Middle East. — Bloomberg
Source : Business Times  - 28 March 2008

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Mindy Yong

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Property trust to acquire office building for $1.17b -Singapore

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore Real Estate News.

Property trust to acquire office building for $1.17b -Singapore
 
Sale of 1 George Street to CCT comes with arrangement guaranteeing yields

By Joyce Teo, Property Correspondent 
PRIME PROPERTY: The 23-storey 1 George Street building offers its owner high returns from rents, as it sits near the Raffles Place and Clarke Quay MRT stations. — ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE
 
CAPITACOMMERCIAL Trust (CCT) plans to buy a three-year-old office block - the building was completed in 2004 - in the Central Business District (CBD) for $1.17 billion from its biggest shareholder, CapitaLand.
The purchase of the 1 George Street building will augment the property trust’s other prime blocks at a time of tight office supply and rising rents.

CCT’s portfolio includes Capital Tower in Robinson Road, 6 Battery Road, the HSBC Building in Raffles Place and a majority stake in Raffles City.

The 1 George Street transaction works out to $2,600 per sq ft (psf) of net lettable area.

The deal comes with a form of yield protection. CapitaLand will ensure a minimum net property income of $49.5 million a year for five years from the day the sale is completed.

This translates into a net yield of 4.25 per cent a year on the purchase price, CCT said in a statement, and implies a rental rate of about $10.50 psf.
The yield protection arrangement makes the acquisition compelling, as CCT’s current Grade A office assets have an average yield of 3.2 per cent per annum, said CCT’s chief executive, Ms Lynette Leong.

Ms Leong said buying 1 George Street would increase CCT’s net property income contribution from such assets from 43 per cent to about 55 per cent.

‘The 4.25 per cent yield is reflective of the current office market,’ said Cushman & Wakefield managing director Donald Han.

‘Prime office acquisitions last year were done at average yields of between 3 per cent and 3.5 per cent.’

The yield protection arrangement will also shield the trust from any potential oversupply situation in the office market from 2010 and beyond, he said.

CCT’s Grade A office buildings have done well. Asking rents at 6 Battery Road in Raffles Place, for example, have risen to $22.50 psf, with rent deals done above $20 psf.

The 23-storey 1 George Street is well sited to benefit from high CBD rents, being near the Raffles Place and Clarke Quay MRT stations, said CCT.

There is good upside for rents, as it was completed in 2004, when the office leasing market was sluggish.

The building is fully occupied, but about half the rental leases will be up for revision over the next two years, said Ms Leong.

Tenants at 1 George Street include The Royal Bank of Scotland, WongPartnership and the Canadian High Commission.

CapitaLand said it expected a gain of about $47 million from the sale. This is after taking into account the yield protection and its 30.5 per cent interest in CCT.

It said the divestment was in line with its strategy of unlocking value from commercial properties at the appropriate time to recycle capital.

CapitaLand gained full ownership of 1 George Street last year, when it bought German insurer Ergo’s 50 per cent stake in the building at $2,700 psf of net lettable area.

CCT will seek unitholder approval for the deal at an extraordinary general meeting before June 30, so the deal can be completed before July 31.

As CCT has secured committed funding for the entire purchase price, it does not need to do a placement of CCT units or a rights issue to raise cash.

Its gearing, however, will rise to 40 per cent from 27 per cent.
Source : Straits Times  - 28 March 2008

Singapore Property - Buy , Sell , Rent , Invest

Mindy Yong

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mindy@mindyyong.com

New Singapore HDB grant for filial singles

Posted on March 28th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: Singapore Real Estate News.

New Singapore HDB grant for filial singles 

$20,000 subsidy for singles who buy resale flat to live with parents

By Joyce Teo, Property Correspondent 
SINGLE Singaporeans who opt to buy an HDB resale flat in order to live with their parents can now get a housing subsidy of $20,000.
The subsidy aims to encourage children to look after their parents while helping them get a bit further up the property ladder.

It is a variation of an existing programme - the Single Singapore Citizen Scheme, which allows single people aged 35 and above to apply for a $11,000 CPF housing grant to buy a resale flat to live on their own.

The $20,000 subsidy - called the higher-tier Singles Grant - starts on Tuesday and comes with a number of conditions.

Applicants must be aged 35 and above, be first-time HDB buyers and must not earn more than $3,000 a month if they are buying alone.

They must also commit to living with their parents in the flat for at least five years.

Housing grants for singles

Singles grant
For singles buying a resale flat for their own use: $11,000
Higher-tier singles grant
For singles buying a resale flat to share with their parents: $20,000
Joint singles grant
For two to four singles who jointly buy a resale flat. They must all share the property and may also share with sets of parents subject to a monthly household income ceiling of $8,000. They can get up to one singles grant and one higher-tier singles grant, or up to two singles grants or two higher-tier singles grants. $40,000 max.

Note: The singles grants are applicable to unmarried singles and divorcees aged 35 and above. Orphans and widowed individuals must be over 21.
Parents have obligations as well. They cannot buy or own another HDB flat or invest in private property within this period.

This means they will have to dispose of any property they own before they can qualify as co-occupiers in the subsidy application.

The $20,000 grant is also subject to other HDB policies such as resale levy liability, but it can be used by singles buying flats under the Design, Build and Sell Scheme.

The subsidy, which was announced in Parliament on March 5, is not a cash grant and can be used only for initial payment on the flat or to reduce the mortgage.

Singles buying resale flats under the joint singles scheme can also apply for the new grant.

‘It’s not something that will make all singles jump for joy as most want an opportunity to buy a flat to live on their own,’ said MP Charles Chong, chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee for National Development and Environment.

But it will benefit a small group who prefer to live with their parents.

The HDB said about 270 people applied each year, between 2003 and 2007, for a singles grant to buy a resale flat with their parents.

Mr Chong felt the new subsidy does not go far enough.

He said feedback he has received suggests that singles want to be treated the same as married people, including the right to buy a new flat direct from the HDB.

He added: ‘If the purpose (of the higher grant) is to encourage children to look after their parents, then the grant should also be given to married children living with their parents.’

Source : Straits Times  - 28 March 2008

Singapore Property - Buy , Sell , Rent , Invest

Mindy Yong

(+65)91002985

mindy@mindyyong.com