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S’pore retailers and restaurants hoping to cash in on F1 excitement
By Cheryl Lim,
SINGAPORE: The excitement over the Singapore Formula One night race is increasing, with the race less than a week away.
Numerous retailers and restaurants are cashing in with attractive offers.
With products from a variety of teams is the F1 Merchandise Shop at the Shangri-La Hotel, where some products are proving more popular than others.
“We have a resident customer who is very enthusiastic. And she probably bought half the merchandise that is in this shop. She bought everything in every size,” said Shatz Gillet, Public Relations Marketing Officer, 1st-Formula 1.
The Screening Room, an entertainment venue in Singapore, will be holding week-long screenings of Formula 1 Season Review 2008. It will be hosting driving simulation competitions and serving several F1-themed drinks as well.
Over at the Fairmont Hotel, F1 fans can opt for an ultimate dining experience for four with a 61-course meal that reflects the 61 laps of the Singapore F1 Grand Prix circuit.
The meal which will include a wide selection of seafood, meats and vegetables is priced at S$5,000.
With so much action on and off the race track, the Singapore Tourism Board is confident that it will achieve its target of S$100 million in tourism receipts from the upcoming night race.
- CNA/sc
Source : Channel NewsAsia - 21 September 2009
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MM Lee says Russia must remain open so that the young can connect with world
By Channel NewsAsia’s Anya Ardayeva
SKOLKOVO, RUSSIA: Singapore’s Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has met Russian President Dmitri Medvedev on the third anniversary of the establishment of the Moscow School of Management Skolkovo, Russia’s first business school.
Minister Mentor Lee, who is on the school’s advisory board, also addressed students and told them the importance of keeping Russia an open country.
Russia’s top politicians and business leaders gathered in Skolkovo, 30 kilometres west of Moscow, for the school’s anniversary.
Launched three years ago with the participation of private businesses and state support, the project is coming into force only now - with the first group of full-time MBA students receiving their student IDs.
Mr Medvedev said: “This is a different type of education that we’ve never had in our country but which we really need. Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, the Russian Empire before that were famous for their classical universities but we have never had business education.”
The school’s MBA programme is designed to cater to 240 students a year.
This year, there were less than 40 students, perhaps because the Russian economy is still recovering from the effects of the global financial crisis.
Wilfried Vanhonacker, the Dean of the school, however, remains optimistic. “Our focus has always been the emerging markets and if anything, the crisis has brought out the importance of emerging markets and the economic development in Russia and in China as locomotives to maybe pull the rest of the world out of recession. I think we picked the right objective and focus and the crisis is helping us.”
Mr Vanhonacker also praised the advice and support the business school has been receiving from Singapore and from Minister Mentor Lee in particular. He said: “It’s a very open economy, it’s an economy in which the government has played a very important role, which is totally new in development markets now. So, we can learn a lot and we will bring it into pedagogical model. You know, we are very happy with our link and our support and the insight that Minister Mentor gives.”
Minister Mentor Lee, who has been a member of the school’s advisory board since its foundation in 2006, received a warm welcome from President Medvedev.
“Dear and respected Minister Mentor, it is a great pleasure to see you and to thank you for the personal input you made in our school, that you agreed to become a member of its advisory board and for performing your responsibilities in good faith,” said Mr Medvedev.
Minister Mentor Lee said the Skolkovo business school project is important as Russia needs a generation of people who would be able to better connect Russia with the world.
He said: “You have now entered into the world economy, no longer isolated, and you must produce a generation of young people who are able to connect with the world and maximize the advantages that the world offers you,” said Minister Mentor Lee.
“Without the world, Singapore would not be able to develop. It was because of the advanced countries around the world and our links with them - in trade, education, investments, connections in tourism - that we were able to ramp up our society in less than 40 years.”
Mr Lee also urged students to seize the opportunity to create more connections with the world so as to further develop Russia.
The meeting between President Medvedev and Minister Mentor Lee was not only to talk about the school.
The Russian president also said he plans to visit Singapore in November with his first official visit.
He said he is looking forward to see Singapore and to learn from the economic experience of Minister Mentor Lee.
- CNA/ir
Source : Channel NewsAsia - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
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mindy@mindyyong.com
Egypt’s Investment Minister to visit Singapore
SINGAPORE: Egypt’s Minister of Investment, Dr Mahmoud Mohieldin, will visit Singapore from Monday till Friday.
According to a statement by Singapore’s Foreign Ministry, Dr Mohieldin will call on Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong, and meet Minister for Trade and Industry Lim Hng Kiang and Senior Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Zainul Abidin Rasheed.
Dr Mohieldin will deliver a Distinguished Public Lecture on Tuesday on “Economic Developments in the Middle East since the recent Financial Crisis and Investment Opportunities in Egypt”, as a guest of the Middle East Eminent Persons Programme (MEEPP).
The MEEPP is jointly organised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Middle East Institute of the National University of Singapore.
- CNA/sc
Source : Straits Times - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
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Markets sizzling, but investors worry about what lies ahead
By Goh Eng Yeow, Senior Correspondent
SO FAR, September this year has shaken off the month’s traditional reputation for buffeting investors with rough sailing.
Instead, it has been decidedly smooth sailing, and a world away from the nightmare month of September last year.
Across the globe, stock indexes soared to their highest levels for this year last week as traders laid to rest the ghastly memory of the collapse of US investment bank Lehman Brothers last September. That event took the world’s financial system to the brink of collapse, and eventually set off a global recession.
But the question now dogging investors even as they bask in the glow of the sizzling share price run-up of the past six months is: What dangers lie in wait?
Here, then, is a review of some of the major issues exercising the minds of top investors and policymakers.
One of the biggest challenges facing investors is what to make of the weakness in the greenback as it sinks to its lowest levels in over a year against other key currencies such as the euro and the yen, as well as regional units like the Singdollar.
Given its role as the world’s reserve currency, everything from hard commodities such as crude oil and iron ore to edibles like wheat and soya beans is priced in US dollars.
This has spawned fears that runaway inflation may again rear its ugly head as producers of raw materials demand to be paid more in what they perceive to be a currency that is being debased rapidly - the US dollar.
A related question is how soon central bankers plan to drain the trillions of dollars worth of liquidity pumped into the global financial system since last year to douse the vast financial firestorm ignited by Lehman’s collapse.
Signs are emerging that the US government is beginning to unwind some of the government loan and guarantee schemes it had used to shore up wobbly domestic lenders.
Next month, another measure, which is believed to be partly responsible for triggering the stock market rally, will be removed when the US central bank completes its planned purchase of US$300 billion (S$424 billion) of government bonds.
In order to purchase the bonds, the Federal Reserve had been printing money in the belief the bond sellers would use the money to increase spending and reduce their other borrowings - thus flooding the market with cash as a result.
Some of this money has found its way into the stock market, where it has propelled stock prices sharply higher.
But influential US strategists such as Ms Meredith Whitney have warned that the stock market might face a big test as the US government starts winding down its massive support programme.
There is simply too much bad news around - a weak US economy languishing under weak job growth and home sales - to move the stock market higher, so the argument goes.
Another source of worry is China, whose red-hot Shanghai bourse has been a powerful magnet drawing huge sums of foreign money into the region.
On the surface, China gives the appearance that its loose money policy will continue, as Premier Wen Jiabao warned last month that the ‘foundations of recovery are not stable’.
But a subtle shift seems to be underway as its central bank takes liquidity out of the market. For example, Chinese lenders will have less money to pass out as they obey a new directive to hoist their reserves to 150 per cent of non-performing loans by the end of the year, from 134.8 per cent as of end-June.
Still, despite bearishness triggered by the liquidity draining measures taken by the United States and China, one other point which may be worth considering is the extremely low interest rate environment prevailing across the globe.
Even without the Fed printing more money, there will be tremendous amounts of cheap funds floating in global financial markets as central banks have kept interest rates at rock-bottom levels in order to ensure the global financial system fully heals from the wounds inflicted by Lehman’s collapse.
This might initially propel stock prices higher in the next few months, even though the problems associated with rising inflation might inflict considerable damage on a company’s balance sheet further down the road as runaway costs erode its profit margin.
One possible strategy for investors is to identify potential winners in the next leg up on stock markets before any correction is brought on by a build-up in inflationary pressure.
There is an intriguing close correlation between the level of economic development in a country and the performance of the local stock market since Lehman’s collapse on Sept 15 last year.
The red-hot Shanghai market is clearly the runaway winner with a 53 per cent gain in the past year. Other markets such as Taipei, Seoul and Hong Kong have also made big gains as companies benefit from their close proximity to China and gain huge orders from exposure there.
But commodity-rich stock markets such as Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur have outperformed as well due to rising raw material prices.
The laggards are markets in developed countries such as Sydney and Tokyo, where stock prices have not bounced back to pre-Lehman levels. This is not surprising, given the big exposure of some of their biggest companies to the troubled US market, where the Dow Jones Industrial Average is still trading 12.4 per cent below its Sept 15, 2008 level.
As a relatively developed market itself, Singapore is also a laggard, with stock prices gaining only 7 per cent in the past 12 months.
Looking ahead, two scenarios might emerge: There is a chance the gains of outperformers such as Shanghai and Jakarta might be trimmed as investors switch to laggard markets such as Singapore or Sydney, which offer better upside potential.
The other scenario is that bourses around the globe will continue to soar, fuelled by investors taking advantage of even more cheap money flooding the world.
Source : Straits Times - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
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mindy@mindyyong.com
More parking in Orchard Road
By Maria Almenoar
TWO new developments - 313@Somerset and *Scape - will open on the Orchard Road shopping belt over the next six months, bumping up the number of parking spots in the area by more than 360.
Together with the recently opened ION Orchard and Orchard Central, they will add a total of over 1,100 parking spaces.
But the increase in the number of spaces has not translated to cheaper fees.
Out of the 20 commercial buildings along Orchard Road that The Straits Times checked, five - Wheelock Place, Shaw Centre, Far East Shopping Centre, Orchard Parade Hotel and Far East Plaza - raised their parking fees recently. The increases across different categories of parking charges mean that motorists who park at these buildings can pay as much as double their usual parking fees.
The remaining malls said they will not raise their parking charges, at least for the near future.
The malls which had raised their fees cited higher operating costs. Some also said it was to bring their fees in line with those of other carparks in the area.
Orchard Road Business Association spokesman Stephen Goh said the extra parking spots should help to ease the crunch, especially on weekends.
‘Prices are also likely to stay fairly consistent because even with an extra supply, there will be some new curious shoppers in the area,’ he said.
In July, ION Orchard, at the junction of Orchard and Paterson Roads, added 516 spaces on four above-ground parking levels. The mall also offers valet parking to accommodate more cars.
At Orchard Central, opposite The Centrepoint, there are 281 spots available over six floors.
313@Somerset, beside Orchard Central, will open in November while *Scape near Orchard Cineleisure is set to open next March.
There will another 81 spaces next May, once the renovation of the new Knightsbridge - the former Crown Prince Hotel on Bideford Road - is completed.
To help shoppers find a parking space, the Land Transport Authority has put up electronic signboards in Orchard Road and its fringes since the end of last month.
Called the Parking Guidance System, the 11 boards give real-time information on available spots at 14 carparks along the shopping belt.
Source : Straits Times - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
( +65 ) 91002985
mindy@mindyyong.com
Property: Govt has learnt from history
Calibrated measures will likely curb speculation without killing demand
By Fiona Chan
THE last thing the Government expected to do in this recession year was tackle a budding housing bubble, the second to appear in three years. But on Tuesday, four state bodies - the Ministries of National Development, Finance and Law, as well as the Monetary Authority of Singapore - came together to do just that.
They unveiled measures to cool the downturn-defying ‘exuberance’ of the property market, revealing in the process how much the Government has learned about pricking property bubbles since the epic housing bubble of 1996.
What stood out about Tuesday’s announcement was that it was timely and generally light-handed. Some measures were even widely anticipated, such as the reinstatement of regular, scheduled sales of state land through the confirmed list.
Back in 1996, the Government acted only after home prices had been rising for 10 straight years, including the surges of 1993 and 1994. And just two years ago, when the Government removed the deferred payment scheme in October 2007 to deter speculation, the move came only after private home prices had jumped 23per cent in first nine months of 2007, on top of a 10per cent rise in 2006.
This time, the anti-speculation steps were announced just as the bubble was forming. Indeed, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said the measures were designed to ‘pre-empt any speculative bubble’.
Although home sales picked up in February, and have been steadily rising since then, it was only in June or July that worries of a bubble surfaced. Until then, the global economy was still in recession and property experts had expected the housing market rebound to fizzle out.
But as soon as boom-time signs started appearing in the market - such as queues forming outside showflats, and new benchmark prices at Centro Residences in Ang Mo Kio - the Government began laying the ground for an intervention.
Mr Mah sounded the first alarm in July, saying that the Government could revive the confirmed list if necessary. About a month later, he said confirmed list sales were likely to be resumed. So when the Government officially signed off on this on Tuesday, the market was well-prepared, even if the speed of the announcement caught some off-guard.
Ms Fera Wirawan, a Royal Bank of Scotland property analyst, said the swiftness of the measures ‘has surprised the market, as the Government had warned of a nascent bubble only on July30′. She noted that in 2007, it took four months between warning the market of a bubble and removing the deferred payment scheme.
The speed of Tuesday’s measures signalled an urgency borne of the fact that the boom is in the mass market, she said. Affordability was less of an issue in 2007, when the buying frenzy was largely confined to the luxury home market.
Apart from restarting the confirmed list, the Government also disallowed home loans that let buyers of uncompleted homes defer initial mortgage payments. Again, this move did not come as a surprise: City Developments chief Kwek Leng Beng had suggested it to the media last month.
The measured approach this time contrasts greatly with past interventions.Back in 1996, perhaps to make up for its delay, the Government unexpectedly unleashed a wide-ranging arsenal of dampening measures. They drew criticism for being both too late and too much.
The measures back then included taxing gains from property sales, mandating stamp duty on property sales, and restricting home loans to 80per cent of the property’s price - measures that predictably drove the property market to the ground.
Property consultants say the Government’s more calibrated handling of the bubble this time round clearly shows it has learned some lessons from the past.
‘The Government appears to be monitoring the market more closely and it is more proactive,’ said DTZ Debenham Tie Leung’s senior director of research, Ms Chua Chor Hoon.
The measures now may be more effective in curbing speculation without killing genuine demand. They seem targeted at speculators and at danger-zone buyers with low affordability.
Their main impact on the wider property market could be through moderated sentiment, which was arguably the element that was the most bubbly.
That is not to say that the Government’s pre-emptive strike is without risk.
While there was an element of speculation in the current boom, experts believe the vast bulk of demand came from genuine home buyers and investors, drawn in by super-low interest rates and improved economic optimism.
Removing the interest absorption scheme could hit young home buyers or HDB upgraders, who benefited greatly from the two to three years of deferred mortgage payments.
Property prices also have not technically surpassed the fundamentals. Although new home sales are roaring, private home prices fell 4.7per cent in the second quarter, even as Singapore’s economic growth surged 20.7per cent in the same period.
This has led some pundits to question whether the Government was too hasty in moving to calm the market.
In some ways, the active housing market was also acting counter-cyclically to the recession. Bursting the bubble before it has even formed, while probably less painful for homeowners in the long run, could pose dangers to a nascent economic recovery in the short run.
The jury is still out on whether Tuesday’s anti-speculation measures will work better than those adopted in 1996 and 2007. But the good thing about being prompt and moderate is that if anything goes wrong, there is still time and room for the necessary corrections.
Source : Straits Times - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
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mindy@mindyyong.com
S’pore stays hot for Google offerings
Search giant continues to see robust growth for its Google Search Appliance (GSA) and paid Google Apps, reports ONG BOON KIAT
DEMAND for Google Search Appliance (GSA) and Google Apps Premier Edition - two key offerings in the US search giant’s enterprise product stable - is continuing to grow at a bullish peg in Singapore, according to a senior company executive. Tan Bee Loon, head of enterprise sales, Google Southeast Asia, said upcoming growth of GSA in Singapore can be expected to be ‘even more accelerated’ than the robust clip the product enjoyed in the past 12 months, when sales more than doubled.
‘At the same time, with the downturn, companies become a lot more value-conscious - so something like a utility-based, per-user model has played out very well for Google.’
- Tan Bee Loon, head of enterprise sales, Google Southeast Asia
Speaking to BizIT at the sidelines of the launch of a new version of GSA here last week, Ms Tan also tipped the Google Apps Premier Edition to grow strongly here and in the region.
She said this paid version of Google Apps saw a doubling of seats in South-east Asia in the past year. She declined to give sales projections for this product ‘because the market is moving very, very rapidly’.
Last June, senior Google executive Paul Slakey told BizIT the company has set a goal to double annual sales for its enterprise products in Singapore and Asia.
Google executives in Singapore last week revealed the company plans to ink an expanded partnership deal with local IT services firm NCS to further drive its enterprise business.
NCS is presently Google’s key reseller of GSA and Google Apps to enterprises in Singapore. Google also taps other resellers to cater to small and medium-sized businesses.
The GSA is a product that lets businesses trawl their internal databases similar to how Internet users search the Web. It features Google’s search technology housed in a Dell server. The latest 6.0 version, priced from US$45,000, runs on faster hardware, has more customisation abilities, and lets companies search billions of documents instead of the previous limit of 30 million documents.
Google Apps Premier Edition, at US$50 per user per year, is the paid version of Google’s popular office and collaboration software suite, which includes e-mail, word processor and spreadsheet applications. The paid version offers more online storage and security features than the free one.
Ms Tan said firms in Singapore are warming up to Google Apps due to the rising acceptance of cloud computing, which is a key selling point of Google Apps. Cloud computing refers to a computing model that allows companies to use applications without owning the systems needed to run them, hence allowing firms to save on capital costs.
‘At the same time, with the downturn, companies become a lot more value-conscious - so something like a utility-based, per-user model has played out very well for Google,’ she said.
Currently, both GSA and Google Apps account for only a very small portion of Google’s overall sales. Roughly 97 per cent of Google’s revenue comes from advertising. The company raked in US$5.5 billion in sales for the three months to end-June this year
Google has been trying to strengthen its foothold in the enterprise application space. Last week, it announced a suite of cloud computing services designed for US government agencies which will go live next year. In July, it shifted Gmail out of its five-year-old trial, or beta, status in a move that could gain it more legitimacy among businesses.
In Singapore, a notable GSA user is the Infocomm Development Authority (IDA).
One Singapore company tapping Google Apps is Remarkable Innovation. The firm, which offers assessment services of technology companies to investors, is using the free version of Google Apps for messaging and collaboration.
Managing director Mark Reilly said he is ‘more confident using Google Apps than I would be if we ran our own internal e-mail servers’.
But he is remains wary about potential security issues, such as information leakage. ‘As a result, we choose not use Google Apps for the confidential parts of our work, and we’re very careful about setting strong passwords,’ he said.
Source : Business Times - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
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New hospital open to retail purchasers
But suites can be leased only to doctors meeting hospital’s standards
By CHEN HUIFEN
MEDICAL suites at the upcoming Farrer Medical Centre will be open to purchase by retail investors as well, but with a caveat. Investors must understand that the suites can only be leased to doctors and that their choice of tenants have to meet the professional standards demanded by the medical board at the integrated Farrer Park Hospital.
Farrer Medical Centre: With the units ranging from 560 to 1,421 sqft, the suites would cost between $1.7 million and $4.4 million. Demand for the project is expected to come from a mix of both local and foreign doctors
Acknowledging that this limitation may have stifled enthusiasm from retail investors, Maurice Choo, one of the leading doctors behind the project, said it is necessary to ensure that the quality of clinical practice is high.
‘If you are a savvy, wise investor, you will know that if I bring in a rotten apple, the whole thing (project) will go down,’ said Dr Choo. ‘Of course, a short sighted investor will say this is bad for me. But a long term investor will say this is a very, very far-sighted organisation. They want to be sure that every doctor who comes in to this place is of quality, so that the value (of the suites) goes up, including mine.’
Doctors are the primary targets of the Farrer Medical Centre, which is now selling at an average price of $3,100 psf. Still, the project has managed to attract retail and corporate investors who have bought a handful of units during the initial phases of launch, according Dr Choo, a cardiologist who currently practises at Mount Elizabeth Medical Centre.
With the units ranging from 560 to 1,421 sqft, the suites would cost between $1.7 million and $4.4 million. The 99-year tenure started from December 2007. Demand for the project is expected to come from a mix of both local and foreign doctors.
‘Because every year, we produce about 300 local doctors,’ he added. ‘We also have an influx of foreign doctors. Soon, Duke (Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School) will produce 50 doctors. So we are looking at an annual input of 500-600 doctors. Now, the number of suites that are coming on stream are limited.’
When fully completed, Farrer Medical Centre is slated to have 189 suites, more than the 145 offered at Novena Medical Centre, the newest medical centre. Suites there cost between $1,500-$3,300 psf.
Parkway Holdings is planning for an estimated 200 units at its yet-to-be built hospital at Novena Terrace/Irrawaddy Road, which will be up in 2011 - the same year that the Farrer Park Station Road project will be completed. Parkway also runs Mt Elizabeth Hospital, the last private hospital to be built, where suites were transacted at between $4,803 and $5,295 last year.
So far, Farrer Medical Centre has been 45 per cent sold. Although he is not setting any target for the ongoing Phase 2 sale, Dr Choo said the intention is not to sell all suites, in order to leave some flexibility for drawing academia or top surgeons from the world at a later stage.
‘If I’m all sold out, how am I going to do that? I will have to kick somebody out. So I must have the financial strength to reserve some of that to cherry pick some of the top medical hands, and eyes in the world to enhance this whole thing. Not just for me but for everybody who is there.
‘Let’s say, if I draw a top stem cells transplant surgeon in, the stem cell transplant surgeon will draw in patients, who will then refer cases to the lung physician, the X-ray. Everybody benefits. Plus the retail investor.’
Farrer Medical Centre is part of a complex called Connexxion, which also encompasses a hospital and a hotel along Farrer Park Station Road. Dr Choo believes Connexxion will help lift the profile of the area. In particular, the 230-room One Farrer Hotel is designed to suit a wide spectrum of foreign visitors (including non-patients) with accommodation that ranges from the presidential suites to service apartments to standard rooms. It will be run by an external party.
As for the 220-bed hospital, it is set to hire some 300 nurses to support the 11 operating theatres, three day surgery units and inpatient care at the wards. Connexxion is developed by Singapore HealthPartners, which comprises a group of 40 doctors, architect Lim-Tan Suat Hua, Malaysia’s Berjaya Group and Wharton Scott of Indonesia.
Source : Business Times - 21 September 2009
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MINDY YONG
( +65 ) 91002985
mindy@mindyyong.com
Faber Hill For Sale
District: 05 ( Clementi, Dover, Pasir Panjang, West Coast )
Property Type: Semi Detached
Asking Price: $ 4,000,000
No of storeys: 2
Tenure: Freehold
No. of bedrooms: 4
No. of bathrooms: 3
Utility: 1
Built up: 4000 sq. ft.
Land Area: 8000 sq. ft.
Amenities: Mins to MRT, IMM Mkt & School
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Mindy Yong 杨雯诗
Tel: (+65) 91002985
Fax: (+65) 64021826
mindy@mindyyong.com
D14, FH Sem-Detached @ Jln Singa For Sale
District: 14 ( Geylang, Eunos, Sims, Paya Lebar )
Property Type: Semi Detached
Asking Price: $ 1,900,000
No of storeys: 2
Tenure: Freehold
No. of bedrooms: 4
Built up: 2400 sq. ft.
Land Area: 3554 sq. ft.
Direction: North
Carpark: Private CarPark
Occupied: Owner Occupied
Air Cond: Fully Aircon
Living: Marble
Dining: Marble
Bedroom: Parquet
Kitchen: Ceramic
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Mindy Yong 杨雯诗
Tel: (+65) 91002985
Fax: (+65) 64021826
mindy@mindyyong.com
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