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Chancery Court along Dunearn Rd put up for en bloc sale

The Chancery Court residential development along Dunearn Road has been put up for en bloc sale.

CB Richard Ellis said 124 out of the 144 units, representing more than 87 percent of the share value, have signed the Collective Sale Agreement (CSA).

The prime site is located next to Anglo-Chinese School (Barker Road).

Chancery Court sits on 24,074.4 square metres of prime land and is a short walk to Newton MRT Station.

The guide price is S$468 million, which equates to about S$1,614 per square foot per plot ratio.

Under the Master Plan 2003, the plot ratio is 1.4 and the maximum number of storeys is five.

To maximize the plot ratio and top up the lease to a fresh 99 years, developers will have to pay a development charge of S$118 million.

A developer can build about 242 units, assuming an average size of 1,500 sq ft each. The estimated break-even is around S$2,075 per square foot.

The tender exercise closes at 3pm on 5 December 2007.

Source : ChannelNewsAsia - 31 Oct 2007

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Analysts see no property bubble

They’re mum on whether it’s a good time to buy, but agree S’pore fundamentals are pretty robust.

PROPERTY: boom or bust? This was the intriguing question to which a capacity turnout of about 170 investors recently sought answers, at a dinner hosted by financial advisory firm ipac. The good news is that the experts at the evening’s panel do not foresee a bubble in the offing, based on three presentations - albeit with some concern expressed by Jones Lang LaSalle’s head of research, Chua Yang Liang.

The not-so-good news is that the experts shied away from the multi-million-dollar question of whether this was a good time to buy. What is more, over the past weekend, the surprise news of a halt to the popular deferred payment scheme for uncompleted properties appears to have cast a cloud over residential property’s upward trajectory.

In a deferred payment scheme, developers effectively extend free financing to buyers of uncompleted properties. Buyers need only pay an initial deposit of 10 to 20 per cent, with the balance due when the property is completed in a couple of years.

Thanks to this form of free credit, a sizeable number of speculators have rushed in to new home launches, as a rising market gives them a window to sell their units at a substantial profit in a short period.

The base case of one panellist, HSBC senior Asian economist Robert Prior-Wandesforde, is that there are few obvious triggers for a sharp deceleration in prices.

‘If we’re in a bubble, we’re in the early stages. The fundamentals are pretty robust. The mass market is just starting to see a recovery and that’s probably the safest area for investment,’ he told the audience. The supportive factors include the expected growth in employment and personal incomes.

The cost of servicing mortgage debt also remains relatively low at just about 14 per cent of household income, compared to 50 per cent in mature markets like London.

Contacted yesterday, he said: ‘I think the measure (to halt deferred pricing) will take a little bit of froth out of the market, but with employment booming, wages soaring and the real mortgage rate at its lowest level since 1990, the outlook still looks very promising.

‘We should also bear in mind that valuations are still way below the levels of the previous boom. When adjusted for the growth in incomes, the private residential property price index is little more than half of what it was in 1996.’

At the discussion, Dr Chua of JLL expressed concern over the price gap between new and resale homes in the prime districts. The gap has widened sharply this year, reaching a peak of 60 per cent, against a medium to long-term premium gap of 32 to 38 per cent. The resale market, he says, reflects true demand better, as deferred payment schemes in the new home market have inflated prices.

In terms of rental yields, rentals in the luxury prime segment have edged below the 10-year Singapore bond yield. The clampdown on deferred payment schemes should remove the speculative froth, he says. ‘Generally prices will take a breather in the next two to three years with the sheer volume of (new) stocks coming on stream. We expect some kind of softening, not a correction, but a softening.’

Sing Tien Foo, deputy head of the National University of Singapore’s department of real estate, pointed to property’s ability to help diversify a portfolio, thanks to a low correlation with stocks and bonds.

Prof Sing’s research has shown that property provided a positive hedge against inflation between 1992 and 2007, a period in which stocks and bonds did not provide such a hedge.

While all types of property offered a more-than perfect hedge against inflation, the best hedge was that offered by detached housing, followed by semi-detached homes.

Meanwhile, advisers are sounding caution. Roy Varghese of ipac says: ‘If you’re looking to invest, be very careful. You need to have an investment objective and that includes looking into the IRR (internal rate of return). You should be able to hold it for seven to 10 years. If you bought your property at a peak, your IRR will be low.’

Joseph Chong of New Independent expects the price gap between new uncompleted homes and resale homes to narrow. ‘The market should see a more moderate ascent in prices - instead of 20 per cent, perhaps 10 per cent in line with nominal GDP.

‘You should see more upside…But if your portfolio is not big enough, I don’t think you should bet on investment property in Singapore.’

Those with modest resources are better off investing in a global property fund or Reit, he adds.

Analysts, however, remained mostly sanguine over the medium-term outlook. Merrill Lynch’s property team wrote in a paper market that sentiment will be weak over one to two months. ‘However, we are of the view that genuine buyers do not buy houses on innovative purchase schemes by developers alone. We believe the more important considerations will be where Singapore is heading, will they be able to keep their jobs or businesses and will their salaries/profits increase.’

The firm’s economics team recently wrote that Asian property prices were not high relative to per-capita income, and advances have been modest compared to those in the UK, the US and Australia. The drivers include low real interest rates and positive demographics.

Citigroup analyst Wendy Koh said that while sentiment will weaken in the short term, residential prices are supported by strong fundamentals. In a note on Friday, she said: ‘We believe the current price increase is well supported by strong fundamentals such as the extremely tight physical supply and economic and wage growth.

‘We maintain our view that rental rates for residential units will continue to climb on the back of the relative net increase in housing stock due to low completion and relatively high demolition due to en blocs. The rise in rental rates will likely continue to support further price appreciation.’

Source : Business Times - 31 Oct 2007

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Acer Building in Jurong for sale

ACER Computer International is selling its building at International Business Park in Jurong East.

The property is said to be worth about $75-80 million, or $337 to $360 psf of existing net lettable area (NLA).

The property, a high- tech business park development, was completed about 10 years ago on a site leased from JTC Corp for 30 years with an option to renew for a further 30 years.

Acer is paying JTC an annual land rent of $715,469, with an escalation of 4 per cent a year (as at Q3 2007). Acer Building’s new owner will likely pay JTC a slightly higher land rent each year.

Acer Computer (Singapore) will lease back 51,548 sq ft in the building - about 23 per cent of the property’s 222,510 sq ft NLA - from the new owner.

BT understands that the net property yield to the new owner can work out to around 6 to 7 per cent, based on a $75-80 million price.

DTZ Debenham Tie Leung is marketing Acer Building through an expression of interest exercise.

Source : Business Times - 31 Oct 2007

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URA property auction attracts $37m of bids

Bidders included smaller developers, contractors and engineering firms.

THE mood continued to be buoyant at two property auctions yesterday held by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) and DTZ Debenham Tie Leung.

The URA auctioned 12 sub-divided landed housing plots near Sembawang Beach which can be developed into a total of 57 landed homes.

The auction fetched a total sum of $37.09 million, working out to about $285 per square foot of land area on an average basis.

The bidders included mostly smaller developers, contractors and engineering firms but also some individuals, like local advertising guru Lim Sau Hoong.

The chief executive of Singapore-based advertising agency 10AM Communications clinched the sole bungalow plot of 4,477 sq ft for $940,000.

Market watchers expect Ms Lim to spend a further $1.5 million on construction costs and fees, bringing her likely all-in investment for her bungalow at about $2.5 million.

Mecbonn Engineering, whose office is at International Plaza and which is controlled by a Tew family, walked away with the biggest plot, a 43,687 sq ft site slated for development into 23 terrace houses, for $14.3 million or $327.33 psf of land area.

The plot attracted a total of 107 bids from about eight parties.

A property consultant estimates Mecbonn’s break- even cost works out to about $1.3 million per terrace house.

The company also bought two smaller plots for semi-detached homes.

Fragrance Group unit Fragrance Homes bought two plots. It paid $9.2 million or $294 psf for a plot designated for 14 terrace houses and $1.76 million or $270 psf for a smaller plot for three terrace homes.

Fragrance Group boss Koh Wee Meng and his wife Lim Wan Looi too bought a semi-detached plot for $289 psf.

The 99-year leasehold land plots auctioned by the URA yesterday form the first phase of Sembawang Greenvale.

URA’s director of land administration, Choy Chan Pong, was pleased with the auction result, noting that it drew ‘wide participation and competitive bidding’.

‘We can consider releasing the next phase of Greenvale in the H1 2008 Government Land Sales Programme,’ he added.

DTZ Debenham Tie Leung’s auction at Amara Hotel saw a strong turnout of about 100, including spectators, with three mortgagee sale properties changing hands, including a ground floor shop unit at the freehold Grandlink Square at Guillemard Road selling for $226,000 or $1,102 psf of strata area.

The other two properties sold were a two-storey linked semi-D factory at 67E Tuas South Avenue 1, which fetched $1.3 million or about $139 psf of strata area, and a two-storey, freehold corner terrace house at 34 Maria Avenue in Opera Estate that was sold for $1.4 million, or $392 psf of land area.

Source : Business Times - 31 Oct 2007

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Majority owner raises fresh objections before STB

If there’s one thing that has characterised the Horizon Towers saga, it’s the number of twists and turns that have emerged - and yesterday’s hearing before the Strata Titles Board (STB) was no exception.

The session marked the start of the resumption of a previous hearing, which had stalled on Aug 3 when STB decided Horizon Towers’ application for a collective sale order was defective. The High Court subsequently overturned the board’s decision and sent the application back to STB.

Yesterday’s sitting, however, was anything but a straightforward continuation of that earlier session.

Instead, it saw one majority owner, Susanna Rusli - represented by Cheong Yuen Hee from JS Yeh - raising fresh objections and saying she did not wish to be represented alongside the other majority owners, whose legal counsel are Tan Rajah & Cheah.

Mr Cheong, on behalf of his client, questioned the validity of Horizon Towers’ collective sale application after it was thrown out by STB on Aug 3.

He also argued that the sale & purchase (S&P) agreement - signed between Horizon Towers’ majority owners and the buyers, Hotel Properties and its partners - had expired, as it was not extended before the deadline.

After STB threw out their collective sale application, the majority owners did not extend the Aug 11 deadline for the S&P agreement - despite repeated requests by the buyers to do so - until Sept 24. Mr Cheong is arguing that this invalidates the S&P agreement.

It’s also a point taken up by some of the minority owners who are objecting to the sale. Tan Kok Quan Partnership - which represents one group of minorities - is arguing that STB does not have the jurisdiction to hear the application as a consequence of the majority owners’ failure to extend the S&P agreement.

BT understands the other minority owners objecting to the sale also intend to take up this argument.

Such a move will, however, run counter to what transpired in the High Court earlier this month - when the majority sellers appealed against STB’s dismissal of their application. In that session, the buyers’ lawyers - Allen & Gledhill (A&G) - argued that the appeal could be heard only if the S&P agreement was still in existence and the deadline extension was not disputed.

A&G Senior Counsel K Shanmugam asked the various parties to state before the court if they were challenging the existence of the contract, adding that they could not then go back to STB after the appeal and say the contract had expired. No one challenged the existence of the contract then.

Yesterday’s session before STB also saw the minorities raising queries over the role played by the sales agent for the en bloc deal, Alvin Er. They argued that Mr Er’s decision to accept a sales commission from the buyers for the deal posed a conflict of interest - in that he could have been motivated by the commission rather than the need to secure the best offer for Horizon Towers.

STB has asked the various parties to submit these applications over the next few days. The hearing will resume next Tuesday.

Source : Business Times - 31 Oct 2007

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