Make SgHousing your default homepage
Add SgHousing to your favourites
EMail This Post

Many home buyers welcome move to scrap deferred payment scheme

Many home buyers have not been put off by the government’s decision to withdraw the deferred payment scheme for property purchases.

Some showflats still bustle with activity, especially those approved to offer deferred payments.

The latest change, which took effect on Friday, will only affect uncompleted private homes, commercial and industrial properties.

Alan Tan has just bought a penthouse at Park Natura at Jalan Jurong Kechil in the Bukit Timah area for over S$2 million.

The project can continue to offer deferred payment, but many home hunters say this is not a major factor that will sway their buying decision.

He says: “The deferred payment of course is a plus factor, but at the end of the day we look at the property itself, the location as well as the view. It’s also a freehold properties - these are the factors that we considered.”

The scrapping of the deferred payment scheme is seen as a move to cool the hot property market.

Buyers will now have to make progressive payments every few months at various stages of the construction process, instead of postponing payment till the property is completed two to three years later.

Some home buyers welcomed the move as it would deter speculators and stabilise the market.

Lim Guan Huat, Home Buyer, says: “For those who are more on the speculation, they have to think twice, because they cannot predict the market in two years’ time. So it’s the risk they have to consider.”

Cheam Heng Peng, Home Buyer, says: “Less speculators, maybe the price will be down. It’s uncertain right now.”

Property agents say buyers will now have to be more prudent in their selection and they must also be prepared to incur interest from bank loans taken to service the payments.

But there is a flip side to it.

David Poh, Director, Strategic Planning and Development, PropNex, says: “When they opt for deferred payment scheme, they would normally pay a higher purchase price because developers would probably build in a small percentage for them, an interest element. Now if they just go for the normal progressive payment scheme, their purchase price would be lower, so with that saving they can use to pay the interest, it’s still a zero sum game.”

Industry watchers do not expect the change to have major impact on the market.

But they say developers will have to tweak their marketing activities to focus on other selling points like design and eco-friendly environment, rather that offering an attractive deferred payment scheme.

Source : ChannelNewsAsia - 27 Oct 2007

EMail This Post

The devout tycoon

Stephen Riady, president of the Lippo conglomerate, talks to CHOW PENN NEE about why faith and business can mix, the prospects for real estate, and the group’s future plans.

A HUGE signboard for the Lippo development Newton One at the junction of Newton and Dunearn Road is emblazoned with the words ‘Fully Sold, Thanks be to God’.

Stephen Riady, president of Indonesian conglomerate, the Lippo Group, is not afraid to wear his faith on his sleeve. Dotted around the island, his group’s projects bear testament to his strong beliefs.

‘Our development at Sentosa Cove is expected to have very good response too, when the results come out next month. For that one, I’m going to put up a signboard with the phrase ‘Praise be to God’, he says with delight, his arms gesturing animatedly.

Unapologetic about his enthusiasm for religion, Mr Riady says this is the best way to show one’s faith. ‘When you proclaim openly, you signify your commitment to Christianity. I become stronger after saying it and I feel I’m strengthening my faith,’ says the 46-year-old Mr Riady. Ironically, he was the last in his family to convert - in 1992 as a 31-year-old - after his siblings and parents had taken the plunge.

Apparently, many staff of the Lippo group are also devout and have been fervently praying for the success of the group’s projects. ‘In fact, they were the ones who suggested I put a phrase thanking God for the developments being fully taken up,’ reveals Mr Riady.

Whether or not through divine intervention, Lippo’s prominence in the real estate space in Singapore has been growing. It had started snapping up properties on choice parcels of land long before the property-price frenzy took hold. ‘When the Singapore government talked about the plans to remake Singapore, lots of people heard it,’ he says. ‘But we were the ones who believed in it, and took action early.’

Buying spree

This is the hallmark of a wise investor, he explains. ‘If you see something that you believe in, that other people have not seen yet, will you just wait there? No. You get so excited you just go out to the market to find friends and brokers and see if there are opportunities.’ Fortunately for him, at that time, there were few bidders and plenty of opportunities.

The group started its buying spree with Lippo’s head office at Shenton Way at the end of 2004. It was subsequently sold for more than double the $151 million purchase price at $350 million earlier this year. Mr Riady said signs were becoming clearer in 2005 and 2006 that the Singapore economy was in good shape, with more investors streaming in. Then it was full steam ahead for the group, which chalked up a buy every month.

The Lippo name came to the fore with high profile buys from local banks United Overseas Bank (UOB) and OCBC - which had to divest some of their attractive properties in order to comply with regulatory requirements. ‘Those were opportunities of a life-time, they were prime assets,’ Mr Riady recalls.

Overseas Union Enterprise (OUE) - bought in a joint venture with Malaysian tycoon Ananda Krishnan from UOB - owns Meritus Mandarin hotel, the office building Overseas Union House, and the adjacent Change Alley Aerial Plaza. Lippo also bought retailer Robinsons from OCBC.

The tally in Singapore so far: nine residential developments, five commercial properties and two retail brands, with a total value of $4 billion. Collectively, these assets are a perfect fit for a group which had decided to focus primarily on real estate and retailing after the 1997 Asian financial crisis hit. Before that, its businesses ran the gamut of telecommunications, manufacturing, banking and other sectors.

Mr Riady - who has just been named Ernst & Young Strategic Investment Entrepreneur of the Year - is not about to slow down. He hopes to increase the value of the group’s portfolio from US$7 billion in assets at present to US$20 billion within five years.

He does not think property prices here have reached their peak. ‘I think not for the next four to five years,’ he predicts. Ever the astute businessman, he’s already looking for new opportunities. Right now, he’s putting his money on properties that are almost completed.

‘The developments that are going to be completed in six months to one year’s time, there will be a lot of demand for them,’ he says, pointing out that people who have sold their homes in en-bloc sales will need places to stay. There’s also a dearth of soon-to-be completed projects.

His plan for his next few developments is to keep a few choice blocks for renting out. ‘For the launch of Sentosa Cove next month, the plan is to sell half and then keep the other half and rent out,’ he says, pointing to the booming demand for service apartments.

But what about the possible fallout from the US sub-prime mortgage crisis? It doesn’t seem to faze him; there’s still no problem borrowing from banks here, he says, and liquidity is abundant. ‘I think the Asian market fundamentals are still strong, governments have accumulated huge foreign exchange reserves and companies in Asia have healthy balance sheets.’

To him, Asia and the US seem worlds apart. ‘When I go to the US, people are talking about sub-prime,’ he says. ‘But in Asia, Hong Kong, China, Singapore, it’s business as usual, people are still looking for opportunities to buy.’ While transactions might slow in the next six to nine months, activity will return after that, he predicts.

Mr Riady’s other core business, retail, is also humming along nicely. In the latest development, Lippo’s Auric Pacific Group bought Delifrance - the chain of bakeries and cafes - from Prudential Asset Management Asia for $75.2 million earlier this month. Mr Riady said Delifrance is a ‘good, strong brand’ which would fit in with the food businesses Auric currently owns.

‘Auric is involved in food manufacturing and distribution, but we would like to go direct into food retailing, straight to the consumers,’ he said. Some of Auric’s brands include Sunshine bread and SCS butter as well as a 29.9 per cent stake in Sesdaq-listed Food Junction Limited which operates a chain of food courts, Food Junction and Food Culture, in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and China.

Delifrance’s network of 230 outlets spanning Asia is a good way for Auric to distribute its other food products which do not have access to other markets outside Singapore, Mr Riady explained. ‘We can sell SCS butter to Delifrance outlets in Hong Kong, for example, therefore using these overseas outlets to distribute our other food products,’ he said.

In terms of clothing and department stores, his vision for the group’s retail business is not just confined to Singapore but takes in the whole region, encompassing Indonesia, Hong Kong, China and Thailand. Growth for his retail business will be both organic and via acquisitions.

In China the group wants to grow organically, under the brand name Robbinz. ‘We have started from scratch, with two stores in Guangdong. Two more will be opened in Tianjin and Chengdu, with the Tianjin store spanning one million sq ft - the largest single department store in the whole of China.’

‘In the next three to five years, we plan to grow retailing from the present turnover of US$2 billion to US$5 billion for whole group.’

China is an important market for the group, but in the next 30-40 years. ‘If we want to become the top businessmen in the world, Singapore is a little small, and we cannot ignore China,’ says Mr Riady.

He plans to use Shanghai, rather than Hong Kong, as the base for Lippo’s China operations in the future. ‘If you want to be serious about the country, we have to be in that place, rather than operate from another territory,’ he says.

Meanwhile, closer to home, Mr. Riady is determined to shrug off the bad press arising from the ousting of long-time Robinson directors in November last year.

‘That episode was unexpected and I feel regretful over what has happened,’ he says. But he is resolute in not letting the saga overshadow his plans for the department store. ‘That was in the past. We now have better relationships with the current directors. Time will tell if I’m right or wrong. Let’s see the results of Robinsons over the next few years.’

As president of Lippo group, Mr. Riady’s ambit spans Singapore (where he is now based) plus Hong Kong and China. His attachment to Singapore goes way back; he studied here from the age of 10. In the years ahead, he sees Singapore becoming increasingly important for the group, which has shifted its head office here from Hong Kong. ‘We want to make Singapore the regional office, outside Indonesia,’ he says.

‘The government here has good and far-sighted vision,’ he adds. ‘Its plan to remake Singapore into a completely different city is very positive for the market. That gives us a lot of confidence.’

In fact, the group will be raising up to $587.4 million with the planned listing in Singapore of a real estate investment trust (Reit) based on its retail properties in Indonesia. The Lippo-Mapletree Indonesia Retail Trust (LMIR) will offer 645.5 million units at 78 to 91 cents a unit, according to the trust’s preliminary prospectus which has been lodged with the Monetary Authority of Singapore earlier this week.

Having made his first million in stock market investing while he was still studying for a finance degree at the University of Southern California, Mr. Riady was already subsumed into the family business - set up by his father Dr Mochtar Riady - two years before graduation.

He has since gone from working in various departments to heading the group’s business in Singapore and Hong Kong. His brother James takes charge of the Indonesian business. Given his success, it is surprising to hear him say, not without a tinge of regret, ‘actually if I had a choice I would have done something else, be a doctor or engineer’.

‘My dad didn’t say that I had to join the business, but in the early days, you already have the business, so somehow in university you just naturally major in business. You don’t think about it.’ Every school holiday would see him go back to Jakarta to work in different departments in the group’s banking business.

Mr Riady doesn’t want to impose the same routine on his children. ‘The next generation, let them go, let them choose what they like,’ he says amiably. What about succession? It’s too early to say who will take over the business, he replies. For now, he is letting his children pursue what they want. Two of them are studying in his alma mater, while the third is 16 years old and studying at the Singapore American School

‘It’s important that we tell them they don’t have to be in the family business. You see many people follow something that is not in their interest. Halfway through, they say that this is not what they want.’ He relates how he meets friends of his children and they ask him for advice on a career ‘that gives the most money and fame quickly’. But that may not be where their talents or interests lie, he says. ‘It’s important that you see what areas you like and can serve best. If you can serve it well, then the money will follow.’

Mr Riady’s Christian faith has helped inspire his philanthropy. Like most businessmen, making money, friends, entertainment, were top of the list. ‘Even family was ranked number 3 or 4, so God was nowhere on this list,’ he says. That changed 15 years ago.

Joy of giving

‘I have become less self-centred since becoming a Christian. The joy and satisfaction is much greater when you give. He relates his first act of giving, when he was still working in Hong Kong, where he attended a camp organised by a Christian organisation to help recovering drug addicts. ‘They only asked for US$3,000 from me, and of course I helped. There was no unwillingness or burden at all on my part, since it was only US$3,000.’

A few months later, they invited him to their Christmas party, and the people who attended the camp were all wearing new T-shirts. ‘A few hundred people were able to wear new T-shirts because of my gift. I had never experienced that before.’

Today, the Lippo group gives to a variety of causes, particularly education and religion.

It donated $21 million to NUS Business School in the form of $15 million to support the Mochtar Riady Building, and $6 million to create two distinguished professorships. The group gives to various churches and schools in Indonesia, Hong Kong, China, and Vietnam. ‘We set aside millions each year,’ he says proudly. ‘And every year it is increasing.’

Source : Business Times - 27 Oct 2007

EMail This Post

Specialists’ Centre project gets the green light

Go-ahead for several projects to ease space crunch.

OCBC Bank and its insurance subsidiary Great Eastern Holdings are poised to redevelop the Specialists’ Shopping Centre and Hotel Phoenix complex, together with shopping mall Orchard Emerald just across the road.

And when works are complete, the new project could have some 314,000 square feet of retail space, 66,000 sq ft of office space and 684 hotel rooms, judging by the two companies’ submissions to the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA).

URA said that provisional permission for the development of the two properties was given in August this year.

OCBC owns the Specialists’ Shopping Centre and Hotel Phoenix complex, while Great Eastern owns Orchard Emerald.

When contacted, OCBC said that it has ‘made certain submissions to the relevant authorities and received provisional approvals with regard to the possibility of redevelopment of the property’.

‘We are currently exploring several possibilities with regard to working with other developers in redeveloping the property,’ said Koh Ching Ching, head of group corporate communications at OCBC.

Market watchers said that there could be some sort of an underground link between the Specialists’ Shopping Centre and Hotel Phoenix complex and Orchard Emerald - beneath Orchard Road - in a bid to maximise the plot ratio.

URA’s quarterly update on projects under development also showed that there are extension works planned for OUB Centre at Raffles Place.

Provisional permission has been given for the addition of 301,000 sq ft of office space and 32,000 sq ft of retail space. The extension is expected to be up in 2011.

Approval was also given for the redevelopment of the former Robinson Towers and former International Factors Building on Robinson Road. Owned by Tuan Sing, the project will offer some 258,000 sq ft of gross floor area (GFA) for office use once it is completed in 2010.

JTC Corporation has also received permission for an office development at Fusionopolis Phase 2A at science hub one-north, which will have 161,000 sq ft of office space when it is up in 2010.

The new developments are expected to ease the current shortage of office space.

Rentals for office space in Singapore increased by 14.8 per cent in the third quarter of 2007, compared to 11 per cent in the second quarter, URA’s data shows. Rents have climbed some 40.7 per cent since the start of the year.

As at the end of the third quarter of 2007, there was a total supply of 6.6 million sq ft of GFA of office space from projects in the pipeline - from both government and private land sources - which are expected to be completed between the fourth quarter of 2007 and 2010, URA said.

‘More supply will also come from the government land sales sites which were recently awarded or launched for sale,’ URA said.

There was also a total supply of some 4.1 million sq ft of business park space from projects in the pipeline as at end-September 2007, which will be completed by 2010, URA said.

URA’s data also showed that it has given provisional permission for a 352-room hotel development at Telok Blangah Road to Fiesta Development Pte Ltd. The site, which previously housed Citiport Centre, was sold in a collective sale.

Source : Business Times - 27 Oct 2007

EMail This Post

UOL’s Q3 profit soars 105%

HOTEL and property group UOL said net profit for the third quarter of 2007 increased by 105 per cent to $64.5 million from $31.5 million a year ago, boosted by higher income from hotel operations, property investment, property development and associated companies, in addition to an exceptional gain.

Revenue in the third quarter increased 11 per cent to $166.7 million, largely from the improved performance of the group’s hotels in Singapore, Australia and Vietnam. Revenue from property development was also higher with the progressive recognition of revenue from the sale of units in projects like Pavilion 11, Southbank, Regency at Tiong Bahru and Duchess Residences.

Exceptional items included the recognition in the income statement of negative goodwill arising from the acquisition of a subsidiary company, UOL said.

Earnings per share rose to 8.11 cents from 3.97 cents.

Group net profit for the nine months ended September 2007 increased to $426.8 million from $107.7 million a year ago.

UOL’s listed unit, Hotel Plaza, reported net profit of $14.1 million in the third quarter of 2007, up from $6.0 million in the previous period.

Hotel Plaza also announced a renounceable non-underwritten rights issue of up to 200 million new shares at an issue price of $1.70 for each rights share. The rights shares will be issued on the basis of one rights share for every two existing shares held.

The issue price represents a discount of approximately 20 per cent to the closing share price of Hotel Plaza shares yesterday.

The net proceeds of the rights issue are expected to be about $339.7 million.

Hotel Plaza said it intends to utilise the net proceeds to partially fund, up to $180 million, the acquisition and development of a land parcel at Upper Pickering Street. The balance will be used to repay advances from parent UOL.

Source : Business Times - 27 Oct 2007

EMail This Post

CapitaLand Q3 net more than doubles to $563.9m

Boost from fair-value and portfolio gains and China devt projects.

CAPITALAND said yesterday that its net profit for the third quarter ended Sept 30 more than doubled from $272.41 million a year ago to $563.93 million, driven by fair value gains from its investment properties, portfolio gains and higher sales of development projects in China.

Related links:Click here for Capitaland’s news releaseFinancial statementsPresentation slidesThe Ascott Group’s news releaseFinancial resultsPresentation slidesPresentation slides

Its revenue for the quarter jumped 24.6 per cent to $895.77 million, particularly bolstered by sales from its China development projects and the revenue from Raffles City Shanghai.

These gains helped to offset the lower fee-based income, lower rental income due to the divestment of Temasek Tower in April and the deconsolidation of revenue from Ascott Residence Trust (ART), following the reduction of the group’s beneficial interest in ART to 37.5 per cent with effect from March this year.

For the first nine months of this year, CapitaLand’s net profit more than tripled from a restated $559.15 million to $2.08 billion on the back of a 14.9 per cent year-on-year increase in revenue to $2.47 billion.

Its overseas revenue constitutes some 71.7 per cent of the group’s revenue, up from 66.2 per cent a year ago as contributions from its China operations increased.

CapitaLand achieved a record Q3 earnings before interest and tax (Ebit) of $758.6 million, up from a restated $565.2 million.

‘The group continues to see healthy and sustainable growth prospects in Asia and other new markets,’ CapitaLand group chairman Richard Hu said.

‘Given CapitaLand’s substantial financial capacity and capital efficient business model, the group is in a good position to benefit from Asia’s positive growth,’ he added.

Year-to-date, CapitaLand has committed investments of over $8 billion in new businesses and new geographies, CapitaLand group president and chief executive officer Liew Mun Leong said.

He noted that while the group’s core markets of Singapore, China and Australia continue to post stellar results, the group continues to expand its footprint in growth markets of Vietnam, the Gulf Cooperation Council region (GCC) and India.

But the profit received from its associates for the third quarter slumped 82.8 per cent to $35.27 million.

CapitaLand’s subsidiary, The Ascott Group, saw net profit for the third quarter slip 41 per cent from a year back to $34 million as it received lower portfolio gains and incurred higher expenses for assets under development.

But its revenue for the quarter grew 17 per cent year-on-year to $116.55 million, with gains mainly coming from its serviced residences in Europe, North Asia, Singapore and South-east Asia.

Source : Business Times - 27 Oct 2007

Page: 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... 50
For More Recommended Real Estate Books, Click SgHousing's Recomended Books