PM Lee pledges to keep housing affordable

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Published February 2, 2011

PM Lee pledges to keep housing affordable
Government to do more to stabilise the market should it become necessary

By JOYCE HOOI

(SINGAPORE) The government will do more to stabilise the property market should the occasion call for it, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said in his Chinese New Year address this year.

'The government has acted to curb speculation and cool the property market. We will do more to stabilise the market if and when this becomes necessary,' he said yesterday.

'We will keep housing affordable to Singaporeans, especially public housing. At the same time, in a prospering economy, home owners should see their properties appreciating in value over the long term.'

The government had recently announced new rules that would raise the seller's stamp duty on properties to as much as 16 per cent of the sale price if the home is sold within a year, and lower the limit that banks can lend to home buyers for a second property to 60 per cent of the property's value.

On the immigration front, while the prime minister acknowledged the 'sense of dislocation and unfamiliarity' felt by some Singaporeans, he stressed the need to keep up with the world or face stagnation and decline.

'We need immigrants to reinforce our ranks, but we must maintain a clear majority of local-born Singaporeans who set the tone of our society, and uphold our core values and ethos.

'We are managing the inflow of foreigners who want to live and work here. Many want to become permanent residents and new citizens, but we will only select those who can add value to Singapore.'

He pointed out that last year, the nation's total fertility rate fell to an all-time low of 1.16. The Chinese fared worse than the national average, at 1.02, but the decrease in the fertility rate was observed across the board.

'It could have been because of the Year of the Tiger, or perhaps the economic uncertainties the year before, in 2009. Whatever the reasons, I hope more couples will start or add to their families in the Year of the Rabbit,' said the prime minister.

'Chinese New Year is the time for families to come together in celebration, and more babies can only mean more joy in the years to come.'

As part of the effort to ensure the longevity of values and culture, the nation's mother tongues needs to be kept alive, he said.

'We regularly update and improve the teaching of mother tongue languages in our schools, to keep it current and effective.

'Hence, the recent measures announced by the Ministry of Education, which will help a new generation to use their mother tongue languages freely in a changing language environment.'


Source: www.businesstimes.com.sg

Developer shoots for moon on Capitol site but braces for chill

Top Print Edition Stories
Published February 2, 2011

Developer shoots for moon on Capitol site but braces for chill

By KALPANA RASHIWALA

(SINGAPORE) The $750 million mixed development project that will come up on the Capitol site will include some 60-70 luxury apartments which are expected to be launched in the third or fourth quarter of this year.

The consortium developing the project has secured debt financing from OCBC. Market watchers reckon the project's gearing ratio could be about 70 per cent.

Internal rates of return will be 'very fantastic... more than the teens', Pua Seck Guan, CEO of Perennial Real Estate Pte Ltd, told reporters yesterday. He and his co-investors hold a 40 per cent stake in the consortium developing the retail/theatre, hotel and residential project that will be developed on the Capitol site.

The historic Capitol Theatre, Capitol Building and Stamford House will be conserved and restored for adaptive re-use while a new 15-storey structure will be built on the existing Capitol Centre site.

The other members of the consortium - Chesham Properties (controlled by members of the Kwee family who own Pontiac Land Group) and Sukmawati Widjaja's Top Global - each hold a 30 per cent stake.

Mr Pua said the consortium is in 'a very comfortable position' with regard to its breakeven costs for all components of the project, given the competitive price it paid for the site - $250 million or nearly $461 per square foot per plot ratio.

'We can make very good money from this project, but it's not just about making money. We must do justice to this project,' he said.

The final pricing for the apartments, which are slated for launch later this year, will depend on market conditions prevailing at the time. For now, the pricing expectation has been clipped to about $2,500-3,000 per square foot from an initial range of $3,000-3,500 psf following the introduction of the Jan 13 property cooling measures, according to Hano Maeleo, CEO of Top Global.

The apartments will range from 1,200 sq ft to over 2,000 sq ft and likely comprise two- to four-bedroom units. They will be housed on the third to 15th levels of the building that will be built on the current location of Capitol Centre.

Levels one and two, and basements one and two, of the same building will house retail space. The existing street between Capitol Theatre and Stamford House/Capitol Building will be transformed into a glass-covered pedestrianised galleria lined with eateries.

There will also be an underground mall link to City Hall MRT Station, and retail space on the ground floors of Capitol Building and Stamford House.

The development will have at least eight flagship retail and 30 F&B stores, and at least 40 per cent of total retail space in the project will be dedicated to new-to-market brands, revealed Mr Kwee Liong Seen, director of Chesham Properties.

Said Mr Pua: 'We will be different because this site is unique and deserves a lot of our careful attention and effort to make it different. So if you are just another Bugis Junction, I think we will fail and we will not have done this site justice.'

The $750 million total development cost includes the land price of $250 million, construction costs (inclusive of at least $30 million to restore Capitol Theatre) and the cost of fitting out a luxury hotel with about 200 rooms on the second to fourth levels of the four-storey Capitol Building and Stamford House.

A building agreement was signed yesterday between the consortium members and the Singapore government, which sold the Capitol site to the consortium in 99-year leasehold tenure.

Capitol Theatre will be restored and upgraded into a single-screen cinema with about 800 seats and alternate as a performance theatre. Ground level access will enable the hosting of a wide range of activities from first-run screenings to red carpet movie premieres, to in-house theatre and dance productions.

The project is slated for completion by end-2014.

Richard Meier, managing partner of the eponymous US firm that is the design and concept architect, said: 'The new structure will complement the existing historical architecture, creating a new civic centre that will look to the future while it is respectful of the past.'

The consortium's bid was selected following a dual-envelope tender last year, which drew 14 bids. The winning consortium offered the highest land price among the three bidders that were shortlisted based on their concept proposals.



Source: /www.businesstimes.com.sg

UE sells UE Print Media Hub for $51m

Published February 1, 2011


UE sells UE Print Media Hub for $51m

By UMA SHANKARI

PROPERTY and construction group United Engineers (UE) has sold one of its industrial properties, UE Print Media Hub, for $51 million.

The project was bought by Singapore-based Crescendas Group, which is involved in a diversified range of businesses including real estate, manufacturing, and hospitality.

Crescendas said that it acquired UE Print Media Hub for long-term investment. The property is currently 100 per cent occupied.

For UE, the divestment is fully in line with the group's ongoing strategy to streamline its businesses, it said yesterday.

This is the second industrial property UE has sold in the last five years. In December 2006, the group sold off UE Tech Park, a warehouse complex at Pandan Crescent, for $115 million.

UE Print Media Hub, located at Tai Seng Avenue, is a five-storey industrial building developed and constructed by UE.

It received its temporary occupation permit in June 2007 and has a net lettable area of about 254,752 sq ft on a site area of 131,577 sq ft.

The development was architecturally designed and spatially structured to house the supply chain of the print-and-media industry so that industrial linkages and business efficiency can be maximised, UE said.

The company added that the sale of UE Print Media Hub will further help to consolidate the group's portfolio of commercial property assets.

The portfolio includes the group's flagship building UE Square in Clemenceau Avenue; UE BizHub Central in Ang Mo Kio; and upcoming developments such as UE BizHub East in Changi Business Park and a mixed development comprising of a hotel and a shopping mall in the one- north research hub.

UE shares lost five cents to close at $2.50 yesterday.


Source: www.businesstimes.com.sg

Robin Star sold to Sing Holdings

SINGAPORE - Boutique development Robin Star has been sold to high-end property developer Sing Holdings for $47 million, according to Credo Real Estate which brokered the deal.

Located at Robin Road, off Bukit Timah Road, the 10-unit property was sold by private treaty, said Ms Yong Choon Fah, executive director of Credo Real Estate.

Robin Star which has a land area of about 24,360 sq ft has been zoned for residential development of up to a gross plot ratio of 1.4 and has an allowable height of up to five storeys.

The total gross floor area (GFA) is about 37,515 sq ft based on a gross plot ratio of 1.4 with an additional 10 per cent for balconies.

The site may yield about 36 apartment units with an average size of 1,000 sq ft each, depending on the layout, configuration and development charge (DC).

The DCs payable are estimated at $5.28 million for the development of the site, said Ms Yong. "This translates to a land rate of approximately $1,393 per sq ft (psf) on potential GFA after factoring DC," she said, adding that the rate is similar to Serene House's $1,388 psf per plot ratio.

With the purchase of Robin Star, Sing Holdings can lower the average cost of the new development by incorporating the adjoining Robin Court and 1 Robin Drive, said Credo Real Estate.

Sing Holdings bought Robin Court and 1 Robin Drive for $77.33 million in a hotly contested en-bloc exercise back in September last year. The sale of both properties was also handled by Credo Real Estate.

Located in the prestigious District 10, Robin Star is walking distance away from renowned schools such as The Singapore Chinese Girl's School, Anglo-Chinese School (Barker) and the Chinese International School.

The Stevens Road MRT Station, which is expected to be fully operational in 2015, is less than 250m away from the site, said Credo Real Estate. Jo-Ann Huang



by Jo-Ann Huang Limin
05:55 AM Jan 31, 2011

Source: www.todayonline.com

HDB resale prices up 2.5% in Q4 2010

Published January 29, 2011

HDB resale prices up 2.5% in Q4 2010
Up to 22,000 new flats may be offered under the build-to-order system

By UMA SHANKARI

HDB resale prices rose by 2.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2010 - a tad higher than the 2.4 per cent climb estimated earlier this month - even as the number of deals and the cash-over-valuation (COV) amounts commanded by flats fell.

Data from the Housing & Development Board (HDB) released yesterday showed that the official resale price index climbed to yet another new high in Q4 2010. For the whole of 2010, HDB resale prices rose by 14.1 per cent.

Prices rose even as the median COV amount among all resale transactions fell by $7,000 (or 23 per cent) from $30,000 in Q3 2010 to $23,000 in Q4 2010.

But prices still rose as valuations of most types of HDB flats climbed in Q4, analysts said.

The number of resale transactions fell by about 21 per cent, from 8,205 in Q3 2010 to 6,454 in Q4 2010. The total number of resale transactions in 2010 fell to 32,257, a decline of 13 per cent over 2009's volume.

Analysts said that HDB flat valuations still increased in Q4 2010, in spite of a number of cooling measures introduced in August 2010, as there is usually a lag time of about six to eight weeks before price corrections would align with the actual sentiment in the market.

But resale prices could soon plateau, PropNex chief executive Mohamed Ismail said.

HDB's Q4 2010 data shows that median resale prices of 3-room, 4-room, 5-room and executive flats stood at $300,000, $385,000, $460,000 and $548,000 respectively, he said.

But PropNex's in-house data for deals done in January shows median resale prices of $298,000, $393,000, $466,000 and $538,000 respectively - a 1.8 per cent drop to 2.1 per cent increase from Q4 2010.

'It must also be highlighted that some of our data reflects transactions that took place before the additional cooling measures announced on Jan 13, 2011,' added Mr Mohd Ismail. 'Feedback from the ground has indicated that there is less movement among the current HDB dwellers due to the (new) 60 per cent loan-to-value (LTV) cap. Therefore, it is possible to see a further dip, though not drastic one, for median COVs and sales volume in Q1 2011.'

HDB plans to offer up to 22,000 new flats under the build-to-order (BTO) system if demand is sustained.

The BTO supply will also be supplemented by the upcoming supply of flats under the design, build & sell scheme (DBSS) and the executive condominium (EC) housing scheme. Four more EC developments in Punggol, Pasir Ris, Bukit Panjang and Tampines will be launched for sale in the coming months by private developers.


Source: www.businesstimes.com.sg

The charge of the bungalows brigade

Published January 29, 2011

The charge of the bungalows brigade
URA's sub-index for detached homes soars 37.6%, boosting overall index's gain to 17.6%

By KALPANA RASHIWALA

IN a year fuelled by strong liquidity and economic growth, bungalows were the stars that led the surge in the Singapore property market in 2010. Latest data from the Urban Redevelopment Authority shows that its price index for landed homes climbed 30.8 per cent last year. The sub-index for detached houses, or bungalows, soared 37.6 per cent against a 5.6 per cent rise in 2009.

The index for non-landed private homes rose 14 per cent last year, following a 0.5 per cent gain in 2009. The biggest price hike in 2010 in this segment was for completed non-landed homes in Core Central Region, which climbed 19.5 per cent last year, although prices of uncompleted units in the same region rose at a much slower rate of 10.6 per cent in 2010.

URA's overall price index for private homes swelled 17.6 per cent last year, after posting a 1.8 per cent rise in 2009. It rose 2.7 per cent quarter on quarter in Q4 2010.

Knight Frank chairman Tan Tiong Cheng observed that the index has appreciated by about 65 per cent over the past five years, translating to an average annual increase of 13 per cent. 'This is a very significant increase considering that we had the biggest financial crisis during this period,' he added. Developers sold a record 16,292 private homes (excluding executive condos) last year, up 10.9 per cent from 2009 and busting the previous high of 14,811 units in 2007.

The other sectors of the property market also saw sharp turnarounds last year, according to the latest URA numbers. For instance, the office price index rose 18.9 per cent in 2010, against a 16.4 per cent drop in 2009. Flatted factory and warehouse prices, too, shot up 23.7 per cent last year, compared with respective declines of 14.2 per cent and 16 per cent in 2009.

Looking ahead, market watchers expect some wind to be taken out of the residential sector following the latest property cooling measures. Investors are channelling their money to the commercial and industrial property segments, which were not the target of the cooling measures announced on Jan 13.

DTZ's SE Asia research head Chua Chor Hoon is predicting a minus 5 per cent to 0 per cent change in URA's overall private home price index this year. Others are more sanguine. Colliers International director of research and advisory Tay Huey Ying forecasts a 5-8 per cent rise with the increase led by mid and high-end properties.

Prices of mass market homes are expected to stay relatively unchanged or ease by up to 2 per cent given the ample new supply in this segment, she said.

As for the landed segment, RealStar Premier Property managing director William Wong, who had earlier predicted an average 10 per cent rise this year in Good Class Bungalow (GCB) prices - the creme de la creme of landed homes on mainland Singapore, now expects prices to hold in 2011.

'Transaction volumes are expected to fall 20-30 per cent over the next 3-6 months. Owners are not prepared to adjust prices downwards while buyers are waiting for prices to go down. This may not happen.'

Another bungalow specialist, KH Tan, managing director of Newsman Realty, said that some sellers have started to withdraw GCBs from the market following the latest cooling measures as they would face longer holding periods on any replacement bungalows they may purchase because of the hikes in seller's stamp duties.

Nevertheless, he predicts an increase of about 10 per cent in GCB prices this year, following last year's appreciation of about 35 per cent, because of the limited stock of GCBs, wealth effect from new ultra high net worth citizens and low interest rates. On Sentosa Cove, where foreigners may buy landed homes, the price gain this year could be higher, about 15 per cent, as 'there are still a lot of rich Chinese foreigners coming in'. Bungalow prices on Sentosa climbed 30 per cent last year on average, he estimated.

On URA's numbers, CB Richard Ellis executive director Li Hiaw Ho observed that while the price index for uncompleted non-landed homes in Outside Central Region (where mass-market condos are located) has surpassed the peak in Q2 2008 by 19.1 per cent, the equivalent index for Core Central Region (which covers the traditional prime districts, financial district and Sentosa Cove) is still 7.1 per cent below its Q1 2008 high.

Meanwhile, the National University of Singapore's Singapore Residential Price Index (SRPI) flash estimate shows that prices of completed non-landed private homes in Singapore's Central region (postal districts 1-4 and 9-11) appreciated 7.8 per cent last year, while the sub-index for the Non-Central region rose 15 per cent. As a result, the overall SRPI increased 11.9 per cent in 2010. In 2009, the three indices posted respective gains of 27.3 per cent, 19.5 per cent and 22.2 per cent.

URA's data showed that 10,399 private homes were completed last year - close to the 10,488 units in 2009 and 10,122 units in 2008. The overall private residential rental index rose 17.9 per cent last year, a sharp reversal from the 14.6 per cent slide in 2009.

Savills Singapore director for residential leasing Patrick Lai said that overall residential rents may increase a further 5 per cent in 2011. 'We believe that the rental rates for super high-end condominiums and GCBs will remain robust and are likely to increase by 6-10 per cent as more top executives relocate to Singapore.

'For example, we have just leased out a 2,852 square foot unit at The Orchard Residences for $20,000 per month. We also recently handled the leasing of a GCB in the Peirce Villas/Swettenham Road neighbourhood for $40,000-45,000 per month.'


Source: www.businesstimes.com.sg

DBSS site at Clementi launched for sale

By UMA SHANKARI

THE Housing and Development Board (HDB) has launched a site at Clementi Avenue 4 for sale under its design, build and sell scheme (DBSS).

An estimated 770 flats can be built on the plot, which has a site area of 235,800 square feet and a maximum allowable gross floor area of 825,300 sq ft. The site carries a lease term of 103 years (including a four-year construction period).

Analysts expect a top bid in the range of $200-$250 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr) for the plot. This translates to an overall land cost of $165 million to $206 million.

'This is one of the more attractive sites offered under the DBSS scheme,' said Nicholas Mak, head of research at SLP International. 'It is close to Clementi MRT station. Clementi New Town is also becoming more vibrant, with new projects such as The Clementi Mall.'

While buying sentiment has significantly moderated in both the public and private housing sectors, participation from developers for this site is likely to be motivated by the project's physical strengths and opportunities, said Ong Kah Seng, Cushman & Wakefield senior manager of Asia-Pacific research.

'This site is likely to see moderate interest from developers, who are still interested in providing homes for this specific segment although generally, home-buying sentiments are expected to remain cautious in the months ahead,' Mr Ong said.

The last site offered for sale under the DBSS scheme, at Yuan Ching Road in Jurong, drew a top bid of $192 psf ppr. Six bids were submitted for the site.

The tender for this site will close at noon on March 8, 2011.

Last year, HDB sold five land parcels for DBSS development in Yishun, Bedok, Tampines, Hougang and Jurong West. These five land parcels will yield about 3,000 DBSS flats, and this pipeline supply will come on-stream progressively in 2011.

Another DBSS site at Pasir Ris Central, with an estimated yield of 460 units, will be launched for tender in March. More sites for DBSS development will be made available if there is sustained demand, HDB added.

Flats sold under DBSS are offered to buyers under HDB's eligibility conditions. But the developers who buy such sites have some flexibility in designing, pricing and selling the flats.


Source; www.businesstimes.com.sg