Category Archives: Office / Retail / Industrial

313@somerset draws more people than expected

ORCHARD Road newcomer 313@somerset has received a higher than expected nine million visitors since it opened three months ago, the mall’s owner, Lend Lease Group, said yesterday.

Dandy, just dandy: The new Orchard Road mall gets about 100,000 visitors a day, up from a forecast of 60,000-70,000

‘When we first did the research three years ago, we were expecting something like 60,000-70,000 (visitors) a day. But now, the average is about 100,000 a day,’ said Ooi Eng Peng, executive officer for retail and investment management in Asia for Australia-based Lend Lease.

The 301,000 square foot mall is fully leased at ‘market rents’. Lend Lease won the retail site above Somerset MRT station in a government tender in 2006 with its top bid of $617.2 million. The mall had its official opening yesterday and now Lend Lease is on the lookout for more sites.

‘We are very committed to Singapore and we hope we can get more land to build retail malls here,’ said Mr Ooi. ‘But the market landscape is quite competitive, everybody is trying (to get more land).’

Lend Lease, in particular, hopes to grow its presence in the suburban retail space, said Mr Ooi: ‘If you look at our model around the world, we are very much focused on suburban malls.’

In Singapore, Lend Lease also has Parkway Parade Shopping Mall in its retail portfolio. But the company is not placing all its bets on the retail scene here – it also has plans to grow into other regional markets.

‘For the next three years . . . we are very focused on three countries – China, Malaysia and Singapore,’ said Mr Ooi. ‘Singapore retail is very competitive because retail malls here are very tightly held. And China is a very big market for us. We are not rushing there but with our skills in retail, hopefully we can get some advantage in China.’

Lend Lease hopes to have a retail presence in China by the end of this year. And in Malaysia, Lend Lease has teamed up with property group SP Setia to build a RM750 million (S$311 million) retail mall in Setia City, in the Setia Alam township in Shah Alam.

Source : Business Times – 4 Mar 2010

Big boys go looking for swank, new offices

The upswing in office leasing deals that started around July last year shows no signs of letting up. The healthy demand has persuaded some property consultants that rents for the best quality space in Singapore’s financial district could be close to their bottom and poised to perk up.

The Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) is understood to have inked a lease for about 160,000 square feet at Mapletree Business City on Pasir Panjang Road.

This is said to be spread over six floors in the 18-storey office tower of the development, which is expected to receive Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) soon. With IDA secured as a tenant, the tower’s 436,300 sq ft net lettable space is now fully leased, BT understands. The project is near Labrador Park MRT Station, which opens next year.

IDA is expected to move out of Suntec City, where its lease is said to be expiring next year.

Barclays Capital, which has leased 100,000 sq ft at Marina Bay Financial Centre’s Tower 2, is said to be close to inking a deal for another 250,000 sq ft in the same tower, which is expected to receive TOP next quarter. The bank is expected to exit from Atrium @ Orchard.

Barclays also occupies about 100,000 sq ft at One Raffles Quay’s South Tower and its retail bank has a technology centre at Eightrium @ Changi Business Park. The bank’s headcount in Singapore has increased from just several hundred people in 2004 to over 3,500 currently. Of these, about 2,000 are employed at Barclays Capital Global Support Hub.

As new office projects are rolled out, big tenants such as banks are being offered more choices. For instance, ANZ, which is currently at OUB Centre at 1 Raffles Place, is said to be deciding whether to move to the new tower being built in the same development, or to Ocean Financial Centre along Collyer Quay.

The latter, a 43-storey development under construction that will have about 850,000 sq ft net lettable area, is also said to have attracted some tenants from Ocean Towers next door. These include Ifast, Verizon Communications and DMG & Partners Securities.

Other tenants at Ocean Financial Centre are said to include Stamford Law Corporation, which is currently in Republic Plaza, and serviced office operator The Executive Centre.

Colliers International executive director Calvin Yeo said: ‘We are starting to see our clients, who are MNCs including financial institutions, planning for expansion as their existing leases approach expiry.’

While some of the initial buzz in the office leasing market was a game of musical chairs involving relocating from older buildings to newer properties, the market is now starting to move beyond replacement demand to actual expansion or new demand, say market watchers.

‘We’re seeing quite a few law firms from Europe coming to Singapore as well as existing law firms in Singapore expanding,’ says Jones Lang LaSalle regional director and head of markets Chris Archibold.

‘Insurance companies are starting to look at headcount growth of about 5 per cent this year followed by a further 5-10 per cent per annum for the next few years. Banks are boosting their headcount, not just for private banking but across the board. We’re seeing a number of them bringing high-end back-office support functions again to Singapore,’ he added.

Mr Archibold reckons that for international standard prime Grade A offices in the Raffles Place and Marina Bay area, rents will probably bottom out at their current levels of about $8 psf a month for smaller occupiers and $7 psf for bigger occupiers. These levels are about 58 per cent below the Q3 2008 peak figures. ‘However, rents for A- and B+ grade offices may still decline a few per cent from current levels though the drop should end by Q4 2010.’

Another office property consultant also said that office landlords are more confident and not prepared to discount rents any further. ‘But older buildings may relatively underperform and that means rentals in even good-quality buildings may not rebound quickly until space availability in new developments tightens,’ he added.

Others are more optimistic. UBS has predicted a 30 per cent jump in the average monthly Grade A office rental value from $8.10 psf at the end of last year to $10.60 psf at end-2010, citing growth in demand. The impact of new office completions is not likely to be as grave as feared earlier since some one million sq ft of existing office stock is expected to be removed in 2010-2011 for conversion to residential use.

Source : Business Times – 3 Mar 2010