Category Archives: Office / Retail / Industrial

Clementi Mall a potential shopping hub

CLEMENTI Mall’s potential as a busy shopping hub and its ability to generate recurring income were key reasons for the bullish bid from Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) and its joint venture partners.

SPH chief executive Alan Chan told a briefing yesterday that the team behind the winning $541.9 million tender based its bid on rents the mall could achieve beyond the first rental cycle.

Mr Chan said the bidding team was confident of achieving rents of top suburban malls and that the mall will enjoy capital appreciation similar to other retail properties in land-scarce Singapore.

‘Due to scarcity of land and growing population, prospect for capital appreciation is positive,’ he added.

Times Properties owns 60 per cent of the joint venture CM Domain; NTUC Income and NTUC FairPrice hold 20 per cent stakes. The Housing Board awarded the shopping centre site to it yesterday.

Some analysts were taken aback when bids for the tender of the 99-year leasehold mall at the junction of Commonwealth Avenue West and Clementi Avenue 3 were revealed last week.

CM Domain’s bullish offer was nearly 42 per cent above the second-highest bid of $382 million from a joint venture between Keppel Land’s Alpha Investment Partners and Guthrie.

SPH shares reacted by sliding 3.9 per cent the next day, but have since regained some ground. The company noted that the value of its Paragon investment in Orchard Road had increased at a compounded annual growth rate of 8 per cent since it was acquired in 1997. Some market watchers at the time had thought that the price paid for the shopping mall in Orchard Road was on the high side.

Mr Chan said that Clementi Mall has ‘a unique opportunity to be the anchor attraction’ in the area, adding that already ‘300 interested tenants have registered their interest’. SPH was also on the lookout for recurrent revenue streams and felt this was a great opportunity. The company is confident of achieving similar yields as those achieved by the top suburban malls and aims to open the mall by the first half of 2011.

Mr Chan clarified that the total cost of the mall would come under $3,000 psf of retail net floor area – less than analyst estimates – as the fit-out will be less than $40 million, subject to final negotiations with contractors. CM Domain needs to fit out the mall as the HDB is building only the shell structure. HDB will hand over the structure by next August.

An SPH statement also released yesterday said the offer price was ‘arrived at after considering the economic potential of the property based on stabilised operations after rental renewal cycle and enhancing yield over time’. It said that factors such as the expected net lettable area, rental rates and property yields, market positioning and trade and tenant mix were taken into account.

Chesterton Suntec International’s research and consultancy director Colin Tan said yesterday the bids by other players in the market show that they were perhaps not as optimistic.

The joint venture’s cash-rich partners also likely had allowed it to bid so bullishly, he added.

Ngee Ann Polytechnic real estate lecturer Nicholas Mak noted that it was usual for bidders to bid on a property’s potential. ‘If someone sees a gem stone in the rough, they could bid bullishly for it as they see the potential,’ he said. ‘If the mall can achieve 5 to 6 per cent net yield, it’s pretty decent.’

He pointed out that the mall does not have immediate competition and will have a large catchment of shoppers from the Holland, Bukit Timah and West Coast areas. The site, which has direct links to the Clementi MRT station, is part of a larger HDB project comprising two 40-storey blocks of flats, a carpark, roof garden and a bus interchange. The mall will occupy basement one, the third and fourth levels and part of the fifth floor. Total gross floor area is about 25,000 sq m while the net floor area is up to 18,000 sq m.

Mr Chan said the mall will be driven by a strong retail team from SPH, NTUC FairPrice and Income – all with a proven track record in suburban malls.

The purchase will be financed through internal funds with gearing for yield enhancement, and will not have an impact on dividends, he said.

SPH shares closed two cents down at $3.77 yesterday.

Source : Straits Times – 18 Nov 2009

S’pore offices 3rd most expensive in Asia

Slowdown in fall in rents in Q3 attributed to confidence in economic recovery

OFFICE space in Singapore was the third most expensive in the region in the third quarter, as the fall in rents slowed significantly, a Colliers International survey has found.

‘Among all Asia-Pacific cities, Singapore registered the most distinct deceleration in office rental declines,’ said the firm’s director of research and advisory, Tay Huey Ying.

She attributed this to growing confidence in economic recovery, which ‘lifted the gloom that had been pervading the office property market since Q4 2008′.

The Colliers survey, which covers 25 Asia-Pacific cities quarterly, found Singapore’s office rents to be the region’s third most expensive in Q3, after Tokyo and Hong Kong.

The average monthly Grade A rent in the Central Business District (CBD) dipped 6.4 per cent quarter-on-quarter in Q3, after a steep 26.1 per cent slide in Q2. The average gross office rental in the CBD in Q3 was $6.31 per square foot.

Enquiries about new space rose in Q3 as some occupiers began searching for larger and better premises.

One of those that has already upgraded is insurer AIG, which relocated from the CBD fringe to 78 Shenton South Tower. And at Mapletree Anson, more than 100,000 sq ft of space has been leased to companies such as AON, QBE and Sumitomo Corporation, which are relocating from Singapore Land Tower, OCBC Centre and Equity Plaza respectively. Elsewhere, Servcorp has committed to one floor at Marina Bay Financial Centre in the CBD for seven years.

The average occupancy rate of prime office space in the CBD fell 2.1 percentage points from a quarter ago to 92.2 per cent in Q3 as several new buildings, including Mapletree Anson and 71 Robinson, were completed.

But there could be further downward pressure on rents as demand for Grade A office space here is unlikely to grow in the short term, while supply is set to rise with the completion of major projects such as Twenty Anson and the Straits Trading Building.

Ms Tay said that she expects office rents to fall as much as 5 per cent in Q4, taking the full-year contraction to 48 per cent.

Source : Business Times – 18 Nov 2009