Category Archives: Office / Retail / Industrial

Singapore’s office rental market expected to go up

Singapore’s office rental market is on the rebound after bottoming out in the last quarter of 2012, according to Cushman & Wakefield.

In its quarterly office market report, the real estate firm said rents are on the rise and vacancies are drying up, though not all office buildings are sharing the comeback.

Cushman & Wakefield’s latest office market report showed that the average rent in prime Grade A locations was up 4.2 per cent in the second quarter, from a quarter earlier, hitting S$9.03 a square foot per month.

That was up from S$8.99 per square foot per month in the first quarter of this year.

Sigrid Zialcita, managing director of research for the Asia Pacific at Cushman & Wakefield, said: “We are expecting rents to go up across the board on the back of very solid demand.

“We’re not going to see the spikes we’ve seen in the 2007-2008 time frame, where rents went as high as S$18-S$19 a foot.”

The report showed that all the CBD submarkets saw average rents appreciate, with Marina Bay and Shenton Way seeing a 9 per cent rise in rents. In the fringe area, Orchard Road’s average rents moved up by around 4.6 per cent quarter-on-quarter.

The average rent in the suburban submarket rose slightly — by 1.3 per cent quarter-on-quarter — to S$5.64 psf per month.

Vacancy rates for Grade A office space is also improving — dropping to 3.7 per cent in the second quarter from 5.0 per cent in the first quarter.

Vacancies at Marina Bay shrank to 3.6 per cent in Q2, from 5.6 per cent a quarter ago and 12.1 per cent a year ago. Raffles Place had an overall vacancy rate of 5.5 per cent, while Shenton Way’s vacancy rate stood at 4.9 per cent.

Experts said diversity in the tenant pool has helped fill the office space.

“Long gone are purely financial institutions,” said Desmond Sim, associate director of CBRE Research. “You have complimentary services like insurance, you’ve got legal all coming in to take up Grade A stock within Marina Bay and Raffles Place.”

Also helping the office rental market is the limited new supply coming to the market.

Mr Sim said: “This year, we have the Asia Square Tower II coming on stream. Next year, we have CapitaGreen that will come on stream. Then we actually have a break of no Grade A product coming in 2015.

“So if someone is trying to take advantage of the current low Grade A rents, they might realize the Grade A stock coming online is quite limited.”

One place where vacancies are not falling is in the suburbs, where vacancies are expected to rise to over 8 per cent through 2014.

The suburban vacancy rate was 2.7 per cent in 2012, and is expected to rise to 6.0 per cent this year and hit 8.2 per cent in 2014.

Sigrid Zialcita said: “In the suburbs, we’re going to see some massive projects delivered and add space, but again we don’t think it’s a huge concern for the market because the take up we’ve seen has been brisk, and going forward we see very healthy leasing occurring in this properties.”

There will be more options, but not necessarily better prices, as experts said despite rising vacancies, rental rates in the suburbs will remain stable at around S$5.50 per square foot this year to 2014.

Source – CNA – 26 Jun 2013

S’pore office landlords widen their tenant base

Office landlords, long dependent on banks, are broadening their tenant base to soak up empty space as the commercial property market inches towards recovery after a three-year slump in rents.

Property owners such as CapitaCommercial Trust and Suntec Real Estate Investment Trust are using the cheapest rents in three years to lure commodity traders, law firms and software companies. The new tenants are moving in as financial-services firms scale back expansion plans in the wake of the European debt crisis.

“Singapore’s office market is getting a lot more diversified,” said Ms Elysia Tse, Senior Vice-President of Strategy and Research at Aviva Investors Asia. “We are at the turning point where we see supply stopping, demand slightly turning positive, vacancy declining, and rents have stopped falling.”

Office inventory surged after the government in 2005 extended the traditional Central Business District with the development of Marina Bay, home to 10 office towers and the Marina Bay Sands hotel and casino.

Then came Lehman Brothers’ collapse in 2008, a global recession and later the euro zone crisis. These sent vacancy rates soaring to a high of 14.5 per cent in the third quarter of 2010.

Prime-office lease rates declined to S$9.55 per square foot per month in the first quarter of this year, according to CBRE Group, which ranks Singapore’s overall office rents the 19th highest globally. Rents for prime space peaked at S$18.80 psf in August 2008, CBRE data shows.

But things are expected to soon change. Rents in the best buildings may start to rise this year, according to CBRE and Cushman & Wakefield.

Vacancies in Singapore fell to 5.1 per cent in the first quarter from the previous three months, the lowest since September 2008, CBRE said. Annual new supply will be 38 per cent lower than in the past 20 years, CapitaCommercial Trust forecasts.

The office market is benefiting from Singapore’s emergence as Asia’s wealth-management centre. The Republic has also become a commodities hub and the largest foreign-exchange centre in the region after Tokyo.

Companies are also attracted by some of the lowest occupancy costs in Asia. Rents, local taxes and service charges average US$99.65 (S$126.60)psf on an annual basis, according to a CBRE survey. That compares with US$235.23 in Hong Kong, the world’s most expensive office market, and US$161.16 in Tokyo.

British law firm Clifford Chance, French oil-and-gas company Lynx Energy Trading, American publisher McGraw Hill Financial, German software maker Software and Zurich-based bakery Aryzta are among companies that have moved into Marina Bay Financial Centre’s Tower 3, completed in March last year.

“We are becoming more optimistic about the prospects and outlook for the office sector,” said Mr Moray Armstrong, Executive Director of Office Services at CBRE in Singapore.

Source – Today – 26 June 2013