Tag Archives: Ho Bee

Far East tops tender with bid 35% clear of field

It plans Holland V-type shophouses, 150-200 apartments

The tender for a residential and commercial plot at the corner of Yio Chu Kang and Seletar roads yesterday drew 12 bids, with Far East Organization topping the list with an offer that outshone its closest competitor by a huge 35 per cent – possibly the widest margin at a state tender in recent years.

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Far East’s offer of $119.08 million works out to $376 per square foot of potential gross floor area – much higher than market expectations.

The second-highest bid, by a Centurion Properties unit, was $88.19 million or $279 psf per plot ratio (psf ppr).

Sim Lian, Soilbuild Group and Frasers Centrepoint bid in the $247 to $253 psf ppr range. Continue reading

Bids for Dakota Crescent plot soar above expectations

UOL Group bid tops 12 others as developers vie for choice piece of land

The result of yesterday’s tender for a plum condo plot at Dakota Crescent shows just why the government recently raised the ‘definite possibility’ that it will restart confirmed list land sales from next year.

A total of 13 bids were received, reflecting developers’ voracious appetite for mass-market and mid-tier private housing land.

The top bid from UOL Group was above market expectations of about $420-450 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr) just a few days ago. UOL’s price yesterday was slightly more than $329 million or about $508 psf ppr – just 3 per cent shy of the $524 psf ppr that Ho Bee and NUTC Choice Homes paid during the peak in June 2007 for the plot next door on which they are developing Dakota Residences, which has achieved an average selling price of about $970-980 psf.

However, after taking into account changes in planning regulations since then, whereby planter boxes and bay windows are not exempted from gross floor area calculations, UOL’s bid yesterday is probably higher than the equivalent 2007 bid for the next-door plot, some market watchers say.

BT understands that UOL is gunning for a high proportion of smaller units in its proposed scheme, and thus push for a higher average selling price of about $1,000-1,050 psf. ‘They should be able to achieve this kind of psf price – so long as they keep the absolute price quantum within an affordable range,’ an industry observer said.

BT understands UOL’s breakeven cost will be about $920 psf. Continue reading