Tag Archives: Land Sales

Reserve list plot triggered by $82m offer

DEVELOPERS continue to hunger for land. The Urban Redevelopment Authority has announced that a private housing site at Upper Changi Road North/Flora Drive, next to Edelweiss Park Condominium, has been triggered for release from the government’s reserve list.

An unnamed developer has agreed to bid at least $82 million or $177.37 per square foot of potential gross floor area.

The 99-year leasehold plot is next to the Japanese School (Primary) and a stone’s throw from Changi Prison. It is nestled amid several large condominiums developed by the Hong Leong Group over the years on a huge tract of land acquired mostly in the 1970s by the group. The most recent of these projects is The Gale, which was launched last year. Earlier releases include Azalea, Ballota, Carissa, Dahlia, Edelweiss and Ferraria Park condos.

Property consultants polled by BT estimate that the latest plot on offer could fetch top bids of $300-400 psf per plot ratio (psf ppr).

Knight Frank managing director (advisory services) Lydia Sng estimates that a $320-350 psf ppr land bid would translate to a breakeven cost of $580-600 psf and a target average selling price of about $730 psf for the 99-year leasehold project.

In the first two months of this year, units at the freehold Gale and Ferraria Park – the two most recent projects in the area – have changed hands at a median price of about $740 psf, according to caveat data, she notes. The Gale is under construction, while Ferraria Park was completed last year. There’s typically a 15 per cent price difference between freehold and 99-year properties.

DTZ’s South-east Asia research head Chua Chor Hoon reckons that the highest offers for the Flora Drive site will be around $300-350 psf ppr, and the average selling price for the project around $700-750 psf. ‘As it’s not close to any MRT station, the unit land price will be lower,’ she says. ‘The developer can target the mass-market segment, in which there is strong demand.’

Real estate lecturer Nicholas Mak says that the site could draw 6-10 bids, with the highest around $350-400 psf ppr.

Chesterton Suntec International head of research and consultancy Colin Tan suggests that developers may be ‘pretty aggressive’ with their bids.

Most developers have reported excellent results and are sitting on a pile of cash, Mr Tan notes. ‘If the market is hot, you’re running out of land and you need to bid aggressively to get some land, it’s better to do so at the earlier stage of the up-cycle. As time passes by and the market gets closer to the correction point, the risks get higher.’

URA said yesterday that following the triggering of the Flora Drive housing site, another 16 residential plots remain on the first half 2010 reserve list that can potentially be triggered for launch. These include three executive condo (EC) plots and two mixed-use sites where private homes can be built. The 16 land parcels can potentially generate a total of 6,770 private homes.

The H1 2010 confirmed list has eight residential sites that can yield 2,925 units. Of these, four plots have been launched – EC sites near Buangkok MRT Station and at Yishun Avenue 11, the Ten Mile Junction plot and a site at Tampines Ave 1/10 fronting Bedok Reservoir. Two choice sites – one near Lakeside MRT Station and Jurong Lake, and the other diagonally opposite Simei MRT Station – will be launched from the confirmed list before the month runs out.

This week, National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan said that the H2 2010 government land sales (GLS) programme will have a ‘larger supply and wider variety of sites’ on the reserve list to give developers more choice.

DTZ executive director Ong Choon Fah suggests that the H2 2010 GLS Programme may feature more private housing sites further from the city, even if they are near MRT stations, as well as plots near HDB estates such as Choa Chu Kang, Yishun, Sengkang and Simei, where there is strong upgrader demand.

Such sites will hopefully sell at a lower unit land price and translate to more affordably-priced housing for end-buyers – compared with plum sites near MRT stations and closer to the city.

‘I think the affordable price range for private home buyers in the mass market is still $700-800 psf,’ Mrs Ong says.

In the meantime, developers are expected to continue triggering sites from the current H1 reserve list. ‘Developers need to replenish their landbanks and there’s a lot of choice now. So if they like something, why wait?’ says DTZ’s Ms Chua.

Source : Business Times – 13 Mar 2010

China SOE unit MCC Land is top bidder for Yishun EC site

MCC Land, part of Chinese state- owned enterprise Metallurgical Corporation of China (MCC Group), has emerged top bidder for an executive condominium site at Yishun Avenue 11.

Its bid of $127.8 million or $281 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr) was 7.5 per cent above the next highest offer of $261.68 psf ppr from fellow mainland Chinese group Qingjian Realty.

The tender for the 99-year leasehold plot drew 10 bids, with the lowest bid from SK Land (owned by a Lee Boon Teow) at $103 psf ppr.

If MCC Land is awarded the site, it will mark the MCC Group’s maiden Singapore property development.

MCC Land managing director Tan Zhiyong told BT that the group’s proposed scheme for the site is an eco-friendly project with over 400 units comprising two, three and four-bedroom apartments. The breakeven cost will be in the $500-550 psf region and the plan is to launch the project this year.

Mr Tan would not be drawn on likely selling prices but said: ‘We will keep it affordable, given the buying eligibility criteria for exec condos of a maximum $10,000 monthly household income.’

The developer will not build any shoebox units in the project, he said. ‘We want to follow the Singapore government’s vision for ECs. Let the people have enough room to pro-create and set up a family.’

This is the second time MCC Land has taken part in a Singapore Government Land Sales tender. Its first attempt, a week ago, was the tender for an EC site near Buangkok MRT Station. In that tender, it emerged second-highest bidder, pipped by a tie-up between Frasers Centrepoint and Lum Chang Building Contractors – by 1.4 per cent.

While MCC Land is new to Singapore, the MCC Group’s Singapore construction unit China Jingye Engineering Corporation Ltd (Singapore Branch) has been doing business here for almost 14 years. It is the main contractor for Universal Studios at Resorts World Sentosa.

Mr Tan told BT that if the group is awarded the Yishun EC site, it will ‘definitely explore’ the possibility of handling the project’s construction in-house. ‘But we will consider outside parties to handle the construction if they can do it cheaper. Whatever it is, we will not compromise on quality,’ he said.

‘Looking at the beautiful environment in the location – it is next to parks – we will complement this by using environmentally friendly technology and concepts for our project, such as having solar panels for the general areas and recycling rainwater for non-potable use.’

MCC Land will continue to seek good development land – be it residential, commercial or mixed-use sites – across the island, he said.

MCC Group – with dual listings on the Hong Kong and Shanghai bourses – is involved in engineering, procurement and construction, mining, paper-making, equipment fabrication and property development. It is a Fortune 500 company.

Seven of the total 10 bids in yesterday’s tender exceeded the $150-210 psf ppr that the site was estimated to fetch when it was launched in January by the Housing & Development Board.

But market watchers yesterday were not too surprised by the strong bids, pointing to robust sales recently for the launch of The Estuary, a 99-year leasehold private condo project in a better location in Yishun that fronts Lower Seletar Reservoir and is near Khatib MRT Station.

More than 500 units in The Estuary have been sold at an average price of $758 psf. ‘The developer of the latest EC site in Yishun might be able to achieve an average selling price of about $650 psf,’ said an industry observer.

CB Richard Ellis executive director Li Hiaw Ho said that while the latest EC plot may be less accessible, future residents will nonetheless enjoy a serene environment as it is close to Yishun Park and Orchid Country Club. ‘It’s also a short drive from Northpoint mall and other amenities at Yishun Central,’ he said.

ECs are a hybrid of public and private housing. EC projects have initial eligibility, ownership and resale restrictions similar to public housing, but these are lifted after 10 years.

Other bidders in yesterday’s tender included United Engineers unit Maxdin (about $257 psf ppr), Far East Organization ($256 psf ppr) and JBE Development, controlled by Hongkonger Patrick Lam, who developed The Luxe in Handy Road, at $227 psf ppr.

Source : Business Times – 12 Mar 2010