Tag Archives: Sentosa Property

LTA to extend Parking Guidance System to HarbourFront area

The Land Transport Authority (LTA) is extending the Parking Guidance System to the Harbour Front area from October 26.

With the system, motorists can find out the number of available lots at car parks located within HarbourFront Centre, Vivo City, Resorts World and selected locations in Sentosa that are managed by Sentosa Development Corporation.

Electronic signboards will be installed along Telok Blangah Road, Keppel Road and Kampong Bahru Road.

The panels will help motorists plan their routes, saving them time on searching for available parking lots. This will, in turn, reduce the number of vehicles travelling within the same area.

LTA will also be widening Telok Blangah Road and Kampong Bahru Road, as well as constructing a new up-ramp to link Telok Blangah Road to West Coast Highway by 2010. The Sentosa Gateway Tunnel will be ready by 2015.

The Parking Guidance System is one of several measures that LTA is implementing to meet the long-term development needs of the Sentosa and HarbourFront areas.

Without proper disclosure, how useful are research reports?

IN A Monday report on the property sector issued before the government’s anti-speculation real estate measures were announced in Parliament, a foreign broker said it was positive on stocks of developers because not only was Singapore in the early stages of a residential sector upswing, but there were also no indications that the government would do anything to derail the recovery.

In the various ‘buy’ calls on Genting Singapore which were issued during the stock’s run-up over the past six weeks or so – some of which went so far as to describe the stock as potentially being worth $2 to $3 – not one drew attention to the fact that the company had yet to announce a profit. All instead relied on the promise of possible riches available from the start of casino season in Singapore next year, based mainly on forecasts from the company’s management.

When formulating its calls for various blue chips, a foreign broker employs long-term forecasting models which project cash flows or ‘value creation’ for a period of up to 10-18 years, ie, up to the year 2019- 2027. Details of the model, however, are only given deep inside the report and are, in some cases, sketchy.

There’s more, but by now a common thread should be obvious – because of the rebound in equity markets since March, rising complacency in the financial markets has led to increased exuberance in the broking community. This in itself is fine – in an upward, frenzied market, investors are typically hungry for ideas and there’s nothing like a juicy investment story with a high target price to stir the senses. Continue reading