The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) has released a redevelopment site at Beach Road for sale by tender and bids are likely to top $1 billion.
The 376,295 sq ft site has a maximum gross floor area (GFA) of 1.58 million sq ft and 40 per cent must be for office use, and 30 per cent for hotel use.
The future developer will also have to conserve four existing historic buildings, including the former NCO Club.
Knight Frank director (research and consultancy) Nicholas Mak estimates that the Beach Road site could fetch bids of around $600-700 per square foot per plot ratio (psf ppr) or between $950 million and $1.1 billion.
The government will adopt a two-envelope system to evaluate the tenders.
Mr Mak added: ‘The scheme will have to inject vitality to this part of Beach Road.’ As with other ‘trophy sites’, foreign investors are likely to participate in the tender but Mr Mak said the more complex two-envelope system could see foreign investors teaming up with local developers.
Separately, the owners of a 25-unit townhouse development at Bishopswalk have put their homes up for sale by tender for an estimated total price of $108 million. This is around 20-30 per cent more than when the same site was put up for sale through an ‘expression of interest’ exercise less than a year ago. The 69,189 sq ft site has a plot ratio of 1.4.
Jeremy Lake, executive director at CB Richard Ellis, which is the marketing agent, said a development with about 48 new units assuming an average size of 2,000 sq ft each can be built. The price works out to about $1,276 psf ppr, inclusive of an estimated Development Charge of $15.58 million.
Mr Lake also pointed out that the site represents the only opportunity for a developer to build a condominium in the Good Class Bungalow area of Bishopsgate.
Source: The Business Times, 08 March 2007
Thursday, March 8, 2007
SINGAPORE Buyers of luxury projects slow to lodge caveats
(SINGAPORE) Buyers of luxury apartments launched of late are not rushing to stake legal claim on the properties by lodging caveats on them, official data shows.
Figures from the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s (URA) Realis website shows that in some instances, fewer than a quarter of the units sold have seen caveats lodged on them even a few months after the launch.
Industry players attribute this to a variety of reasons, including speculators looking to sell their properties quickly, the newly introduced deferred payment scheme, and good buyer-developer relationships.
At Marina Bay Residences, for example, just 75 caveats for new sales had been filed as of Jan 31, although the 428-unit development was fully sold by mid-December last year. The project is by a consortium comprising Keppel Land, Cheung Kong Holdings and Hongkong Land.
Similarly, only 66 new sale caveats have been lodged for the 111 apartments sold in Wheelock Properties’ Ardmore II. The project has 118 units.
Other recently launched developments where the number of new sale caveats lodged falls short of the number of units sold include City Developments’ St Regis Residences (87 new sale caveats lodged for around 128 units sold) and Tribeca By The Waterfront (29 caveats for more than 112 units sold) and Ho Bee’s The Coast at Sentosa Cove (98 caveats for more than 240 units), among others.
Lawyers BT spoke to said that while lodging a caveat when acquiring a new property is not mandated by law, new owners are usually advised to do so to stake their claims on their properties.
One reason for this new trend could be due to buyers looking to resell their apartments soon after buying them.
‘Nowadays, there are a number of people who don’t lodge caveats when they buy,’ said DTZ Debenham Tie Leung executive director Ong Choon Fah. ‘We suspect the caveats are popping up in the subsale market instead.’
URA classifies caveats for new projects as either those for new sales or those for subsales.
Mrs Ong said she first started noticing the trend about 1-2 years ago. While historically, for every development, there have always been some buyers who choose not to lodge caveats, the proportion has increased over the past couple of years, she says.
Another reason is the deferred payment schemes offered by developers, which means there is no immediate need to get financing.
Deferred payment schemes have been a popular option for property buyers, accounting for more than 90 per cent of transactions in recent new Marina Bay and downtown projects, according to Citigroup.
Such arrangements also favour buyers looking to resell their properties on the subsale market.
‘The deferred scheme may be encouraging the entry of speculators and fuelling stronger price increases in the primary residential market,’ said Citigroup economist Chua Hak Bin. ‘Sub-sale transactions have quadrupled from two years ago. Median prices of uncompleted projects have risen by about 20 per cent from their recent lows, double that of the 10 per cent for completed projects.’
The scheme allows buyers to fork out only a 10 per cent or 20 per cent downpayment on a property, with the rest due upon completion - sometimes as much as three years later. Buyers need not worry about further payments during the construction phase and the ample period of three years also allows the buyer time to resell the property for a profit.
Buyers could also simply be letting the task of lodging caveats slide, since they are secure in the knowledge that big-name developers are not likely to sell the same unit twice, said Norman Ho, senior real estate partner with law firm Rodyk & Davidson. This is especially likely, he said, considering the volume and speed of recent high-end property launches.
‘They (buyers of new properties) are buying directly from the developers, so they are very, very safe - the developer is not going to sell the same property twice,’ said Mr Ho.
Despite this, lawyers will always advise clients to file caveats just to cover all bases.
More caveats for newly launched upmarket developments are likely to be filed in the coming weeks. Mr Ho explained that in every transaction, there is a time lag of about five weeks between the time the option-to-purchase is granted by the developer and the time the sale-and-purchase agreement is signed by both parties. The sale-and-purchase agreement is needed before a caveat can be filed.
However, with the high levels of resale and subsale activity on the market now - aided in part by the deferred payment scheme - the proportion of new sale caveats lodged is unlikely to climb by too much, market watchers said.
Figures from the Urban Redevelopment Authority’s (URA) Realis website shows that in some instances, fewer than a quarter of the units sold have seen caveats lodged on them even a few months after the launch.
Industry players attribute this to a variety of reasons, including speculators looking to sell their properties quickly, the newly introduced deferred payment scheme, and good buyer-developer relationships.
At Marina Bay Residences, for example, just 75 caveats for new sales had been filed as of Jan 31, although the 428-unit development was fully sold by mid-December last year. The project is by a consortium comprising Keppel Land, Cheung Kong Holdings and Hongkong Land.
Similarly, only 66 new sale caveats have been lodged for the 111 apartments sold in Wheelock Properties’ Ardmore II. The project has 118 units.
Other recently launched developments where the number of new sale caveats lodged falls short of the number of units sold include City Developments’ St Regis Residences (87 new sale caveats lodged for around 128 units sold) and Tribeca By The Waterfront (29 caveats for more than 112 units sold) and Ho Bee’s The Coast at Sentosa Cove (98 caveats for more than 240 units), among others.
Lawyers BT spoke to said that while lodging a caveat when acquiring a new property is not mandated by law, new owners are usually advised to do so to stake their claims on their properties.
One reason for this new trend could be due to buyers looking to resell their apartments soon after buying them.
‘Nowadays, there are a number of people who don’t lodge caveats when they buy,’ said DTZ Debenham Tie Leung executive director Ong Choon Fah. ‘We suspect the caveats are popping up in the subsale market instead.’
URA classifies caveats for new projects as either those for new sales or those for subsales.
Mrs Ong said she first started noticing the trend about 1-2 years ago. While historically, for every development, there have always been some buyers who choose not to lodge caveats, the proportion has increased over the past couple of years, she says.
Another reason is the deferred payment schemes offered by developers, which means there is no immediate need to get financing.
Deferred payment schemes have been a popular option for property buyers, accounting for more than 90 per cent of transactions in recent new Marina Bay and downtown projects, according to Citigroup.
Such arrangements also favour buyers looking to resell their properties on the subsale market.
‘The deferred scheme may be encouraging the entry of speculators and fuelling stronger price increases in the primary residential market,’ said Citigroup economist Chua Hak Bin. ‘Sub-sale transactions have quadrupled from two years ago. Median prices of uncompleted projects have risen by about 20 per cent from their recent lows, double that of the 10 per cent for completed projects.’
The scheme allows buyers to fork out only a 10 per cent or 20 per cent downpayment on a property, with the rest due upon completion - sometimes as much as three years later. Buyers need not worry about further payments during the construction phase and the ample period of three years also allows the buyer time to resell the property for a profit.
Buyers could also simply be letting the task of lodging caveats slide, since they are secure in the knowledge that big-name developers are not likely to sell the same unit twice, said Norman Ho, senior real estate partner with law firm Rodyk & Davidson. This is especially likely, he said, considering the volume and speed of recent high-end property launches.
‘They (buyers of new properties) are buying directly from the developers, so they are very, very safe - the developer is not going to sell the same property twice,’ said Mr Ho.
Despite this, lawyers will always advise clients to file caveats just to cover all bases.
More caveats for newly launched upmarket developments are likely to be filed in the coming weeks. Mr Ho explained that in every transaction, there is a time lag of about five weeks between the time the option-to-purchase is granted by the developer and the time the sale-and-purchase agreement is signed by both parties. The sale-and-purchase agreement is needed before a caveat can be filed.
However, with the high levels of resale and subsale activity on the market now - aided in part by the deferred payment scheme - the proportion of new sale caveats lodged is unlikely to climb by too much, market watchers said.