Source : 《联合早报》July 31, 2008
建屋发展局为女皇镇杜生(Dawson)组屋区规划的新一代组屋确定将落实,预定明年第三季推出供公众申请,2014年入伙。
李显龙总理在去年国庆群众大会描绘“再创我们的家园”公共住屋愿景时,宣布在第一个组屋新镇女皇镇建造新一代组屋。
SCDA的新一代组屋设计,是传统长形建筑组屋设计的创新。(SCDA照片)
建屋局于是在去年4月商请盛邦国际咨询、WOHA建筑师事务所和SCDA建筑师事务所,在女皇镇镇中心和杜生路设计3个新一代组屋项目。
国家发展部兼教育部高级政务部长傅海燕昨晚在建屋局常年颁奖礼上说,建屋局确定将进行这三个组屋项目,并委任这3家公司为设计顾问。
不过,建屋局将只在清空女皇镇镇中心后,估计2011年才发委任状给盛邦。女皇镇镇中心3座组屋前年底获选展开选择性整体重建计划(SERS),替代组屋在建造中。
受委为设计顾问后,WOHA和SCDA将为组屋项目进行细节设计,如各类型组屋数量,但不会对整体设计做出大改变,基本上跟去年展出时的模型一样。
这两个项目可在明年第三季让公众预购(BTO),工程在2010年第一季展开,预计2014年完成。建屋局将在发售时公布销售详情如组屋面积、售价、数量等。
傅海燕在演讲中说,由于公众热烈支持这三家公司所设计的新一代组屋,政府因此决定展开这项计划。“这三家公司的参与不仅给组屋购买者更多不同的选择,也为杜生组屋区引进更多活力和卖点。”
她过后答复媒体询问说:“杜生区对我们来说是非常新的尝试。我们第一次用了新加坡在国际上非常著名的建筑师来帮我们设计,所以我们相信这个组屋区推出后会受到非常热烈反应,特别是比较年轻的一群,他们都会被这个新的设计而吸引……这也把我们这个组屋的概念推上一个高峰。”
新一代组屋设计概念受欢迎
花园中的组屋、环保、空中花园、社区空间、两代家庭比邻而居、无缝行人网络等设计概念是新一代组屋的特色。建屋局去年在“再创我们的家园”巡回展中进行的调查显示,有63%和56%的参观者分别表示喜欢空中花园和花园组屋概念,53%的参观者喜欢两代同堂而居的概念。
WOHA和SCDA在国内外获奖无数。WOHA最近以摩绵坡1号获得国际大奖阿卡汉建筑奖(Aga Khan Award for Architecture);SCDA创办人曾仕乾则是第一届新加坡总统设计奖年度设计师。
由WOHA设计的杜生路B地段占地2.7公顷,约有1000个单位。SCDA则负责设计杜生路C地段,占地2.2公顷,约有800个单位。所有组屋楼高可达40层。
曾仕乾在设计中运用光与影的特点,并以独特手法实现“两代同堂而居”概念。WOHA则让屋主自行决定组屋装上什么外墙、怎样的阳台、窗户或墙壁,这使各单位外观不一样,整座大厦也独一无二。
“更新我们的杜生”(Transforming our Dawson)展览在大巴窑建屋局中心销售展示处展出,时间从上午9时至晚上9时,下月10日结束。
傅海燕昨晚也颁发18个奖项给获得建屋局设计奖、品质奖和建筑安全奖的承包商、建筑设计公司、供应商与合作伙伴。设计奖得主是盛邦国际咨询,品质奖得主有宝联建筑、海峡建筑、Kienta工程、Chiu Teng建筑以及联宇建筑等11家公司;建筑安全奖得主有海峡建筑、森联建筑及联宇建筑。
This Blog is an informational site, which provide mainly Property News, Reviews, Market Trends and Opinions regarding the real estates of Singapore. All publications belong to their respective rights owners. We do not hold any responsiblity in the correctness or accuracy of the news or reports. 23/7/2007
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Three Parts To Dawson’s New Face
Source : TODAY, Thursday, July 31, 2008
THE public first got wind of the ambitious vision last August, when Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke of giving the 56-year-old Dawson Estate a new face.
Now, the surgeons who will design its new face have been appointed, and flats could go on sale by next year.
Construction is expected to start six months after the sale and the new generation of flats would be ready by around 2014, said Ms Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education, yesterday.
She added that since the conceptual designs from the three architects invited to give shape to the ideas had been well-received by the public, all three — SCDA Architects, WOHA Architects and Surbana International Consultants — would be appointed as consultants for the Dawson project.
The rejuvenation of Dawson Estate is part of an initiative to transform public housing into vibrant homes for Singapore. Apart from Dawson, Yishun and Punggol have also been earmarked for major facelifts.
Dawson Estate — formed by the merger of Princess and Duchess estates — was first developed in the 1950s by the Singapore Improvement Trust.
Last September, the Housing Development Board (HDB) commissioned the three architects to come up with design ideas for Dawson Estate and showcased these concepts in an exhibition called “Remaking Our Heartland”.
The majority of the 11,000 Singaporeans who visited the exhibition gave the designs a thumbs up.
As a result, the HDB decided to appoint all the three architects to regenerate Dawson Estate.
SCDA and WOHA will work on the next stage of the estate’s detailed design as the sites they would be working on are now vacant.
SCDA and WOHA told Today that they are already talking to landscapers, quantity surveyors, structural and mechanical engineers.
The HDB will appoint Surbana at a later date when the site that the firm would be working on is ready for development in 2011.
Under SCDA’s concept, residents can look forward to flats with tall ceilings in the living room. These lofts are built next to smaller flats which can function as “granny units” should the owners of the bigger flat decide to buy over the smaller unit.
Other features include a central staircase with solar panels which face the West and cascading landscaped terraces. Around 800 units will come under the SCDA’s design.
WOHA’s design is based on a concept of a “kampung in the sky” by creating a 10-storey column as the heart of each village, overlooking a village square.
“This village square has community gardens, study areas, barbecue areas and gathering spaces which will allow people to get to know the other 60 to 70 households in their village,” said Mr Richard Hassell, WOHA’s founding director.
Surbana plans to stretch a park six storeys upwards with ramps covered with greenery.
It will meander in a figure-of-eight shape around the twelve 48-storey blocks. The site includes the old Queenstown town centre.
But with construction costs going up, will all these features and amenities be included?
Mr Chan Soo Khian, SCDA’s founding principal and design director, said the firm would stick to its design and “it is up to HDB” how it wants to price these units.
Mr Chan, however, said there is a possibility that not all features — such as solar panels — will be included since they “are an economic issue”.
WOHA’s Mr Hassell said it would be working very closely with the HDB to achieve Dawson’s expected standard “at a reasonable market price”.
The HDB is inviting all Singaporeans with fond memories of Dawson Estate to contribute old photos, postcards, cinema tickets and souvenirs commemorating the estate at its “Transforming Our Dawson” exhibition, which is being held at the HDB Hub until Aug 10.
Meanwhile, another first step in remaking Singapore’s heartland was taken, when 94.1 per cent of voters in a Yishun precinct said “yes” to the new Home Improvement Programme. The nine blocks are the first to come under this scheme.
THE public first got wind of the ambitious vision last August, when Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke of giving the 56-year-old Dawson Estate a new face.
Now, the surgeons who will design its new face have been appointed, and flats could go on sale by next year.
Construction is expected to start six months after the sale and the new generation of flats would be ready by around 2014, said Ms Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education, yesterday.
She added that since the conceptual designs from the three architects invited to give shape to the ideas had been well-received by the public, all three — SCDA Architects, WOHA Architects and Surbana International Consultants — would be appointed as consultants for the Dawson project.
The rejuvenation of Dawson Estate is part of an initiative to transform public housing into vibrant homes for Singapore. Apart from Dawson, Yishun and Punggol have also been earmarked for major facelifts.
Dawson Estate — formed by the merger of Princess and Duchess estates — was first developed in the 1950s by the Singapore Improvement Trust.
Last September, the Housing Development Board (HDB) commissioned the three architects to come up with design ideas for Dawson Estate and showcased these concepts in an exhibition called “Remaking Our Heartland”.
The majority of the 11,000 Singaporeans who visited the exhibition gave the designs a thumbs up.
As a result, the HDB decided to appoint all the three architects to regenerate Dawson Estate.
SCDA and WOHA will work on the next stage of the estate’s detailed design as the sites they would be working on are now vacant.
SCDA and WOHA told Today that they are already talking to landscapers, quantity surveyors, structural and mechanical engineers.
The HDB will appoint Surbana at a later date when the site that the firm would be working on is ready for development in 2011.
Under SCDA’s concept, residents can look forward to flats with tall ceilings in the living room. These lofts are built next to smaller flats which can function as “granny units” should the owners of the bigger flat decide to buy over the smaller unit.
Other features include a central staircase with solar panels which face the West and cascading landscaped terraces. Around 800 units will come under the SCDA’s design.
WOHA’s design is based on a concept of a “kampung in the sky” by creating a 10-storey column as the heart of each village, overlooking a village square.
“This village square has community gardens, study areas, barbecue areas and gathering spaces which will allow people to get to know the other 60 to 70 households in their village,” said Mr Richard Hassell, WOHA’s founding director.
Surbana plans to stretch a park six storeys upwards with ramps covered with greenery.
It will meander in a figure-of-eight shape around the twelve 48-storey blocks. The site includes the old Queenstown town centre.
But with construction costs going up, will all these features and amenities be included?
Mr Chan Soo Khian, SCDA’s founding principal and design director, said the firm would stick to its design and “it is up to HDB” how it wants to price these units.
Mr Chan, however, said there is a possibility that not all features — such as solar panels — will be included since they “are an economic issue”.
WOHA’s Mr Hassell said it would be working very closely with the HDB to achieve Dawson’s expected standard “at a reasonable market price”.
The HDB is inviting all Singaporeans with fond memories of Dawson Estate to contribute old photos, postcards, cinema tickets and souvenirs commemorating the estate at its “Transforming Our Dawson” exhibition, which is being held at the HDB Hub until Aug 10.
Meanwhile, another first step in remaking Singapore’s heartland was taken, when 94.1 per cent of voters in a Yishun precinct said “yes” to the new Home Improvement Programme. The nine blocks are the first to come under this scheme.
Solved – The Rental Spike Mystery
Source : TODAY, Thursday, July 31, 2008
It was caused not by a jump in demand, but by a contraction in supply
LAST week, I suggested that the private housing oversupply may have been understated.
This is because units that have been bought by investors can still be considered as part of the housing supply until they are resold or are tenanted. If the rental income cannot cover the mortgage payments and if the owners are highly geared, then they will have to sell the units sooner or later. If a greater proportion of owners are in the same predicament, the competition to sell will result in lower prices.
But surely, finding a tenant cannot be a problem.
After all, was it not so long ago that we heard complaints of unreasonable hikes in rentals. Between the third quarter of 2006 and the second quarter this year, the official rental price index went up by a hefty 69 per cent. This is almost 10 per cent each quarter.
What were the factors responsible for this? Many attributed it to higher demand. It could not have been anything else. But was this really the cause?
Amid the euphoria and excitement of the construction of the two integrated resorts and the anticipation of the tremendous spillover effects, the market misread the cause.
Many attributed it to the surge in foreign talent arriving on our shores. For sure, more expatriates were coming but were their arrivals in such large numbers so as to cause rents to escalate to such dizzy heights?
Even the new plans to prepare Singapore to accommodate up to 6.5 million people were loosely bandied around as proof that Government officials shared the same view. Investors bought the story and snapped up apartments at prices which presupposed a continuation of that strong upward trend.
However, official figures showed the number of rental contracts actually contracted by 17.6 per cent in 2006 and remained flat last year.
On the other hand, the average cost of rentals rose by 15 per cent in 2006 and 43 per cent last year. So, where are the missing expatriate households?
Certainly, the high rents did cause some to leave Singapore, others — especially Permanent Residents — to purchase, and for those without a generous budget, to rent HDB flats.
But there should have been at least a substantial — if not dramatic — nett increase in rental contracts. After all, they were supposed to have come in droves.
The mystery is solved if we realise that the spike was caused, not by a steep jump in demand as many had assumed, but by a sharp contraction in supply. The result may be the same but the implications are different.
The surge in en bloc sales had led to groups of tenants leaving their homes. The competition for homes simply drove rentals sky high.
There are no official figures but I estimate that the supply of rental accommodation to have shrunk by at least a quarter to a third of the existing stock.
Today, the rental market has stabilised. Those seeking homes would have found them by now — either by buying, downgrading or leaving Singapore.
What are the market implications?
First, there are now no hordes of expatriates scrambling for accommodation. This means demand will lag behind supply. Rents will decline. Lower rents translate into lower yields.
Second, for less prime units, it will come to a point when the low rents make no sense. It will be better to sell.
Recently, a consultant’s report extolled the benefits of owning a home on Sentosa Cove and a $19,500 monthly lease was reported in a the news as having been achieved.
Checks revealed that the 560-square-metre unit was sold in July last year for $8.59 million. It was probably a penthouse. This translates to a gross yield of 2.7 per cent. Does this even cover the interest on the mortgage?
Lest we forget, we have not factored in property tax of 10 per cent or maintenance charges of about $12,000 a year for a penthouse. What about the additional security cost for Sentosa homes? Or the cost of furnishings?
Eventually, the nett yield may dwindle to below 1.8 per cent — certainly a high risk to take for such a low return.
Is this situation typical of the other“investor” units completing over the next12 months? I hope I am wrong, but I fear this may be so.
The writer is the head of research at property consultancy Chesterton International.
It was caused not by a jump in demand, but by a contraction in supply
LAST week, I suggested that the private housing oversupply may have been understated.
This is because units that have been bought by investors can still be considered as part of the housing supply until they are resold or are tenanted. If the rental income cannot cover the mortgage payments and if the owners are highly geared, then they will have to sell the units sooner or later. If a greater proportion of owners are in the same predicament, the competition to sell will result in lower prices.
But surely, finding a tenant cannot be a problem.
After all, was it not so long ago that we heard complaints of unreasonable hikes in rentals. Between the third quarter of 2006 and the second quarter this year, the official rental price index went up by a hefty 69 per cent. This is almost 10 per cent each quarter.
What were the factors responsible for this? Many attributed it to higher demand. It could not have been anything else. But was this really the cause?
Amid the euphoria and excitement of the construction of the two integrated resorts and the anticipation of the tremendous spillover effects, the market misread the cause.
Many attributed it to the surge in foreign talent arriving on our shores. For sure, more expatriates were coming but were their arrivals in such large numbers so as to cause rents to escalate to such dizzy heights?
Even the new plans to prepare Singapore to accommodate up to 6.5 million people were loosely bandied around as proof that Government officials shared the same view. Investors bought the story and snapped up apartments at prices which presupposed a continuation of that strong upward trend.
However, official figures showed the number of rental contracts actually contracted by 17.6 per cent in 2006 and remained flat last year.
On the other hand, the average cost of rentals rose by 15 per cent in 2006 and 43 per cent last year. So, where are the missing expatriate households?
Certainly, the high rents did cause some to leave Singapore, others — especially Permanent Residents — to purchase, and for those without a generous budget, to rent HDB flats.
But there should have been at least a substantial — if not dramatic — nett increase in rental contracts. After all, they were supposed to have come in droves.
The mystery is solved if we realise that the spike was caused, not by a steep jump in demand as many had assumed, but by a sharp contraction in supply. The result may be the same but the implications are different.
The surge in en bloc sales had led to groups of tenants leaving their homes. The competition for homes simply drove rentals sky high.
There are no official figures but I estimate that the supply of rental accommodation to have shrunk by at least a quarter to a third of the existing stock.
Today, the rental market has stabilised. Those seeking homes would have found them by now — either by buying, downgrading or leaving Singapore.
What are the market implications?
First, there are now no hordes of expatriates scrambling for accommodation. This means demand will lag behind supply. Rents will decline. Lower rents translate into lower yields.
Second, for less prime units, it will come to a point when the low rents make no sense. It will be better to sell.
Recently, a consultant’s report extolled the benefits of owning a home on Sentosa Cove and a $19,500 monthly lease was reported in a the news as having been achieved.
Checks revealed that the 560-square-metre unit was sold in July last year for $8.59 million. It was probably a penthouse. This translates to a gross yield of 2.7 per cent. Does this even cover the interest on the mortgage?
Lest we forget, we have not factored in property tax of 10 per cent or maintenance charges of about $12,000 a year for a penthouse. What about the additional security cost for Sentosa homes? Or the cost of furnishings?
Eventually, the nett yield may dwindle to below 1.8 per cent — certainly a high risk to take for such a low return.
Is this situation typical of the other“investor” units completing over the next12 months? I hope I am wrong, but I fear this may be so.
The writer is the head of research at property consultancy Chesterton International.
IMF Sees Gradual US Economic Recovery Next Year
Source : The Straits Times, July 31, 2008
WASHINGTON - THE International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday the United States is poised for a gradual economic recovery in 2009, but urged more action to ease the housing crisis and financial turmoil.
'The housing correction and the broader financial sector turmoil of recent months have weakened household demand and credit conditions,' the IMF said in its annual review of the world's largest economy.
The IMF board of executive directors praised the US authorities' 'decisive and swift policy response' to the colliding shocks from the worst housing slump in decades and the broader financial turmoil of recent months, as well as higher energy prices.
'With added headwinds from oil prices, the US economy will be notably weaker but still register positive growth in 2008, and will recover only gradually in 2009,' the IMF said.
The IMF reaffirmed its growth forecasts of 1.3 per cent in 2008 and 0.8 per cent in 2009, released in the July 17 update of its April World Economic Outlook report.
Although short-term inflation expectations have risen 'somewhat' on surging commodity prices, price pressures are expected to be contained as commodity prices peak and demand wanes.
'Housing prices are continuing to fall, and there is a risk that such prices could move significantly below equilibrium, with important macroeconomic consequences,' the IMF said.
Directors advised the US government to 'be prepared to widen support for housing and, if serious dislocations reappear, for financial markets.'
'The housing boom has revealed multiple weaknesses in the current regulatory system,' it said A senior IMF official, speaking in a conference call with reporters, said the assessment took into account a broad housing rescue bill signed by President George W. Bush on Wednesday.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, criticized the new law's measure that provides public funds to allow lenders to voluntary reduce the amount of an outstanding mortgage in order to reduce preventable disclosures as not going far enough.
'The decision of lenders is completely voluntary. The question is are there sufficient incentives to do so,' the official said.
The 185-nation institution also recommended the US take up a financial reform that 'could include further consolidation and specialisation of regulatory institutions.'
The IMF strongly endorsed the Federal Reserve's actions to ease credit, but counseled that 'monetary policy should stay on hold for now, unless economic and financial conditions deteriorate further.'
However, if inflationary expectations spiral, 'the bias should be toward a decisive tightening once recovery is established and financial conditions ease.'
The Fed is widely expected to hold its key short-term interest rate at 2.0 per cent at its August 5 meeting. -- AFP
WASHINGTON - THE International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday the United States is poised for a gradual economic recovery in 2009, but urged more action to ease the housing crisis and financial turmoil.
'The housing correction and the broader financial sector turmoil of recent months have weakened household demand and credit conditions,' the IMF said in its annual review of the world's largest economy.
The IMF board of executive directors praised the US authorities' 'decisive and swift policy response' to the colliding shocks from the worst housing slump in decades and the broader financial turmoil of recent months, as well as higher energy prices.
'With added headwinds from oil prices, the US economy will be notably weaker but still register positive growth in 2008, and will recover only gradually in 2009,' the IMF said.
The IMF reaffirmed its growth forecasts of 1.3 per cent in 2008 and 0.8 per cent in 2009, released in the July 17 update of its April World Economic Outlook report.
Although short-term inflation expectations have risen 'somewhat' on surging commodity prices, price pressures are expected to be contained as commodity prices peak and demand wanes.
'Housing prices are continuing to fall, and there is a risk that such prices could move significantly below equilibrium, with important macroeconomic consequences,' the IMF said.
Directors advised the US government to 'be prepared to widen support for housing and, if serious dislocations reappear, for financial markets.'
'The housing boom has revealed multiple weaknesses in the current regulatory system,' it said A senior IMF official, speaking in a conference call with reporters, said the assessment took into account a broad housing rescue bill signed by President George W. Bush on Wednesday.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, criticized the new law's measure that provides public funds to allow lenders to voluntary reduce the amount of an outstanding mortgage in order to reduce preventable disclosures as not going far enough.
'The decision of lenders is completely voluntary. The question is are there sufficient incentives to do so,' the official said.
The 185-nation institution also recommended the US take up a financial reform that 'could include further consolidation and specialisation of regulatory institutions.'
The IMF strongly endorsed the Federal Reserve's actions to ease credit, but counseled that 'monetary policy should stay on hold for now, unless economic and financial conditions deteriorate further.'
However, if inflationary expectations spiral, 'the bias should be toward a decisive tightening once recovery is established and financial conditions ease.'
The Fed is widely expected to hold its key short-term interest rate at 2.0 per cent at its August 5 meeting. -- AFP
1,800 Flats To Go On Sale At Dawson Estate Next Year
Source : The Straits Times, July 31, 2008
Two 40-storey towers to be constructed under build-to-order system by 2014
A NEW generation of Housing Board flats is set to go on sale in about a year's time at now-sleepy Dawson estate.
The 50-year-old Queenstown estate is set to be transformed with the construction of two striking 40-storey towers, designed by award-winning architects, SCDA Architects and WOHA Architects.
At Dawson - Singapore's first HDB estate - the SCDA-designed block is on a 2.2 ha site and could feature about 800 flats. -- PHOTOS: HDB
The towers, to boast about 1,800 flats, are being built under the HDB's build-to-order (BTO) system - now the board's main means of providing new housing stock.
HDB rarely builds new flats within a mature estate due to the lack of space. The new towers in Dawson will be nestled among gardens designed by landscape architects - a first for an HDB estate.
News that the flats will be on sale in a year's time was unveiled by Ms Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State for National Development, at the HDB awards dinner yesterday.
She later told reporters that she expects very strong demand for the new flats.
Sales will start in the third quarter of next year. Construction could start six months after that and be completed in 2014, Ms Fu said.
At Dawson - Singapore's first Housing Board estate - the SCDA-designed tower block is on a 2.2ha site and could feature about 800 flats. The other block, on a 2.7ha site, will have about 1,000 units.
The towers will have special features such as lofts, flexible flat designs, and sky villages or common high-rise space shared by every 10 floors.
But potential buyers can still influence the final design. Feedback is invited at an exhibition on Dawson estate before the consultants finalise their designs. The show at the HDB Hub in Toa Payoh runs from today until Aug 10.
Home-hunter Lauren Shen, 27, a graphic designer, said: 'The flats are exciting because they can be customised. I have applied for a flat in Punggol. If I don't get it, I will wait for these new ones.
'But it will depend on the prices. My chances may be limited because I think they will be very popular.'
A third new-generation development will be added later at Dawson by Surbana International Consultants. It will be launched when the site for it is cleared by 2011.
To tie the three developments together, HDB has asked award-winning local landscape architects Cicada to draw up a landscape plan.
The plans will rejuvenate Dawson estate, which has about 3,000 flats. Dawson eventually could boast about 10,000 new homes, most of which are expected to be public flats.
HDB is keen to preserve Dawson's heritage and is seeking contributions of old photos, postcards, books and other items for use in a display.
Two 40-storey towers to be constructed under build-to-order system by 2014
A NEW generation of Housing Board flats is set to go on sale in about a year's time at now-sleepy Dawson estate.
The 50-year-old Queenstown estate is set to be transformed with the construction of two striking 40-storey towers, designed by award-winning architects, SCDA Architects and WOHA Architects.
At Dawson - Singapore's first HDB estate - the SCDA-designed block is on a 2.2 ha site and could feature about 800 flats. -- PHOTOS: HDB
The towers, to boast about 1,800 flats, are being built under the HDB's build-to-order (BTO) system - now the board's main means of providing new housing stock.
HDB rarely builds new flats within a mature estate due to the lack of space. The new towers in Dawson will be nestled among gardens designed by landscape architects - a first for an HDB estate.
News that the flats will be on sale in a year's time was unveiled by Ms Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State for National Development, at the HDB awards dinner yesterday.
She later told reporters that she expects very strong demand for the new flats.
Sales will start in the third quarter of next year. Construction could start six months after that and be completed in 2014, Ms Fu said.
At Dawson - Singapore's first Housing Board estate - the SCDA-designed tower block is on a 2.2ha site and could feature about 800 flats. The other block, on a 2.7ha site, will have about 1,000 units.
The towers will have special features such as lofts, flexible flat designs, and sky villages or common high-rise space shared by every 10 floors.
But potential buyers can still influence the final design. Feedback is invited at an exhibition on Dawson estate before the consultants finalise their designs. The show at the HDB Hub in Toa Payoh runs from today until Aug 10.
Home-hunter Lauren Shen, 27, a graphic designer, said: 'The flats are exciting because they can be customised. I have applied for a flat in Punggol. If I don't get it, I will wait for these new ones.
'But it will depend on the prices. My chances may be limited because I think they will be very popular.'
A third new-generation development will be added later at Dawson by Surbana International Consultants. It will be launched when the site for it is cleared by 2011.
To tie the three developments together, HDB has asked award-winning local landscape architects Cicada to draw up a landscape plan.
The plans will rejuvenate Dawson estate, which has about 3,000 flats. Dawson eventually could boast about 10,000 new homes, most of which are expected to be public flats.
HDB is keen to preserve Dawson's heritage and is seeking contributions of old photos, postcards, books and other items for use in a display.
MCL Land's Q2 Net Profit Up 45% To US$3.2 Mln
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
MCL Land said on Thursday that second-quarter net profit rose 45 per cent to US$3.2 million, from US$2.2 million a year ago.
Revenue for the three months ended June 30, 2008 however fell to US$353,000, from US$133.5 million in 2Q 2007.
The group benefited from higher operating income even as sales slipped. In the company's financials, 'other operating income' rose to US$3.1 million in 2Q 2008, from US$515,000 for the same three months in 2007.
Earnings per share for the second-quarter rose 43 per cent to 0.86 US cents, from 0.6 US cents a year ago.
'The current uncertain economic conditions have led to a slowdown in the residential property market in Singapore,' the company said in a filing to the Singapore Exchange. However, medium to longer-term prospects remain positive, it added.
The completion of Mera Springs and The Esta in Singapore in the second half of the year should benefit MCL Land's overall performance in 2008, the company said.
In 2Q 2008, the developer launched no new projects in Singapore. All projects previously launched are fully pre-sold, with the exception of two units at Hillcrest Villa, MCL Land said.
Shares of MCL Land lost two cents to close at $1.26 on Thursday. -- UMA SHANKARI, BT NEWSROOM
MCL Land said on Thursday that second-quarter net profit rose 45 per cent to US$3.2 million, from US$2.2 million a year ago.
Revenue for the three months ended June 30, 2008 however fell to US$353,000, from US$133.5 million in 2Q 2007.
The group benefited from higher operating income even as sales slipped. In the company's financials, 'other operating income' rose to US$3.1 million in 2Q 2008, from US$515,000 for the same three months in 2007.
Earnings per share for the second-quarter rose 43 per cent to 0.86 US cents, from 0.6 US cents a year ago.
'The current uncertain economic conditions have led to a slowdown in the residential property market in Singapore,' the company said in a filing to the Singapore Exchange. However, medium to longer-term prospects remain positive, it added.
The completion of Mera Springs and The Esta in Singapore in the second half of the year should benefit MCL Land's overall performance in 2008, the company said.
In 2Q 2008, the developer launched no new projects in Singapore. All projects previously launched are fully pre-sold, with the exception of two units at Hillcrest Villa, MCL Land said.
Shares of MCL Land lost two cents to close at $1.26 on Thursday. -- UMA SHANKARI, BT NEWSROOM
Australand Fund Picked To Develop Brisbane Site
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
CapitaLand's Australian unit Australand said on Thursday that its recently-formed Australand Residential Development Fund - which is a joint venture between Australand and BOS International (Australia) - has been selected as the preferred organisation to purchase and develop a 6.28 hectare riverfront site in the Brisbane suburb of Hamilton.
This follows a two-stage selection process run by the Port of Brisbane's Northshore Development Group.
The fund will acquire and develop the project over the next eight years, subject to the satisfactory finalisation of commercial terms, Australand said. The fund will utilise the equity and debt financing currently in place, the company added.
'Developing Northshore Hamilton through the Residential Development Fund will allow us to increase Australand's residential pipeline in Queensland, especially in the strong Brisbane market, without the need for additional capital,' Australand managing director and chief executive Bob Johnston said in a filing to the Singapore Exchange. -- UMA SHANKARI, BT NEWSROOM
CapitaLand's Australian unit Australand said on Thursday that its recently-formed Australand Residential Development Fund - which is a joint venture between Australand and BOS International (Australia) - has been selected as the preferred organisation to purchase and develop a 6.28 hectare riverfront site in the Brisbane suburb of Hamilton.
This follows a two-stage selection process run by the Port of Brisbane's Northshore Development Group.
The fund will acquire and develop the project over the next eight years, subject to the satisfactory finalisation of commercial terms, Australand said. The fund will utilise the equity and debt financing currently in place, the company added.
'Developing Northshore Hamilton through the Residential Development Fund will allow us to increase Australand's residential pipeline in Queensland, especially in the strong Brisbane market, without the need for additional capital,' Australand managing director and chief executive Bob Johnston said in a filing to the Singapore Exchange. -- UMA SHANKARI, BT NEWSROOM
Is CMT Morphing From Pure Retail Play Into A Mixed Reit?
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
CAPITAMALL TRUST (CMT), Singapore's first real estate investment trust when it listed in 2002, has enduring appeal.
Six years since its flotation and with another 20 contenders in the Singapore Reit (S-Reit) market today, CMT remains Singapore's biggest Reit with an asset size of $7.2 billion.
The market has rewarded the trust's consistent ability to deliver total returns by according it one of the lowest costs of capital for any Singapore Reit. That is, CMT trades at one of the lowest distribution yields among S-Reits. The market demands a lower risk premium from CMT than it does for just about any other S-Reit. CMT is also trading above its net asset value. This has to do with CMT's track record in managing retail properties.
However, lately some institutional investors have been concerned that the shopping centre trust could be morphing into a mixed development trust. In 2006, CMT bought a 40 per cent stake in Raffles City, which comprises a mall, office tower, convention space and two hotels.
In May this year, CMT announced it was buying Atrium @ Orchard - a predominantly office asset - for $839.8 million.
Is CMT being forced to buy mixed developments because of the challenge of sourcing for pure-retail assets in Singapore as more shopping centres are already owned by Reits and private property funds?
Some investors would prefer CMT to be a pure retail play. If CMT dilutes its portfolio by acquiring mixed developments with office and other components, investors may demand a higher risk premium, that is, CMT may have to trade at a higher distribution yield, putting pressure on its unit price.
Not only that, there may be potential conflict of interest within the CapitaLand stable of Reits, since CMT's sister Reit CapitaCommercial Trust (CCT) owns mostly offices.
It may be timely to revisit some of the reasons behind CMT's acquisitions of Atrium and Raffles City.
Offices make up nearly 96 per cent of Atrium's existing net lettable area (NLA) of 373,446 sq ft. CMT's attraction to the property, however, is due to its strategic location next to the trust's existing mall, Plaza Singapura. By drawing synergies between the two properties, CMT can extract more value out of Plaza Singapura. Atrium is directly linked to Dhoby Ghaut MRT Station, which will be the interchange station for three lines. By integrating Atrium with Plaza Singapura, the latter will have improved MRT connectivity. CMT plans to boost Atrium's retail NLA from about 16,100 sq ft now to 172,100 sq ft by converting the first three levels into full-retail use. It also plans to create retail space on state land that it hopes to buy in front of Plaza Singapura.
CMT could also potentially move some big tenants from Plaza Singapura's upper floors to Atrium's upper levels and subdivide the vacated space at Plaza Singapura into smaller units that will hopefully fetch higher rents. Another possibility is to attract fitness centres and signature restaurants to Atrium's upper levels as office leases expire.
Given CMT's impressive track record at asset enhancement plans and its ability to create new retail space in its properties, it's possible to imagine Atrium transformed into a predominantly retail asset in future.
So too at Raffles City, asset enhancements have boosted the retail net lettable area by 12.5 per cent. These initiatives required the close cooperation of CCT, which owns the remaining 60 per cent in Raffles City. Had CMT bought only the mall in Raffles City, leaving the office tower to CCT, the two Reits might have had sibling arguments during the mall's refurbishment as many common areas were involved. Instead, by taking stakes in the entire development, the two Reits worked in unison.
When Raffles City's asset enhancement potential has been substantially realised, CMT and CCT could neaten their ownership - with CCT holding the office tower and CMT the mall. This will sharpen the two Reits' respective foci and give investors clearer choice to invest in their preferred asset class. Likewise, when CMT is done transforming Atrium and creating more retail space, it could sell the remaining office space to CCT. After all, CMT should not be competing with CCT - a big office landlord - for office tenants at Atrium.
There will also be office space when CMT builds four more floors on top of Funan DigitaLife Mall to tap the site's unutilised development potential. CMT has all approvals in place but will begin work only after the new office space has been substantially leased; this should make it easier for CMT to dispose of the office space and once more stick to its core strength in retail.
Moving ahead, CMT is unlikely to shy away from mixed assets as long as there are strategic reasons and where such assets have a retail component that it can add value to.
CMT will have to hope that investors will still find this defining strength endearing.
CAPITAMALL TRUST (CMT), Singapore's first real estate investment trust when it listed in 2002, has enduring appeal.
Six years since its flotation and with another 20 contenders in the Singapore Reit (S-Reit) market today, CMT remains Singapore's biggest Reit with an asset size of $7.2 billion.
The market has rewarded the trust's consistent ability to deliver total returns by according it one of the lowest costs of capital for any Singapore Reit. That is, CMT trades at one of the lowest distribution yields among S-Reits. The market demands a lower risk premium from CMT than it does for just about any other S-Reit. CMT is also trading above its net asset value. This has to do with CMT's track record in managing retail properties.
However, lately some institutional investors have been concerned that the shopping centre trust could be morphing into a mixed development trust. In 2006, CMT bought a 40 per cent stake in Raffles City, which comprises a mall, office tower, convention space and two hotels.
In May this year, CMT announced it was buying Atrium @ Orchard - a predominantly office asset - for $839.8 million.
Is CMT being forced to buy mixed developments because of the challenge of sourcing for pure-retail assets in Singapore as more shopping centres are already owned by Reits and private property funds?
Some investors would prefer CMT to be a pure retail play. If CMT dilutes its portfolio by acquiring mixed developments with office and other components, investors may demand a higher risk premium, that is, CMT may have to trade at a higher distribution yield, putting pressure on its unit price.
Not only that, there may be potential conflict of interest within the CapitaLand stable of Reits, since CMT's sister Reit CapitaCommercial Trust (CCT) owns mostly offices.
It may be timely to revisit some of the reasons behind CMT's acquisitions of Atrium and Raffles City.
Offices make up nearly 96 per cent of Atrium's existing net lettable area (NLA) of 373,446 sq ft. CMT's attraction to the property, however, is due to its strategic location next to the trust's existing mall, Plaza Singapura. By drawing synergies between the two properties, CMT can extract more value out of Plaza Singapura. Atrium is directly linked to Dhoby Ghaut MRT Station, which will be the interchange station for three lines. By integrating Atrium with Plaza Singapura, the latter will have improved MRT connectivity. CMT plans to boost Atrium's retail NLA from about 16,100 sq ft now to 172,100 sq ft by converting the first three levels into full-retail use. It also plans to create retail space on state land that it hopes to buy in front of Plaza Singapura.
CMT could also potentially move some big tenants from Plaza Singapura's upper floors to Atrium's upper levels and subdivide the vacated space at Plaza Singapura into smaller units that will hopefully fetch higher rents. Another possibility is to attract fitness centres and signature restaurants to Atrium's upper levels as office leases expire.
Given CMT's impressive track record at asset enhancement plans and its ability to create new retail space in its properties, it's possible to imagine Atrium transformed into a predominantly retail asset in future.
So too at Raffles City, asset enhancements have boosted the retail net lettable area by 12.5 per cent. These initiatives required the close cooperation of CCT, which owns the remaining 60 per cent in Raffles City. Had CMT bought only the mall in Raffles City, leaving the office tower to CCT, the two Reits might have had sibling arguments during the mall's refurbishment as many common areas were involved. Instead, by taking stakes in the entire development, the two Reits worked in unison.
When Raffles City's asset enhancement potential has been substantially realised, CMT and CCT could neaten their ownership - with CCT holding the office tower and CMT the mall. This will sharpen the two Reits' respective foci and give investors clearer choice to invest in their preferred asset class. Likewise, when CMT is done transforming Atrium and creating more retail space, it could sell the remaining office space to CCT. After all, CMT should not be competing with CCT - a big office landlord - for office tenants at Atrium.
There will also be office space when CMT builds four more floors on top of Funan DigitaLife Mall to tap the site's unutilised development potential. CMT has all approvals in place but will begin work only after the new office space has been substantially leased; this should make it easier for CMT to dispose of the office space and once more stick to its core strength in retail.
Moving ahead, CMT is unlikely to shy away from mixed assets as long as there are strategic reasons and where such assets have a retail component that it can add value to.
CMT will have to hope that investors will still find this defining strength endearing.
HK Home Sales May Fall On Inflation Worries
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
Share slide, global credit crunch could push property prices down, say analysts
(HONG KONG) Hong Kong's apartment transactions may fall to a 10-month low in July, then drop further, on concerns that accelerating inflation and a slumping stock market may push prices down, analysts said.
Pricey: Hong Kong has the most expensive luxury home prices in Asia - US$10,490 to US$14,780 psm, compared with US$12,510 to US$22,923 psm in Manhattan
Transactions in 10 of Hong Kong's biggest housing complexes, used by many analysts as a benchmark, fell to 27 last week from 33 the previous week, Centaline Property Agency said. Total home sales in the city may drop to 6,100 in July, the lowest number since September, from 7,167 in June, it said.
'This will probably continue for the whole of the third quarter,' said Louis Chan, managing director of residential properties at Centaline. 'We're looking at between a 3 and 5 per cent correction in prices within the quarter.'
Home values have tracked Hong Kong's economy, peaking in the second quarter of 1997, then crashing in the Asian financial crisis, leaving many homes worth less than their mortgages for years. The 2000 dotcom bubble burst, the Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the 2003 Sars epidemic caused prices to fall as much as 70 per cent from the peak. The rebound started in late 2003 and prices doubled in the past four years.
Now, the benchmark Hang Seng Index has fallen almost a third from its record in October as credit-market losses climbed worldwide, threatening global economic growth even as inflation accelerates in Hong Kong. The combination could deter potential homebuyers, possibly for the balance of the year.
'The Hong Kong residential market will go into a quiet period for the rest of 2008,' said Cusson Leung, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Credit Suisse. His July 8 report forecast a 5 to 10 per cent reduction in home prices in the second half.
Overall housing transactions in the second half may fall between 20 and 30 per cent from a year earlier, said Patrick Chow, head of research at real estate agency Ricacorp Properties. 'Many people looking to upgrade their properties again have had their capital drained by the stock market,' Mr Chow said. 'This may seriously impact the high-end market, in part because many of those homebuyers had upgraded last year.'
Hong Kong's four biggest real estate agencies this month fired a total of more than 300 workers in anticipation of a housing slump, according to a July 23 report in the Hong Kong Economic Times.
Hong Kong's inflation accelerated in June to the fastest pace in four months as food and energy costs climbed. Local lenders including BOC Hong Kong (Holdings) and Hang Seng Bank last month raised their mortgage rates for some customers to deflect the squeeze on lending margins.
'Inflation is giving many people second thoughts about buying properties,' said Alnwick Chan, a Hong Kong-based executive director at property research company Knight Frank LLP. 'There's going to be a correction but it won't be a crash.' Hong Kong has the most expensive luxury home prices in Asia, US$10,490 to US$14,780 per square metre, according to the Global Property Guide website. That compares with US$12,510 to US$22,923 per square metre in Manhattan.
The Hang Seng Properties Index, which tracks the city's six biggest builders by market value, has dropped 30 per cent this year on concerns Hong Kong banks may lift rates.
The expectation that the US Federal Reserve will start raising interest rates in the fourth quarter of this year has damped Asia's stock markets, according to Credit Suisse.
Sino Land sold almost 70 per cent of the apartments it made available at the Palazzo, a high-end complex overlooking the Sha Tin horse track in the first nine days of sales, Sing Tao Daily reported in May. Billionaire Li Ka-shing's Cheung Kong (Holdings), Hong Kong's second-biggest builder by value, met full-year sales targets by June, selling 2,700 apartments for HK$23 billion.
Transactions and prices may rebound in the fourth quarter if both the US and Hong Kong stock markets show they have weathered the sub-prime crisis, Centaline's Mr Chan said.
The property affordability ratio, homeowners' average monthly mortgage payment as a percentage of income, is 32 per cent, 'a very healthy level' compared with 93 per cent at the peak of the 1990s boom, according to Buggle Lau, chief analyst at Midland Holdings Ltd, Hong Kong's biggest publicly traded property agency.
'Growth is definitely slowing, but the fundamentals of the economy are still strong,' Mr Lau said. 'When the uncertainties go away we're pretty sure buyers are going to come back.' Midland's shares have plunged 66 per cent this year, after nearly quadrupling between the beginning of 2007 and January. -- Bloomberg
Share slide, global credit crunch could push property prices down, say analysts
(HONG KONG) Hong Kong's apartment transactions may fall to a 10-month low in July, then drop further, on concerns that accelerating inflation and a slumping stock market may push prices down, analysts said.
Pricey: Hong Kong has the most expensive luxury home prices in Asia - US$10,490 to US$14,780 psm, compared with US$12,510 to US$22,923 psm in Manhattan
Transactions in 10 of Hong Kong's biggest housing complexes, used by many analysts as a benchmark, fell to 27 last week from 33 the previous week, Centaline Property Agency said. Total home sales in the city may drop to 6,100 in July, the lowest number since September, from 7,167 in June, it said.
'This will probably continue for the whole of the third quarter,' said Louis Chan, managing director of residential properties at Centaline. 'We're looking at between a 3 and 5 per cent correction in prices within the quarter.'
Home values have tracked Hong Kong's economy, peaking in the second quarter of 1997, then crashing in the Asian financial crisis, leaving many homes worth less than their mortgages for years. The 2000 dotcom bubble burst, the Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the 2003 Sars epidemic caused prices to fall as much as 70 per cent from the peak. The rebound started in late 2003 and prices doubled in the past four years.
Now, the benchmark Hang Seng Index has fallen almost a third from its record in October as credit-market losses climbed worldwide, threatening global economic growth even as inflation accelerates in Hong Kong. The combination could deter potential homebuyers, possibly for the balance of the year.
'The Hong Kong residential market will go into a quiet period for the rest of 2008,' said Cusson Leung, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Credit Suisse. His July 8 report forecast a 5 to 10 per cent reduction in home prices in the second half.
Overall housing transactions in the second half may fall between 20 and 30 per cent from a year earlier, said Patrick Chow, head of research at real estate agency Ricacorp Properties. 'Many people looking to upgrade their properties again have had their capital drained by the stock market,' Mr Chow said. 'This may seriously impact the high-end market, in part because many of those homebuyers had upgraded last year.'
Hong Kong's four biggest real estate agencies this month fired a total of more than 300 workers in anticipation of a housing slump, according to a July 23 report in the Hong Kong Economic Times.
Hong Kong's inflation accelerated in June to the fastest pace in four months as food and energy costs climbed. Local lenders including BOC Hong Kong (Holdings) and Hang Seng Bank last month raised their mortgage rates for some customers to deflect the squeeze on lending margins.
'Inflation is giving many people second thoughts about buying properties,' said Alnwick Chan, a Hong Kong-based executive director at property research company Knight Frank LLP. 'There's going to be a correction but it won't be a crash.' Hong Kong has the most expensive luxury home prices in Asia, US$10,490 to US$14,780 per square metre, according to the Global Property Guide website. That compares with US$12,510 to US$22,923 per square metre in Manhattan.
The Hang Seng Properties Index, which tracks the city's six biggest builders by market value, has dropped 30 per cent this year on concerns Hong Kong banks may lift rates.
The expectation that the US Federal Reserve will start raising interest rates in the fourth quarter of this year has damped Asia's stock markets, according to Credit Suisse.
Sino Land sold almost 70 per cent of the apartments it made available at the Palazzo, a high-end complex overlooking the Sha Tin horse track in the first nine days of sales, Sing Tao Daily reported in May. Billionaire Li Ka-shing's Cheung Kong (Holdings), Hong Kong's second-biggest builder by value, met full-year sales targets by June, selling 2,700 apartments for HK$23 billion.
Transactions and prices may rebound in the fourth quarter if both the US and Hong Kong stock markets show they have weathered the sub-prime crisis, Centaline's Mr Chan said.
The property affordability ratio, homeowners' average monthly mortgage payment as a percentage of income, is 32 per cent, 'a very healthy level' compared with 93 per cent at the peak of the 1990s boom, according to Buggle Lau, chief analyst at Midland Holdings Ltd, Hong Kong's biggest publicly traded property agency.
'Growth is definitely slowing, but the fundamentals of the economy are still strong,' Mr Lau said. 'When the uncertainties go away we're pretty sure buyers are going to come back.' Midland's shares have plunged 66 per cent this year, after nearly quadrupling between the beginning of 2007 and January. -- Bloomberg
Award-Winners To Design HDB Flats
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
SCDA, WOHA and Surbana named consultants for Dawson Estate flats
FLAT-BUYERS eyeing Dawson Estate in Queenstown will be spoilt for choice, as upcoming public housing will feature designer looks courtesy of not one, not two, but three local award-winning architectural firms.
Ms Fu: There will be challenges in keeping HDB flats affordable
The Housing & Development Board (HDB) said yesterday that it will appoint SCDA Architects, WOHA Architects and Surbana International Consultants as design consultants for the district's public housing projects.
Dawson Estate comes under a 'Remaking Our Heartland' exercise that aims to transform public housing into vibrant homes for Singaporeans.
To showcase the regeneration of an old estate, HDB invited the three architectural firms last year to design public housing precincts in Dawson Estate based on new ideas and concepts.
Favourable response from the public led HDB to appoint all three as design consultants.
SCDA and WOHA received their letters of appointment at a HDB awards dinner yesterday evening. The two sites which both firms worked on are vacant and ready for development.
HDB plans to launch the first batch of flats on these two sites for sale under the Built-to-Order system in the third quarter of next year.
Construction could start in the first quarter of 2010 and be completed in 2014.
HDB will appoint Surbana later, when the site it worked on is cleared and ready for redevelopment in 2011.
'The participation of these firms will not only give HDB flat buyers greater variety and choice, it will also bring a livelier, more attractive buzz to Dawson,' said Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education Grace Fu.
HDB has also appointed a local landscape architectural firm, Cicada Pte Ltd, to draw up a landscape masterplan. The plan will create a distinct identity for Dawson Estate and bring together the three different precincts.
To retain Dawson Estate's heritage, HDB is inviting the public to contribute items from the district's past. Selected heritage items will be woven into the new development.
Ms Fu said yesterday that the 'Remaking Our Heartland' programme has made much progress. Nevertheless, she added: 'There will be challenges along the way, such as grappling with inflation and competing for resources amidst the global construction boom, while keeping HDB flats affordable.'
SCDA, WOHA and Surbana named consultants for Dawson Estate flats
FLAT-BUYERS eyeing Dawson Estate in Queenstown will be spoilt for choice, as upcoming public housing will feature designer looks courtesy of not one, not two, but three local award-winning architectural firms.
Ms Fu: There will be challenges in keeping HDB flats affordable
The Housing & Development Board (HDB) said yesterday that it will appoint SCDA Architects, WOHA Architects and Surbana International Consultants as design consultants for the district's public housing projects.
Dawson Estate comes under a 'Remaking Our Heartland' exercise that aims to transform public housing into vibrant homes for Singaporeans.
To showcase the regeneration of an old estate, HDB invited the three architectural firms last year to design public housing precincts in Dawson Estate based on new ideas and concepts.
Favourable response from the public led HDB to appoint all three as design consultants.
SCDA and WOHA received their letters of appointment at a HDB awards dinner yesterday evening. The two sites which both firms worked on are vacant and ready for development.
HDB plans to launch the first batch of flats on these two sites for sale under the Built-to-Order system in the third quarter of next year.
Construction could start in the first quarter of 2010 and be completed in 2014.
HDB will appoint Surbana later, when the site it worked on is cleared and ready for redevelopment in 2011.
'The participation of these firms will not only give HDB flat buyers greater variety and choice, it will also bring a livelier, more attractive buzz to Dawson,' said Senior Minister of State for National Development and Education Grace Fu.
HDB has also appointed a local landscape architectural firm, Cicada Pte Ltd, to draw up a landscape masterplan. The plan will create a distinct identity for Dawson Estate and bring together the three different precincts.
To retain Dawson Estate's heritage, HDB is inviting the public to contribute items from the district's past. Selected heritage items will be woven into the new development.
Ms Fu said yesterday that the 'Remaking Our Heartland' programme has made much progress. Nevertheless, she added: 'There will be challenges along the way, such as grappling with inflation and competing for resources amidst the global construction boom, while keeping HDB flats affordable.'
Frasers To Support Top KL Serviced Residences
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
FRASERS Hospitality, the hospitality arm of property group Frasers Centrepoint. said yesterday that it will provide technical and advisory services for a 'gold-standard' serviced residence project in Kuala Lumpur.
Mr Choe: Fraser Place KL is ideal for expats working on medium-term projects
The project, Fraser Place Kuala Lumpur, is in the Malaysian capital's 'Golden Triangle', where most international banks, oil-and-gas companies and multinationals are based.
It is also within walking distance of the Petronas Twin Towers and the retail mall Pavilion KL.
Fraser Place Kuala Lumpur is owned by Malaysian-listed YNH Property.
The project is part of a mixed development comprising an office tower and a second tower with 217 studios, one-bedroom, two-bedroom and penthouse serviced residences.
Frasers said in a statement yesterday that when Fraser Place Kuala Lumpur opens in the third quarter of 2009, it will set a new standard for Malaysia's extended-stay segment.
Every apartment has a separate bedroom, a fully-equipped kitchen with cooking implements, cutlery and a dishwasher, and a washer-dryer for clothes.
Guests can also make use of an all-day dining outlet, meeting and function rooms, fitness centre, and playground and playroom for children.
Frasers Hospitality chief executive officer Choe Peng Sum says the project will be ideal for expatriates working in Malaysia on medium- term projects, as it provides comfort, all-day-dining and even facilities for accompanying spouses and families.
FRASERS Hospitality, the hospitality arm of property group Frasers Centrepoint. said yesterday that it will provide technical and advisory services for a 'gold-standard' serviced residence project in Kuala Lumpur.
Mr Choe: Fraser Place KL is ideal for expats working on medium-term projects
The project, Fraser Place Kuala Lumpur, is in the Malaysian capital's 'Golden Triangle', where most international banks, oil-and-gas companies and multinationals are based.
It is also within walking distance of the Petronas Twin Towers and the retail mall Pavilion KL.
Fraser Place Kuala Lumpur is owned by Malaysian-listed YNH Property.
The project is part of a mixed development comprising an office tower and a second tower with 217 studios, one-bedroom, two-bedroom and penthouse serviced residences.
Frasers said in a statement yesterday that when Fraser Place Kuala Lumpur opens in the third quarter of 2009, it will set a new standard for Malaysia's extended-stay segment.
Every apartment has a separate bedroom, a fully-equipped kitchen with cooking implements, cutlery and a dishwasher, and a washer-dryer for clothes.
Guests can also make use of an all-day dining outlet, meeting and function rooms, fitness centre, and playground and playroom for children.
Frasers Hospitality chief executive officer Choe Peng Sum says the project will be ideal for expatriates working in Malaysia on medium- term projects, as it provides comfort, all-day-dining and even facilities for accompanying spouses and families.
CBRE Group Income Dives 88% In Q2
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
Brokerage fees hit as sales dry up due to global credit market crunch
(NEW YORK) CB Richard Ellis Group Inc, the world's largest commercial real estate brokerage, said quarterly net income plunged 88 per cent, partly on lower brokerage fees from sales that have all but dried up due to the severely constrained global credit markets.
Hazy days: CBRE's two biggest markets, the US and Britain saw a dramatic fall-off in commercial real estate sales and a slowdown in demand for space leasing. A bright spot was the Asia-Pacific where revenue rose 27.8%
Second-quarter net income fell to US$16.6 million, or 8 cents per share, from US$141.1 million, or 59 cents per share, in the year-earlier quarter, the company said on Tuesday.
Excluding one-time charges Los Angeles-based CB Richard Ellis would have earned US$33.2 million, or 16 cents per share, compared with US$157.3 million, or 66 cents last year, still far from the 44 cents analysts on average had expected, according to Reuters Estimates.
'As we had anticipated, the leasing business turned down from the strong first quarter, especially in the Americas and the UK, reflecting weak economic activity and decreasing business confidence,' Brett White, chief executive, said in a statement.
'Investment sales activity remained quite soft due to a broadening of the credit market turmoil and a continuing gap between buyer and seller expectations of property values. Decreased investment volumes have now become evident in all parts of the world.'
Revenue fell to US$1.3 billion from US$1.5 billion and behind the US$1.42 billion analysts had expected, according to Reuters Estimates.
The commercial real estate market has been hampered by the broader tightness in the credit markets.
The company's two biggest markets, the United States and Britain have seen a dramatic fall-off in commercial real estate sales and a slowdown in demand for space.
One bright spot was the company's real estate outsourcing business, which overseas real estate needs for large global companies. That segment saw revenue rise 29 per cent, accounting for one third of the Los Angeles-based company's global revenue. Also the Asia-Pacific region saw revenue rise 27.8 per cent to US$155.7 million.
But the larger regions were gloomy. In the Americas region, which includes the United States, Canada and Latin America, revenue fell 16 per cent to US$785.5 million. In Europe, Middle East and Africa, revenue fell 9.4 per cent to US$299.7 million.
In the Global Investment Management segment, which consists of investment management operations in the United States, Europe and Asia, revenue fell 49 per cent to US$42.7 million, compared with the second-quarter last year, which included performance fees from funds.
In addition, the second quarter of 2008 included a writedown of US$11.9 million for two investments whose market value declined. -- Reuters
Brokerage fees hit as sales dry up due to global credit market crunch
(NEW YORK) CB Richard Ellis Group Inc, the world's largest commercial real estate brokerage, said quarterly net income plunged 88 per cent, partly on lower brokerage fees from sales that have all but dried up due to the severely constrained global credit markets.
Hazy days: CBRE's two biggest markets, the US and Britain saw a dramatic fall-off in commercial real estate sales and a slowdown in demand for space leasing. A bright spot was the Asia-Pacific where revenue rose 27.8%
Second-quarter net income fell to US$16.6 million, or 8 cents per share, from US$141.1 million, or 59 cents per share, in the year-earlier quarter, the company said on Tuesday.
Excluding one-time charges Los Angeles-based CB Richard Ellis would have earned US$33.2 million, or 16 cents per share, compared with US$157.3 million, or 66 cents last year, still far from the 44 cents analysts on average had expected, according to Reuters Estimates.
'As we had anticipated, the leasing business turned down from the strong first quarter, especially in the Americas and the UK, reflecting weak economic activity and decreasing business confidence,' Brett White, chief executive, said in a statement.
'Investment sales activity remained quite soft due to a broadening of the credit market turmoil and a continuing gap between buyer and seller expectations of property values. Decreased investment volumes have now become evident in all parts of the world.'
Revenue fell to US$1.3 billion from US$1.5 billion and behind the US$1.42 billion analysts had expected, according to Reuters Estimates.
The commercial real estate market has been hampered by the broader tightness in the credit markets.
The company's two biggest markets, the United States and Britain have seen a dramatic fall-off in commercial real estate sales and a slowdown in demand for space.
One bright spot was the company's real estate outsourcing business, which overseas real estate needs for large global companies. That segment saw revenue rise 29 per cent, accounting for one third of the Los Angeles-based company's global revenue. Also the Asia-Pacific region saw revenue rise 27.8 per cent to US$155.7 million.
But the larger regions were gloomy. In the Americas region, which includes the United States, Canada and Latin America, revenue fell 16 per cent to US$785.5 million. In Europe, Middle East and Africa, revenue fell 9.4 per cent to US$299.7 million.
In the Global Investment Management segment, which consists of investment management operations in the United States, Europe and Asia, revenue fell 49 per cent to US$42.7 million, compared with the second-quarter last year, which included performance fees from funds.
In addition, the second quarter of 2008 included a writedown of US$11.9 million for two investments whose market value declined. -- Reuters
Jones Lang Q2 Profit Dives 67% To US$25m
Source : The Business Times, July 31, 2008
(NEW YORK) Jones Lang LaSalle Inc, the world's second-largest commercial real estate broker, said that second-quarter profit fell 67.6 per cent as borrowing costs increased for apartment buildings, offices and retail properties.
Mr Dyer: Diverse business lines offset the impact of illiquid credit markets
Net income declined to US$25.5 million, or 73 US cents a share, from US$78.6 million, or US$2.32, a year earlier, the Chicago-based company said in a statement on Tuesday. Revenue dropped 2.5 per cent to US$660 million.
Higher borrowing costs and scarcer financing for investment in commercial real estate cut into property sales.
Financial services firms have lost or written down more than US$468 billion since the beginning of last year, prompting them to curtail lending.
The company said that it had a 34 per cent increase in investment advisory fees and a 23 per cent increase from commissions.
'Solid revenue performance from LaSalle Investment Management and our diverse business lines offset the continued impact of illiquid credit markets,' chief executive officer Colin Dyer said in the statement.
Jones Lang, second in market value to CB Richard Ellis Group Inc, earns about 34 per cent of its revenue from Europe and the Middle East, 29 per cent from the Americas and 23 per cent from the Asia-Pacific region, according to a company report this month.
The company was projected to earn US$1.01 a share, according to the average of four analysts' estimates in a Bloomberg survey.
In the Americas region, Jones Lang said, revenue rose 6 per cent to US$190 million. In Europe and the Middle East, it rose 20 per cent to US$236 million, and Asia Pacific revenue fell 33 per cent to US$142 million. That decline came after the company failed to repeat a year-ago gain made on a hotel transaction.
Jones Lang stock has lost 20 per cent in New York Stock Exchange composite trading since the beginning of the year.
Jones Lang operates in more than 700 cities and 60 countries with about 30,000 employees, according to its website. It represents tenants, and manages, leases and values commercial real estate. -- Bloomberg
(NEW YORK) Jones Lang LaSalle Inc, the world's second-largest commercial real estate broker, said that second-quarter profit fell 67.6 per cent as borrowing costs increased for apartment buildings, offices and retail properties.
Mr Dyer: Diverse business lines offset the impact of illiquid credit markets
Net income declined to US$25.5 million, or 73 US cents a share, from US$78.6 million, or US$2.32, a year earlier, the Chicago-based company said in a statement on Tuesday. Revenue dropped 2.5 per cent to US$660 million.
Higher borrowing costs and scarcer financing for investment in commercial real estate cut into property sales.
Financial services firms have lost or written down more than US$468 billion since the beginning of last year, prompting them to curtail lending.
The company said that it had a 34 per cent increase in investment advisory fees and a 23 per cent increase from commissions.
'Solid revenue performance from LaSalle Investment Management and our diverse business lines offset the continued impact of illiquid credit markets,' chief executive officer Colin Dyer said in the statement.
Jones Lang, second in market value to CB Richard Ellis Group Inc, earns about 34 per cent of its revenue from Europe and the Middle East, 29 per cent from the Americas and 23 per cent from the Asia-Pacific region, according to a company report this month.
The company was projected to earn US$1.01 a share, according to the average of four analysts' estimates in a Bloomberg survey.
In the Americas region, Jones Lang said, revenue rose 6 per cent to US$190 million. In Europe and the Middle East, it rose 20 per cent to US$236 million, and Asia Pacific revenue fell 33 per cent to US$142 million. That decline came after the company failed to repeat a year-ago gain made on a hotel transaction.
Jones Lang stock has lost 20 per cent in New York Stock Exchange composite trading since the beginning of the year.
Jones Lang operates in more than 700 cities and 60 countries with about 30,000 employees, according to its website. It represents tenants, and manages, leases and values commercial real estate. -- Bloomberg
CDL Hospitality Trusts Looks To Foreign Markets To Grow
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
CDL Hospitality Trusts is setting its sights overseas for potential acquisitions, favouring markets like Japan and China.
It said that while the Singapore hospitality sector is still strong, it is also seeing many interesting offers from the rest of Asia.
Medical tourism and a growing financial sector have kept room rates at record levels in Singapore, but CDL Hospitality Trusts is looking to spread its wings.
About 97 per cent of its S$29.5 million revenue comes from Singapore right now, and the REIT is hoping to take advantage of the current downturn to change that.
Vincent Yeo, CEO of CDL Hospitality Trusts, said: "I think it's part of our plan to diversify and become a pan-Asian REIT. We like to think that we can find bargains around the region, within the next six to twelve months."
The trust has a deep well of reserves to draw from. It currently sports borrowings of 20 per cent and has a debt ceiling of S$740 million before it hits the threshold of 40 per cent.
Among the markets that the REIT finds particularly attractive are Japan, China and India.
Mr Yeo said: "Recently, there have been a lot of deals made available in Japan, and that has come about because of the credit environment where the loan to value ratio has dropped significantly in terms of what banks are willing to lend.
"Credit spreads have also gone up significantly, so people have had refinancing difficulties and have looked to sell at realistic prices."
For the first half of 2008, CDL Hospitality Trusts clocked in a 34 per cent increase in revenue per available room. Distributable income per unit rose to 5.89 cents, up 52 per cent from last year.- CNA/so
CDL Hospitality Trusts is setting its sights overseas for potential acquisitions, favouring markets like Japan and China.
It said that while the Singapore hospitality sector is still strong, it is also seeing many interesting offers from the rest of Asia.
Medical tourism and a growing financial sector have kept room rates at record levels in Singapore, but CDL Hospitality Trusts is looking to spread its wings.
About 97 per cent of its S$29.5 million revenue comes from Singapore right now, and the REIT is hoping to take advantage of the current downturn to change that.
Vincent Yeo, CEO of CDL Hospitality Trusts, said: "I think it's part of our plan to diversify and become a pan-Asian REIT. We like to think that we can find bargains around the region, within the next six to twelve months."
The trust has a deep well of reserves to draw from. It currently sports borrowings of 20 per cent and has a debt ceiling of S$740 million before it hits the threshold of 40 per cent.
Among the markets that the REIT finds particularly attractive are Japan, China and India.
Mr Yeo said: "Recently, there have been a lot of deals made available in Japan, and that has come about because of the credit environment where the loan to value ratio has dropped significantly in terms of what banks are willing to lend.
"Credit spreads have also gone up significantly, so people have had refinancing difficulties and have looked to sell at realistic prices."
For the first half of 2008, CDL Hospitality Trusts clocked in a 34 per cent increase in revenue per available room. Distributable income per unit rose to 5.89 cents, up 52 per cent from last year.- CNA/so
United Engineers Suffers 67% Drop In H1 Profit
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
United Engineers has suffered a 67 per cent drop in first-half earnings, hurt by the strong Singapore dollar and fair value losses.
Profit for the six months ended in June came in at S$8.7 million.
But revenue increased slightly by 2 per cent to S$273.8 million, mainly bolstered by higher rental rates.
Looking ahead, United Engineers is warning about the impact of rising costs. - CNA/ms
United Engineers has suffered a 67 per cent drop in first-half earnings, hurt by the strong Singapore dollar and fair value losses.
Profit for the six months ended in June came in at S$8.7 million.
But revenue increased slightly by 2 per cent to S$273.8 million, mainly bolstered by higher rental rates.
Looking ahead, United Engineers is warning about the impact of rising costs. - CNA/ms
MP REIT Reports DPU Of 1.78 Cents For Q2
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
Macquarie Prime Real Estate Investment Trust (MP REIT) has booked a second-quarter distributable income of S$17.2 million.
That works out to a distribution per unit of 1.78 cents - an increase of almost 19 per cent compared to a year ago.
Gross revenue hit S$30.2 million, up 28 per cent year-on-year.
This was driven by higher rental rates achieved for renewals, new committed leases and revenue from overseas properties.
Macquarie said it has inked an agreement with footwear giant Nike to set up its biggest and first directly-owned and managed concept store in Singapore and Southeast Asia in Wisma Atria before year-end. - CNA/ms
Macquarie Prime Real Estate Investment Trust (MP REIT) has booked a second-quarter distributable income of S$17.2 million.
That works out to a distribution per unit of 1.78 cents - an increase of almost 19 per cent compared to a year ago.
Gross revenue hit S$30.2 million, up 28 per cent year-on-year.
This was driven by higher rental rates achieved for renewals, new committed leases and revenue from overseas properties.
Macquarie said it has inked an agreement with footwear giant Nike to set up its biggest and first directly-owned and managed concept store in Singapore and Southeast Asia in Wisma Atria before year-end. - CNA/ms
CapitaRetail China Trust To Distribute 1.7 Cents Per Unit In Q2
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
CapitaRetail China Trust (CRCT) is distributing 1.7cents per unit for its second quarter. This is 10.4 per cent higher than its forecast for the period.
In all, CRCT is distributing S$10.5 million to its unit holders. The trust said its net property income grew 34 per cent on year to about S$16.5 million.
Revenue also jumped to S$26.4 million for the quarter, some 49 per cent higher than the same period a year ago. This is mainly due to revenue contribution from Xizhimen Mall in Beijing, which was acquired in February this year.
CRCT said that barring unforeseen circumstances, it remains confident of meeting its forecast distribution per unit for the full financial year 2008 of 6.67 cents per unit.
It is posting strong same-store sales, with year-on-year growth in some malls at between 24.5 per cent and 77.2 per cent.
The trust said about 94 per cent of its forecast gross rental revenue for this year has also been locked in.
CRCT's total asset size is about S$1.2 billion, comprising eight retail mall properties in five major Chinese cities.
The properties are Xizhimen Mall, Wangjing Mall, Jiulong Mall and Anzhen Mall in Beijing, Qibao Mall in Shanghai, Zhengzhou Mall in Zhengzhou, Saihan Mall in Huhehaote and Xinwu Mall in Wuhu. - CNA/yb
CapitaRetail China Trust (CRCT) is distributing 1.7cents per unit for its second quarter. This is 10.4 per cent higher than its forecast for the period.
In all, CRCT is distributing S$10.5 million to its unit holders. The trust said its net property income grew 34 per cent on year to about S$16.5 million.
Revenue also jumped to S$26.4 million for the quarter, some 49 per cent higher than the same period a year ago. This is mainly due to revenue contribution from Xizhimen Mall in Beijing, which was acquired in February this year.
CRCT said that barring unforeseen circumstances, it remains confident of meeting its forecast distribution per unit for the full financial year 2008 of 6.67 cents per unit.
It is posting strong same-store sales, with year-on-year growth in some malls at between 24.5 per cent and 77.2 per cent.
The trust said about 94 per cent of its forecast gross rental revenue for this year has also been locked in.
CRCT's total asset size is about S$1.2 billion, comprising eight retail mall properties in five major Chinese cities.
The properties are Xizhimen Mall, Wangjing Mall, Jiulong Mall and Anzhen Mall in Beijing, Qibao Mall in Shanghai, Zhengzhou Mall in Zhengzhou, Saihan Mall in Huhehaote and Xinwu Mall in Wuhu. - CNA/yb
Suntec REIT To Distribute 2.793 Cents Per Unit For Q3, Up 33%
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
Suntec Real Estate Investment Trust is planning to distribute 2.793 cents per unit for its fiscal third quarter.
This was 33 per cent higher than the distribution per unit in the year-ago period and also 25 per cent higher than forecast.
The trust's total distributable income came to S$42 million for the three months to June, up 40 per cent on year.
Suntec REIT credited its strong organic growth and asset enhancement of its properties for the better performance.
It said despite the ongoing US sub-prime crisis, both its office and retail portfolios have achieved stronger committed rents compared to the last quarter.
Its office portfolio achieved another strong performance during the quarter. Renewal and replacement leases at Suntec City were secured at higher closing rents of between S$12 and S$15 per square foot per month.
As at 30 June 2008, Suntec REIT's committed occupancy for the overall office portfolio stood at 99.4 per cent.
The trust said it has no major refinancing needs for the rest of FY2008 and FY2009.
Suntec REIT said barring unforeseen circumstances, it expects its performance for the remainder of the year to continue to be strong. It also expects to exceed its forecast DPU of 8.69 cents. - CNA/vm
Suntec Real Estate Investment Trust is planning to distribute 2.793 cents per unit for its fiscal third quarter.
This was 33 per cent higher than the distribution per unit in the year-ago period and also 25 per cent higher than forecast.
The trust's total distributable income came to S$42 million for the three months to June, up 40 per cent on year.
Suntec REIT credited its strong organic growth and asset enhancement of its properties for the better performance.
It said despite the ongoing US sub-prime crisis, both its office and retail portfolios have achieved stronger committed rents compared to the last quarter.
Its office portfolio achieved another strong performance during the quarter. Renewal and replacement leases at Suntec City were secured at higher closing rents of between S$12 and S$15 per square foot per month.
As at 30 June 2008, Suntec REIT's committed occupancy for the overall office portfolio stood at 99.4 per cent.
The trust said it has no major refinancing needs for the rest of FY2008 and FY2009.
Suntec REIT said barring unforeseen circumstances, it expects its performance for the remainder of the year to continue to be strong. It also expects to exceed its forecast DPU of 8.69 cents. - CNA/vm
Award-Winning Architects To Design New Dawson Estate
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
Two award-winning private architects were officially appointed by the Housing and Development Board (HDB) on Wednesday to put a new spin to the old Dawson Estate in Queenstown.
SCDA Architects Pte Ltd and WOHA Architects Pte Ltd were earlier commissioned to draw up plans for two separate public housing sites at the junction of Margaret Drive and Dawson Road.
The new flats will be launched for sale under the Build-To-Order system in the third quarter of 2009.
The 60-hectare Dawson district, which was first developed in the 1950s, will have new homes nestled among lush greenery.
Related Videos :- http://tinyurl.com/666pgv
SCDA's plan features multiple layers of common spaces such as car parks, shops and facilities, while individual residential units can be combined to create lofts, which are ideal for home offices or larger families.
The 823-unit project will also be eco-friendly.
Chan Soo Khian, design director, SCDA Architects, said: "All the surface runoffs will be collected in retention tanks and these will then be used to irrigate all the landscape. The staircase would be integrated with solar panels."
At a separate site in the same district, architects at WOHA spent over four months on their work. The project will also boast sky gardens and integrated facilities.
It is expected to be home to about 1,000 households, which will have plenty of opportunity to interact.
Richard Hassell, founding director of WOHA Architects, said: "Every apartment feels like it belongs to a smaller community of about 60 or 80 homes. The way we've done it is to make a space... so on the way from the lift to the front door, you always go through this space."
These flats are expected to be ready in 2014 and their price tags will be unveiled next year.
To preserve the heritage of the area, HDB is also calling on the public to contribute items relating to Queenstown. These could be old photographs, postcards or even cinema tickets, which will be incorporated into the design of the new estate.
Subana International Consultants has been chosen to develop a third site in the Dawson Estate. The company will be officially appointed when the plot is cleared in 2011.
The plans will be on display at the HDB Hub from July 31 to August 10. - CNA/so
Two award-winning private architects were officially appointed by the Housing and Development Board (HDB) on Wednesday to put a new spin to the old Dawson Estate in Queenstown.
SCDA Architects Pte Ltd and WOHA Architects Pte Ltd were earlier commissioned to draw up plans for two separate public housing sites at the junction of Margaret Drive and Dawson Road.
The new flats will be launched for sale under the Build-To-Order system in the third quarter of 2009.
The 60-hectare Dawson district, which was first developed in the 1950s, will have new homes nestled among lush greenery.
Related Videos :- http://tinyurl.com/666pgv
SCDA's plan features multiple layers of common spaces such as car parks, shops and facilities, while individual residential units can be combined to create lofts, which are ideal for home offices or larger families.
The 823-unit project will also be eco-friendly.
Chan Soo Khian, design director, SCDA Architects, said: "All the surface runoffs will be collected in retention tanks and these will then be used to irrigate all the landscape. The staircase would be integrated with solar panels."
At a separate site in the same district, architects at WOHA spent over four months on their work. The project will also boast sky gardens and integrated facilities.
It is expected to be home to about 1,000 households, which will have plenty of opportunity to interact.
Richard Hassell, founding director of WOHA Architects, said: "Every apartment feels like it belongs to a smaller community of about 60 or 80 homes. The way we've done it is to make a space... so on the way from the lift to the front door, you always go through this space."
These flats are expected to be ready in 2014 and their price tags will be unveiled next year.
To preserve the heritage of the area, HDB is also calling on the public to contribute items relating to Queenstown. These could be old photographs, postcards or even cinema tickets, which will be incorporated into the design of the new estate.
Subana International Consultants has been chosen to develop a third site in the Dawson Estate. The company will be officially appointed when the plot is cleared in 2011.
The plans will be on display at the HDB Hub from July 31 to August 10. - CNA/so
US Home Prices Continue To Fall; Values Gain In Some Cities
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
WASHINGTON : The decline in home values in major cities accelerated in May amid a lingering property slump, but prices in some areas showed improvement, a survey showed Tuesday.
A house for sale in Illinois.
The Standard and Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index - which tracks property prices across major metropolitan areas - registered a hefty fall of 15.8 percent in May compared with the same month a year ago, marking a record annual decline.
The benchmark index tracks property prices in 20 major US cities.
Home prices in the 20 large cities declined 0.9 percent on a monthly basis to May.
"The overall real estate market continued to slide in May," said David Blitzer, the head of S&P's index committee.
But the survey also showed that home prices in seven cities, Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis, and Portland, displayed monthly increases in May compared with April.
Property values in the Nevada gambling hub of Las Vegas and in Miami, Florida, continued to fall heavily, however.
The survey showed that property values slumped by 3.6 and 2.9 percent in Miami and Las Vegas respectively in the month to May.
Parts of California, Florida, Nevada and Ohio have been particularly badly hit by the lengthy US housing slump, especially neighbourhoods targeted for speculative construction projects.
"House prices will continue to drop because inventories of unsold homes remain high," said Patrick Newport, an economist at Global Insight.
"Recent progress on reducing inventories has been modest. This is bad news because inventories need to come down considerably for the housing market to equilibrate," Newport said.
Other economists believe the housing market slump is showing some signs of bottoming out.
The US housing market has been in a downturn for over two years following a multi-year boom which saw home sales and prices propelled higher, partly due to a speculative building frenzy in some states. - AFP/de
WASHINGTON : The decline in home values in major cities accelerated in May amid a lingering property slump, but prices in some areas showed improvement, a survey showed Tuesday.
A house for sale in Illinois.
The Standard and Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index - which tracks property prices across major metropolitan areas - registered a hefty fall of 15.8 percent in May compared with the same month a year ago, marking a record annual decline.
The benchmark index tracks property prices in 20 major US cities.
Home prices in the 20 large cities declined 0.9 percent on a monthly basis to May.
"The overall real estate market continued to slide in May," said David Blitzer, the head of S&P's index committee.
But the survey also showed that home prices in seven cities, Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis, and Portland, displayed monthly increases in May compared with April.
Property values in the Nevada gambling hub of Las Vegas and in Miami, Florida, continued to fall heavily, however.
The survey showed that property values slumped by 3.6 and 2.9 percent in Miami and Las Vegas respectively in the month to May.
Parts of California, Florida, Nevada and Ohio have been particularly badly hit by the lengthy US housing slump, especially neighbourhoods targeted for speculative construction projects.
"House prices will continue to drop because inventories of unsold homes remain high," said Patrick Newport, an economist at Global Insight.
"Recent progress on reducing inventories has been modest. This is bad news because inventories need to come down considerably for the housing market to equilibrate," Newport said.
Other economists believe the housing market slump is showing some signs of bottoming out.
The US housing market has been in a downturn for over two years following a multi-year boom which saw home sales and prices propelled higher, partly due to a speculative building frenzy in some states. - AFP/de
HSBC Says Global Credit Crisis Not Having Large Impact In Asia
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
HONG KONG: Global banking giant HSBC has dismissed fears of a global credit crisis having a large impact in Asia. It said that overall, Asian economies remain robust, thanks to strong domestic demand.
The US mortgage crisis has put America on a cautious footing and cut its demand for Asian exports - sparking fears that this will put a drag on the growth of regional economies. However, Hong Kong-based economists from HSBC have dismissed those fears.
Frederic Neumann, senior Asian economist, HSBC, said: "We've seen a lot of news reports and commentaries suggesting that Asian economies are likely to decelerate very sharply into the year end. But I think Asian economies are fairly sound."
The most sound economies appear to be China and India, which can tap on strong domestic demand, which is buffering against the negative effects of a US slowdown.
However, HSBC said Taiwan and Thailand are among the those most vulnerable to weakness ahead because of a rapid slowdown in exports and sluggish domestic demand.
The bank said that those looking to invest should stick to places which are considered more developed markets or those that are relatively less affected by inflation.
Garry Evans, chief equity strategist, Asia-Pacific, HSBC, elaborated: "Singapore, (a) developed market, (is) relatively less volatile. (In) China, we don't see (inflation) as being a particularly big issue; (its) earnings growth is fairly visible. Korea, (an) OECD member, (is) one of the more developed markets in Asia."
Although Asian economies remain sound, HSBC said economic imbalance is something that policymakers need to keep their eye on.
It said they must tackle the issue of inflation to keep growth from suffering in the future. - CNA/ms
HONG KONG: Global banking giant HSBC has dismissed fears of a global credit crisis having a large impact in Asia. It said that overall, Asian economies remain robust, thanks to strong domestic demand.
The US mortgage crisis has put America on a cautious footing and cut its demand for Asian exports - sparking fears that this will put a drag on the growth of regional economies. However, Hong Kong-based economists from HSBC have dismissed those fears.
Frederic Neumann, senior Asian economist, HSBC, said: "We've seen a lot of news reports and commentaries suggesting that Asian economies are likely to decelerate very sharply into the year end. But I think Asian economies are fairly sound."
The most sound economies appear to be China and India, which can tap on strong domestic demand, which is buffering against the negative effects of a US slowdown.
However, HSBC said Taiwan and Thailand are among the those most vulnerable to weakness ahead because of a rapid slowdown in exports and sluggish domestic demand.
The bank said that those looking to invest should stick to places which are considered more developed markets or those that are relatively less affected by inflation.
Garry Evans, chief equity strategist, Asia-Pacific, HSBC, elaborated: "Singapore, (a) developed market, (is) relatively less volatile. (In) China, we don't see (inflation) as being a particularly big issue; (its) earnings growth is fairly visible. Korea, (an) OECD member, (is) one of the more developed markets in Asia."
Although Asian economies remain sound, HSBC said economic imbalance is something that policymakers need to keep their eye on.
It said they must tackle the issue of inflation to keep growth from suffering in the future. - CNA/ms
Bush Signs Massive Housing Bill
Source : Channel NewsAsia, 30 July 2008
WASHINGTON : US President George W. Bush has signed an elaborate housing rescue plan designed to help thousands of homeowners avert foreclosure and bolster mortgage finance giants, the White House said on Wednesday.
A sign advertising a reduced price is seen in front of a home for sale in Richmond.
Bush signed the most sweeping housing legislation in decades "to improve confidence and stability in markets, and to provide better oversight for (struggling US mortgage lenders) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac," White House spokesman Tony Fratto said in a statement announcing the signing.
"The Federal Housing Administration will begin to implement new policies intended to keep more deserving American families in their homes," Fratto added.
The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, which legislators from both sides of the aisle have described as vital to stem fallout from a slumping housing sector, provides 300 billion dollars in federal guarantees to help refinance troubled mortgages.
It provides for government credit and equity injections in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two mortgage lenders that underpin much of the housing market, and calls for some 3.9 billion dollars to help local governments buy and rehabilitate foreclosed homes.
Opponents to the bill had argued that it would reward "irresponsible" lenders and consumers and allow the government too big a role in the housing market.
Bush, too, had opposed the bill because of the inclusion of the local government grants, but eventually dropped his opposition.
The bill's supporters stressed that providing a financial lifeline for the government-sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as well as more regulatory oversight would contribute to confidence and stability in housing and financial markets.
The aid package comes with the housing sector still weakening from a nearly two-year-old slide and data showing home prices falling further, inventories rising and many buyers waiting on the sidelines. - AFP/de
WASHINGTON : US President George W. Bush has signed an elaborate housing rescue plan designed to help thousands of homeowners avert foreclosure and bolster mortgage finance giants, the White House said on Wednesday.
A sign advertising a reduced price is seen in front of a home for sale in Richmond.
Bush signed the most sweeping housing legislation in decades "to improve confidence and stability in markets, and to provide better oversight for (struggling US mortgage lenders) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac," White House spokesman Tony Fratto said in a statement announcing the signing.
"The Federal Housing Administration will begin to implement new policies intended to keep more deserving American families in their homes," Fratto added.
The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, which legislators from both sides of the aisle have described as vital to stem fallout from a slumping housing sector, provides 300 billion dollars in federal guarantees to help refinance troubled mortgages.
It provides for government credit and equity injections in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two mortgage lenders that underpin much of the housing market, and calls for some 3.9 billion dollars to help local governments buy and rehabilitate foreclosed homes.
Opponents to the bill had argued that it would reward "irresponsible" lenders and consumers and allow the government too big a role in the housing market.
Bush, too, had opposed the bill because of the inclusion of the local government grants, but eventually dropped his opposition.
The bill's supporters stressed that providing a financial lifeline for the government-sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as well as more regulatory oversight would contribute to confidence and stability in housing and financial markets.
The aid package comes with the housing sector still weakening from a nearly two-year-old slide and data showing home prices falling further, inventories rising and many buyers waiting on the sidelines. - AFP/de