Source : The Business Times, March 13, 2009
As prices drop sharply from peak, investors may return to pick up bargains
The entire 32nd floor of Suntec City Tower 1 has been sold for about $1,300 per square foot of strata area, which is about 40 per cent lower than what strata floors in the development were fetching about seven or eight months ago. BT understands the buyer is a Hong Kong investment company.
The seller is understood to be an entity linked to a German company that had bought the property for about $1,180 psf or $15 million in June 2006 - just as prices were starting to climb. They have come a full circle since then.
Cushman & Wakefield brokered the latest sale, which involves a lump-sum price of $16.5 million for the floor that has a strata area of about 12,712 sq ft.
Prices of office space at Suntec City - a Grade A strata office haunt - have been slipping steadily in recent months. A December 2008 transaction of the entire 42nd floor in Suntec Tower 1 took place at $1,502 psf.
In July last year, the 20th level in Suntec Tower 2 changed hands at $2,350 psf while in January 2008, the 17th floor of the same block fetched $2,300 psf.
'If you look at transactions of office floors at Suntec City, say about 12 months ago, or even just seven/eight months ago, they were going at above $2,000 psf; now they are below $1,500 psf. So that's a huge discount,' observed Cushman & Wakefield managing director Donald Han.
It also presents attractive value to some potential investors, although strata office transactions on the whole have slowed to a trickle amid the generally weak property investment sales climate and the tight credit market.
'Things are a lot different from two years ago when rents were escalating. Then, you'd find buyers looking to own their premises instead of being at the mercy of landlords and upward rental revisions. Today, the priority for companies is cash preservation and buyers are looking at the right price before taking a position. There are still some investors hoping to buy strata offices for their own occupation. But there are also pure investors hoping to fish at the bottom of the cycle,' Mr Han said.
Some of those willing to sell their strata offices now may be trying to capitalise on opportunities such as acquiring new businesses, said Mr Han.
DTZ's senior director for investment advisory services Shaun Poh said that foreign companies with a presence in Singapore are among those interested in buying strata office floors. 'Some of them may need say only 3,000 to 4,000 sq ft premises, but are willing to pick up an entire floor of say 11,000 to 12,000 sq ft at Suntec City (and lease out the rest of the space). So it's a case of buying for their own use mixed with an investment flavour,' he said. And if there's a chance of prices coming down another 10-15 per cent, they are prepared to wait it out.
Cushman's Mr Han recalls that during last year's market peak, strata office investors were eyeing units with either vacant possession or with leases expiring soon. They wanted to ride on higher rental rates that would come with new or renewed leases.
'But with office rents slowing down quickly today, you'd probably want a unit with a lease committed during the peak last year and with another two years to go,' Mr Han said.
Grade A office rents peaked in Q3 last year. According to CB Richard Ellis data, the average gross monthly rental value for Grade A office space in Singapore slipped 20.2 per cent in Q4 last year from the preceding quarter, resulting in a full-year decline in 2008 of 12.5 per cent. This was in sharp contrast to the 96.4 per cent jump seen in 2007.
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