BlackRock's $2.5 billion sale: a sign of
life for Singapore's office market
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[June 06, 2016]
By Aradhana Aravindan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc
<BLK.N> said it would sell a 43-storey Singapore office tower for $2.5
billion - one of at least three office building deals in the last two
months for a market gripped by worries about oversupply and rising
vacancies.
The sale to Qatar Investment Authority, a sovereign wealth fund,
is Singapore's largest office transaction. It is also the largest
single-tower real estate deal in Asia-Pacific, according to
BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager.
The selling price of S$2,700 ($1,980) per square foot for Asia
Square Tower 1 in the city-state's financial district, has only been
outdone by deals in London and Hong Kong, according to property
consultant JLL, which was one of BlackRock's advisers on the
transaction.
The U.S. firm said the deal could mark a turning point for Singapore
real estate and that gloomy views about the market were likely
overdone.
"Singapore as a home for capital is always very well regarded in the
region," said John Saunders, head of Asia Pacific for BlackRock Real
Estate.
"So for those folks who have dry powder and are looking to invest,
frankly ourselves included, I think a lot of people are looking at
Singapore and saying this could be an interesting environment," he
added.
But others were less optimistic, saying the BlackRock deal should be
regarded as an exception at a time when vacancy rates for
Singapore's office property sector are near their highest level in
almost a decade and a raft of new supply was about to hit the
market.
"This is not a deal that triggers more deals, because of the supply
and demand situation," said Nicholas Mak, executive director at SLP
International Property Consultants.
He said developers were set to add 4 million square feet of office
space in Singapore this year - equivalent to about 5 percent of the
current market - which will be followed by another 1.4 million next
year.
Media reports have said that BlackRock had been seeking S$4 billion
for the building instead of S$3.4 billion it gained. BlackRock said
it was happy with the price but declined comment further on
financial terms.
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File photo of a BlackRock building in New York June 12, 2009.
REUTERS/Eric Thayer
On a per square foot basis, similar valuations were gained in a 2014
Singapore deal, according to consultancy firm Cushman & Wakefield.
The BlackRock deal follows two smaller ones - Singapore's Capitaland
Commercial Trust's <CACT.SI> plan to buy the remaining 60 percent of
an office building it did not own and an offer by Singapore-listed
MYP Ltd <MYPL.SI> to buy the Straits Trading Building for S$560
million last week.
Asia Square Tower 1 has over 1.25 million square feet of net
lettable area and Citigroup Inc <C.N> as its anchor tenant,
BlackRock and Qatar Investment Authority said in a joint statement.
BlackRock owns a second tower in the Asia Square development but
first wants to complete renting out the building, which is currently
close to 90 percent leased, before reviewing a sale.
Qatar Investment Authority is one of the most active sovereign
investors in the world. While it has focused on investments in
Europe, it has recently sought to diversify its portfolio with
investments in Asia.
($1 = 1.3613 Singapore dollars)
(Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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