18-02-2017, 01:57 PM
JTC's change of rule catches Reits offguard
They have to pay land premium upfront, not rental, for industrial buildings on JTC sites. -BT
Kalpana Rashiwala
Sun, Feb 24, 2013
The Business Times
From the beginning of this year, they have to fork out a land premium upfront to JTC for the remaining part of the lease term. They can no longer continue paying JTC a monthly land rental, if that is what the seller was doing.
Property funds like Reits buying industrial buildings from sellers on JTC-leased sites will have to re-do their sums.
From the beginning of this year, they have to fork out a land premium upfront to JTC for the remaining part of the lease term. They can no longer continue paying JTC a monthly land rental, if that is what the seller was doing.
This option of paying the land rental now remains open only to buyers who are industrialists.
The move has major implications for third-party facility providers, such as Reits but it could reduce competition from these funds faced by SMEs looking to buy their own premises.
JTC has two schemes allowing third-party facility providers to be its lessees. One allows an industrialist to sell its completed facility to say, a Reit, which in turn leases it back to the industrialist (Sale-and-Leaseback Scheme). In the Third Party Build-and-Lease Scheme, a property fund or developer agrees to build a customised facility for an end-user industrialist, to whom it leases the building. Both are aimed at helping industrialists to offload assets and lighten their balance sheets.
Explaining the rationale behind the change, JTC said: "(Our) land rental scheme serves as a form of financing as it helps end-user industrialists in their cash flow and lower their business costs. Given that third-party facility providers are not end-users..., they may obtain financing from financial institutions."
Most find the land rental payment scheme attractive - payable monthly in advance with the rate revised annually subject to a 5.5 per cent rental escalation cap. And when the market goes down, so does the rent.
BT understands that some industrial property deals that were cooking have been caught offguard by this new policy, which affects pricing. JTC did not make an announcement of the change, but merely reflected it on its website.
Under the Sale-and- Leaseback scheme, with monthly land rent no longer a payment option, the Reit would have to pay an upfront land premium to JTC for the remaining lease. This increases its acquisition price for the asset and could translate to a lower property yield.
Sources say a couple of potential industrial Reit listings are under review as their issuers study the impact of the JTC rule change on the proposed acquisition of their initial portfolio.
Lim Kien Kim, executive director (industrial) at Knight Frank said: "All things being equal, having to pay upfront land premium to JTC for the balance lease term means the price the Reit would be prepared to pay to the seller would possibly be lower."
However, there is scope for the Reit manager to come to a compromise with the seller on pricing - for example by charging the Reit a lower acquisition fee. And if the Reit manager is enjoying a lower cost of funds, the impact of this upfront land premium may not be significant for the acquisition, he said.
A property fund or developer that builds and leases a customised facility to an industrialist (under JTC's Third Party Build-and-Lease scheme) still continues to have an option of paying JTC either an upfront land premium or a monthly land rental when it enters into such a deal with the industrialist.
However, the picture changes if it later decides to sell the building to another third-party facility provider. The new buyer cannot continue with paying land rental to JTC but will have to foot an upfront land premium for the balance of the current lease term, under the new policy.
But if the buyer is an end-user industrialist, it will be able to continue paying land rent to JTC - if that was what the seller had been doing.
Knight Frank's Mr Lim said that the impact of the rule change will be felt less for bigger transactions exceeding say $20 million, as the absolute purchase price of the property will be huge relative to the upfront land premium payable to JTC; therefore, the land premium is unlikely to jeopardise such deals."
"In a way, the change will be beneficial for SMEs as most of the time, they are looking for industrial premises for their own operations costing below $20 million, so they will now not face competition in this space from third-party facility providers like Reits."
The upfront land premium is the prevailing posted land price listed on JTC's website, adjusted for the remaining tenure of the current lease term.
In cases where there is a further option for a second term of lease, the upfront premium for that will be determined after the first term ends.
Savills Singapore research head Alan Cheong reckons the change could mean the shutting of a funding tap for some industralists looking to sell their properties to Reits under sale-and-leaseback arrangements.
Nonetheless he welcomed the change. "Now, JTC's land rent system will benefit only genuine industrialists. In the past, some players masquerading as industrialists were trying to "game the system" - buying land from JTC on the land rent system to develop an industrial property and then flipping it to a Reit for a handsome profit," said Mr Cheong.
Agreeing, a market watcher said: "Whether it was a Reit or a pseudo industrialist that was tapping the monthly land rental scheme, it's a case of using public funding to further private interests."
http://www.asiaone.com/print/News/AsiaOn...03872.html
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
They have to pay land premium upfront, not rental, for industrial buildings on JTC sites. -BT
Kalpana Rashiwala
Sun, Feb 24, 2013
The Business Times
From the beginning of this year, they have to fork out a land premium upfront to JTC for the remaining part of the lease term. They can no longer continue paying JTC a monthly land rental, if that is what the seller was doing.
Property funds like Reits buying industrial buildings from sellers on JTC-leased sites will have to re-do their sums.
From the beginning of this year, they have to fork out a land premium upfront to JTC for the remaining part of the lease term. They can no longer continue paying JTC a monthly land rental, if that is what the seller was doing.
This option of paying the land rental now remains open only to buyers who are industrialists.
The move has major implications for third-party facility providers, such as Reits but it could reduce competition from these funds faced by SMEs looking to buy their own premises.
JTC has two schemes allowing third-party facility providers to be its lessees. One allows an industrialist to sell its completed facility to say, a Reit, which in turn leases it back to the industrialist (Sale-and-Leaseback Scheme). In the Third Party Build-and-Lease Scheme, a property fund or developer agrees to build a customised facility for an end-user industrialist, to whom it leases the building. Both are aimed at helping industrialists to offload assets and lighten their balance sheets.
Explaining the rationale behind the change, JTC said: "(Our) land rental scheme serves as a form of financing as it helps end-user industrialists in their cash flow and lower their business costs. Given that third-party facility providers are not end-users..., they may obtain financing from financial institutions."
Most find the land rental payment scheme attractive - payable monthly in advance with the rate revised annually subject to a 5.5 per cent rental escalation cap. And when the market goes down, so does the rent.
BT understands that some industrial property deals that were cooking have been caught offguard by this new policy, which affects pricing. JTC did not make an announcement of the change, but merely reflected it on its website.
Under the Sale-and- Leaseback scheme, with monthly land rent no longer a payment option, the Reit would have to pay an upfront land premium to JTC for the remaining lease. This increases its acquisition price for the asset and could translate to a lower property yield.
Sources say a couple of potential industrial Reit listings are under review as their issuers study the impact of the JTC rule change on the proposed acquisition of their initial portfolio.
Lim Kien Kim, executive director (industrial) at Knight Frank said: "All things being equal, having to pay upfront land premium to JTC for the balance lease term means the price the Reit would be prepared to pay to the seller would possibly be lower."
However, there is scope for the Reit manager to come to a compromise with the seller on pricing - for example by charging the Reit a lower acquisition fee. And if the Reit manager is enjoying a lower cost of funds, the impact of this upfront land premium may not be significant for the acquisition, he said.
A property fund or developer that builds and leases a customised facility to an industrialist (under JTC's Third Party Build-and-Lease scheme) still continues to have an option of paying JTC either an upfront land premium or a monthly land rental when it enters into such a deal with the industrialist.
However, the picture changes if it later decides to sell the building to another third-party facility provider. The new buyer cannot continue with paying land rental to JTC but will have to foot an upfront land premium for the balance of the current lease term, under the new policy.
But if the buyer is an end-user industrialist, it will be able to continue paying land rent to JTC - if that was what the seller had been doing.
Knight Frank's Mr Lim said that the impact of the rule change will be felt less for bigger transactions exceeding say $20 million, as the absolute purchase price of the property will be huge relative to the upfront land premium payable to JTC; therefore, the land premium is unlikely to jeopardise such deals."
"In a way, the change will be beneficial for SMEs as most of the time, they are looking for industrial premises for their own operations costing below $20 million, so they will now not face competition in this space from third-party facility providers like Reits."
The upfront land premium is the prevailing posted land price listed on JTC's website, adjusted for the remaining tenure of the current lease term.
In cases where there is a further option for a second term of lease, the upfront premium for that will be determined after the first term ends.
Savills Singapore research head Alan Cheong reckons the change could mean the shutting of a funding tap for some industralists looking to sell their properties to Reits under sale-and-leaseback arrangements.
Nonetheless he welcomed the change. "Now, JTC's land rent system will benefit only genuine industrialists. In the past, some players masquerading as industrialists were trying to "game the system" - buying land from JTC on the land rent system to develop an industrial property and then flipping it to a Reit for a handsome profit," said Mr Cheong.
Agreeing, a market watcher said: "Whether it was a Reit or a pseudo industrialist that was tapping the monthly land rental scheme, it's a case of using public funding to further private interests."
http://www.asiaone.com/print/News/AsiaOn...03872.html
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Research, research and research - Please do your own due diligence (DYODD) before you invest - Any reliance on my analysis is SOLELY at your own risk.