06-01-2011, 08:32 AM
In terms of classification, I didn't really know where this should go!
Jan 6, 2011
Former CapitaLand retail chief 'to list $1b Reit'
PERENNIAL Real Estate, a firm set up by former CapitaLand retail chief Pua Seck Guan, has hired Goldman Sachs, DBS Bank and Standard Chartered Bank to help it raise as much as $1 billion in a property trust initial public offering (IPO), sources with knowledge of the deal said yesterday.
Perennial intends to list a business trust in Singapore that will comprise mostly shopping malls in China, said the sources, who declined to be named.
Pre-marketing of the deal is scheduled to begin later this month, with the formal launch of the IPO slated for the end of March, the sources added.
A spokesman for Perennial, which is involved in the development and management of malls as well as property funds, said it has businesses in China, India and Singapore and 'continues to explore opportunities in these markets'.
The three banks either declined comment or could not be reached.
By putting its assets in a business trust, Perennial has greater scope to invest in properties under development, and retains the flexibility of paying out a smaller portion of rental income to shareholders, two of the sources said.
Mr Pua, who is widely credited with building CapitaLand's malls business, resigned from South-east Asia's biggest developer in September 2008, sparking a 7 per cent fall in the firm's share price.
His firm is now leading the redevelopment of three commercial properties in Singapore, and backers of his unlisted China funds include Beijing Hualian Group.
REUTERS
Jan 6, 2011
Former CapitaLand retail chief 'to list $1b Reit'
PERENNIAL Real Estate, a firm set up by former CapitaLand retail chief Pua Seck Guan, has hired Goldman Sachs, DBS Bank and Standard Chartered Bank to help it raise as much as $1 billion in a property trust initial public offering (IPO), sources with knowledge of the deal said yesterday.
Perennial intends to list a business trust in Singapore that will comprise mostly shopping malls in China, said the sources, who declined to be named.
Pre-marketing of the deal is scheduled to begin later this month, with the formal launch of the IPO slated for the end of March, the sources added.
A spokesman for Perennial, which is involved in the development and management of malls as well as property funds, said it has businesses in China, India and Singapore and 'continues to explore opportunities in these markets'.
The three banks either declined comment or could not be reached.
By putting its assets in a business trust, Perennial has greater scope to invest in properties under development, and retains the flexibility of paying out a smaller portion of rental income to shareholders, two of the sources said.
Mr Pua, who is widely credited with building CapitaLand's malls business, resigned from South-east Asia's biggest developer in September 2008, sparking a 7 per cent fall in the firm's share price.
His firm is now leading the redevelopment of three commercial properties in Singapore, and backers of his unlisted China funds include Beijing Hualian Group.
REUTERS
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