27-04-2013, 10:22 AM
The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Apr 27, 2013
CapitaLand posts 41% jump in profit
By Rachel Scully
STRONG sales from residential properties in Singapore and China pushed up first-quarter earnings for real estate giant CapitaLand.
Net profit jumped 41.2 per cent to $188.2 million for the three months ended March 31 from the same period last year. First-quarter revenue grew 3.2 per cent to $661.9 million.
Contributions to the healthy showing came from its four strategic business units: CapitaLand Singapore, CapitaLand China, CapitaMalls Asia and Ascott.
In an announcement yesterday, CapitaLand Singapore said it had sold 544 residential units for $1.3 billion in the quarter. Of these, condominium d'Leedon accounted for 481 units.
That meant sales in Singapore this quarter were similar to the total residential sales recorded for the full financial year last year.
In addition, CapitaLand China sold 955 residential units for about $400 million in the quarter, three times more than it did during the first quarter last year.
Sales from The Metropolis in Kunshan, The Pinnacle and Paragon in Shanghai, The Loft in Chengdu and iPark under Raffles City Shenzhen accounted for the 955 units sold.
Revenue growth for CapitaMalls Asia in the first quarter was mainly contributed by Olinas Mall, which was acquired last July, and The Star Vista in Buona Vista which opened last September.
Higher project and management fees in China also contributed to this growth.
Serviced residences Ascott contributed $92.6 million, up 5.7 per cent, to the group's first quarter revenue from newly acquired properties.
CapitaLand president and group chief executive Lim Ming Yan said that sustainable growth will be achieved through a sharper focus in the Singapore and China markets.
Despite the latest round of property cooling measures announced in January, CapitaLand said it remained "cautiously optimistic" about the local housing market.
In China, urbanisation is growing, and the 150 million people migrating from rural to urban areas will increase demand for housing and other amenities, said CapitaLand.
Earnings per share for the quarter climbed to 4.4 cents from 3.1 cents in the corresponding quarter last year.
Net asset value per share rose six cents to $3.61, from Dec 31 last year.
CapitaLand's share price increased seven cents to $3.65 yesterday.
rjscully@sph.com.sg
www.straitstimes.com
Published on Apr 27, 2013
CapitaLand posts 41% jump in profit
By Rachel Scully
STRONG sales from residential properties in Singapore and China pushed up first-quarter earnings for real estate giant CapitaLand.
Net profit jumped 41.2 per cent to $188.2 million for the three months ended March 31 from the same period last year. First-quarter revenue grew 3.2 per cent to $661.9 million.
Contributions to the healthy showing came from its four strategic business units: CapitaLand Singapore, CapitaLand China, CapitaMalls Asia and Ascott.
In an announcement yesterday, CapitaLand Singapore said it had sold 544 residential units for $1.3 billion in the quarter. Of these, condominium d'Leedon accounted for 481 units.
That meant sales in Singapore this quarter were similar to the total residential sales recorded for the full financial year last year.
In addition, CapitaLand China sold 955 residential units for about $400 million in the quarter, three times more than it did during the first quarter last year.
Sales from The Metropolis in Kunshan, The Pinnacle and Paragon in Shanghai, The Loft in Chengdu and iPark under Raffles City Shenzhen accounted for the 955 units sold.
Revenue growth for CapitaMalls Asia in the first quarter was mainly contributed by Olinas Mall, which was acquired last July, and The Star Vista in Buona Vista which opened last September.
Higher project and management fees in China also contributed to this growth.
Serviced residences Ascott contributed $92.6 million, up 5.7 per cent, to the group's first quarter revenue from newly acquired properties.
CapitaLand president and group chief executive Lim Ming Yan said that sustainable growth will be achieved through a sharper focus in the Singapore and China markets.
Despite the latest round of property cooling measures announced in January, CapitaLand said it remained "cautiously optimistic" about the local housing market.
In China, urbanisation is growing, and the 150 million people migrating from rural to urban areas will increase demand for housing and other amenities, said CapitaLand.
Earnings per share for the quarter climbed to 4.4 cents from 3.1 cents in the corresponding quarter last year.
Net asset value per share rose six cents to $3.61, from Dec 31 last year.
CapitaLand's share price increased seven cents to $3.65 yesterday.
rjscully@sph.com.sg
My Value Investing Blog: http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/