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CICT - New Directions Together
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Joelton
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28-Nov-2024 11:38
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CICT&rsquo s Tony Tan on Singapore&rsquo s office and retail future
Tan, CEO of the manager of CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (CICT), speaks with BT&rsquo s Leslie Yee on the trust&rsquo s Ion Orchard investment, the outlook for Singapore&rsquo s retail and office segments, and the future of local Reits
This interview is an extract from senior correspondent Leslie Yee&rsquo s PropertyBT Podcast. The transcript has been edited for length and clarity.
 
Leslie Yee: While technology enables remote working, Singapore&rsquo s office buildings are hardly white elephants. Why are Singapore offices doing well despite the remote-work shift? What trends are interesting in Singapore office property? What worries you?
 
Tony Tan: To a large extent, you can cut down to a few fundamental things that make Singapore as an office location very attractive.
 
First, the supply dynamics are pretty much in an environment where they are more predictable. With office stock, particularly in the CBD (Central Business District), it was also quite clearly spelt out that (the authorities) wanted to curtail the (supply of) new land sites in the CBD for commercial use.
 
On the demand side, Singapore over the years has been standing quite tall, recognised around the world as a major financial centre, a transportation hub, with a business-friendly environment.
 
One thing that really catalysed that interest further is how Singapore responded to the Covid crisis, which gave a lot of confidence to many business owners, and to top management looking at where they want to locate their presence in this part of the world.
 
Those demand dynamics will be affected by economic circumstances and companies&rsquo business planning. But if you take away the potential supply issues that asset owners have to worry about, we have fundamentally a strong base driving demand.
 
Hence, most of the asset owners in the office space would have a high level of confidence that (they) can ride through different economic cycles.
 
Second is the fact that Singapore is a small nation. Commuting is convenient, supported by a very robust transportation network. End to end (of the) CBD &ndash whether you&rsquo re coming from the east, west, north, south &ndash we&rsquo re talking about a radius of perhaps 15 km at most. And if you take public transportation, we&rsquo re talking about half an hour at most in commute time.
 
There are efforts being made to develop decentralised office locations. But then, the big white site at Jurong Lake District, which has a large office component, was not awarded. In your view, how do decentralised office locations, and Jurong in particular, compare with the CBD?
 
There are two key themes that are spelt out clearly by the master plan. One is looking at more and more centralisation of people living downtown. We&rsquo re creating more residential projects in a downtown location, including public housing.
 
A second major trend is decentralisation, potentially moving some of the commercial activity out of the traditional CBD location. It&rsquo s actually quite a clever plan. If you are talking about the longer-term perspective and having more optimised use of very limited land resources in Singapore, to increase capacity, we just have to rejig some of the urban planning.
 
Jurong Lake District is one of the important locations where the planner was hoping to catalyse and bring some commercial activity over there.
 
How would that pan out? It depends. The economic cycle is one key driver for Singapore&rsquo s ability to continue to attract even more types of services and production, and cluster out some of the locations that they have planned out across the island. That will take some time.
 
The question is how the economic dynamics between (rents in the) central CBD location and the outer ring part of Singapore &ndash where the other commercial centres are &ndash will play out.
 
Retailers here often complain about high rent and manpower costs. Various food and beverage, or F& B, outlets have stopped operating. Singapore residents actively shop online and abroad, including across the Causeway. How have Singapore malls been performing, and what are the key risks in this segment?
 
It&rsquo s no easy job to own and manage a retail asset. It&rsquo s quite management-intensive. We have lived through cycles where consumption patterns change. We were looking at a lot of decentralisation of retail activity &ndash over the last two decades, there&rsquo ve been so many malls sprouting up around the different residential precincts.
 
Today, Singapore is a lot more mature from a retail-offering perspective. But the consumer is constantly evolving. Demography is changing. That&rsquo s where, as owners, we have to be always on our toes, ensuring that every asset is pitched correctly.
 
Annually, we look at our individual assets, at how they should be positioned in the short, mid and longer term given how trends are changing, whether it&rsquo s e-commerce, shopping across the border, Singaporeans travelling, centralisation of population, decentralisation of commercial activity.
 
You may already have seen what we have rolled out, including upgrading Clarke Quay with a full revamp to make it more &ldquo day and night&rdquo , and intensifying our presence in the outlet space, upgrading IMM.
 
For our downtown offerings, tourism trends, (greater) influx of residents, and the profile of residents coming in will shape the way we look at the asset plan.
 
The challenges are there, but it&rsquo s also exciting. We would have to respond quite agilely, taking both the shorter-term needs of our investors (and) at the same time looking at the action plan for the mid to longer term.
 
F& B is a top rental contributor for many malls, but many F& B players suffer from high costs and intense competition. The other issue, longer term, is that we have an ageing population. By 2030, roughly one in four Singaporeans will be aged 65 or above. More elderly people may find visiting malls a bit challenging. Will F& B continue to be a growing contributor to your malls? Are there challenges in attracting elderly shoppers to malls?
 
F& B overall will be a very important component in our asset plan for individual properties. Everyone needs to eat, and the F& B spectrum is pretty wide, whether it&rsquo s a sit-down restaurant, casual dining, fast food, convenient takeaways. So we have an array of different offerings that... cater to (each precinct that we) serve.
 
In the face of competition from e-commerce and social media, attracting people to the mall is critical. Filling the stomach &ndash that&rsquo s, in a way, low-hanging fruit. The question is how you&rsquo re going to bring them in, and bring in new concepts.
 
Our F& B retailers are not working on a single concept. Typically, they have multiple concepts. Some downtown, some suburban, with different price points.
 
When consumers trade up, trade down, they have the flexibility to adjust. But they like to work with us because we have that presence in both downtown and suburban that would give that immediate penetration in the market that they want to be in.
 
The other trend that we&rsquo ve seen a lot of, of late, is Chinese operators starting to be very interested in the Singapore market.
 
A lot of them use the Singapore market as a springboard. We are not a big market here. (A population of) six million. That&rsquo s probably a mid-sized city in China. And they&rsquo ll naturally be constrained by issues we mentioned &ndash manpower, right? And a high cost base. But a high cost base can also mean a high selling point. So from a financial angle, sometimes the return may not be so bad.
 
We had an interesting dialogue with a Chinese operator. They are very successful in their own city or province. But in the current climate, operating there has been very challenging. So, Singapore is a respite &ndash (they are) getting into Singapore as a springboard, to make their name known, but their plans are far wider.
 
Singapore has become a strategic location for them to brand themselves. We have a fairly wide demography and (a diverse) ethnic make-up. We can be very international, or very Asian, or cater to halal offerings. So for them, it&rsquo s a very good test bed before they venture away (to other markets).
 
Ion Orchard is a trophy asset, right in the heart of Orchard Road. It has many luxury boutiques and is a prominent landmark. What is really exciting about your new acquisition?
 
Ion is definitely a crown jewel in our portfolio. But beyond Ion, we look at where we are present now in the downtown precinct. Along Orchard Road, before Ion, we have Plaza Singapura Atrium at one end... Now, with Ion, we are securing ourselves another major... position in Orchard Road. This gives us a very good overview of how we should be playing in the landscape.
 
Ion, no doubt, is very well-known as a luxury mall. Actually, it&rsquo s also a very universal mall. Residents know that if you go to Ion, you don&rsquo t have to just buy your Cartier or your Patek Philippe or Rolex. You have your Uniqlo. You have your food court. Different offerings (for) all walks of life.
 
Given the location, it is probably the No 1 spot for most of the retailers who want to have their presence in Orchard Road. It&rsquo s definitely giving us quite good reach into some of the (market) space that we had not been able to reach, particularly the luxury space.
 
Are you trying to make it more luxury or more &ldquo man in the street&rdquo ? What can you do to drive better performance and improve the customer experience?
 
I can&rsquo t imagine it would be very different, (in terms of) the split between where the luxe space is positioned and where the rest of the offerings are positioned. It&rsquo s the details &ndash what would be the relevant product type?
 
We will be working quite closely with our joint venture partner to look at the overall trends. Interestingly, some of the sort of out-of-favour brands are beginning to come back again. What I can see is: Fine-tuning (some of the) brands&rsquo offerings may happen in the next one to two years, and fine-tuning of some of the space that is offered for certain trades.
 
There&rsquo s little doubt that Singapore can be an expensive city. Will office jobs relocate to hungry and cheaper locations nearby? Does Singapore offer good value for office-space users? Might international visitors find shopping and dining in Singapore way too pricey? Locals may get much better value for money from travelling abroad.
 
The office space definitely is going to get more interesting, given what we understand about how things are panning out around the world with a new US administration... There&rsquo ll be a lot of risk-management thinking behind how and where they want to position their business in this part of the world.
 
I still feel we will be in a good position, even three to five years down the road. Along the way, (we) may face headwinds. It depends on how the world economic environment plays out. Hopefully, we are on a good footing now &ndash things sort of normalised post-Covid, interest rates seem to be peaking.
 
Those are the two key things that will affect market position in a Reit (real estate investment trust) space, which leads to a second question. The Reit as a product is very interest rate-sensitive. The valuation of a Reit is almost instantly affected by the outlook of how the interest rate environment will be like. And that has been pretty volatile over the last one year or so.
 
Hence, you see increased volatility in the Reit pricing. It&rsquo s just portfolio managers doing their portfolio adjustments, according to how the outlook for the interest rate would look like.
 
The economic environment may change over time. That may constrain a little bit of demand if you are going (into) a downcycle &ndash companies look at slower expansion or even outright reduction in space requirement. But it doesn&rsquo t take away the strong attributes that Singapore has.
 
Second, if you look at this part of the world, we probably have one of the most highly rated green buildings. That will fit into (several) needs for occupiers, given where they are in the sustainability journey.
 
You&rsquo ve expressed very strong confidence in the Singapore market and CICT is predominantly exposed to the Singapore market. Do you see your trust continuing to increase its Singapore exposure even more, or are there any thoughts towards perhaps lowering the Singapore weightage and getting a bit more overseas exposure?
 
We&rsquo re going to stay predominantly (in) Singapore for the long haul. That&rsquo s for sure. This is our home market, we know the market, we have better resources to be able to manage the assets through different cycles. So, as far as we can, we would want to continue to invest in Singapore.
 
Investing could come in the form of new acquisitions if there are opportunities available. We are also looking at scaling up existing assets, where an asset is primed for an upgrade. Some assets may be redeveloped. The two major themes that we talked about, centralisation and decentralisation, open up opportunities for us to look at increasing presence as well.
 
But we also always think that it&rsquo s good to have a little bit of an outpost out there &ndash not too big. We have two properties in Germany, three in Australia. We learn along the way. There are mistakes made, obviously, but certainly I think (they&rsquo re good eye-openers).
 
And given the twin objectives of the Reit from the investor angle &ndash (distribution per unit and) distribution growth, and hopefully capital gain growth from the share price &ndash we want to marry that carefully, from a cash-flow perspective.
 
From asset-enhancement work to a full-scale redevelopment, (there will be) a short-term or mid-term cash-flow implication. So we want to show that while we execute our plan in Singapore, we have other avenues where you can bring additional cash-flow stream to our unitholders.
 
While you have great assets, there are numerous Reits that trade at much lower price-to-book ratios and offer higher distribution yields than CICT. Is your trust fully priced, and how should investors with a long time horizon view Singapore Reits?
 
We are trading slightly below our book value. I think it&rsquo s probably about 5 to 6 per cent below book. So the market will have a voice on whether it&rsquo s rightly priced, what attributes it has to offer. Our track record has been stability and growth in the distribution over the few years post-pandemic, and high-level liquidity.
 
We have investors who are in for quick bucks &ndash in and out. But we also have investors who stay with us. And we fit into their profiling, their portfolio construct, in different ways.
 
We do see hedge funds, and hedge funds tend to be quite short term. But we also see hedge funds taking long-term positions on CICT. That says a lot. Liquidity is there. Stability is there.
 
Whether it&rsquo s rightly priced, I can&rsquo t say. Only that interest rates will change all the time. We can manage our capital structure to respond.
 
For Reits, other than the real estate that you own underneath, the other component is how it&rsquo s been financed. Your capital structure becomes very important, and risk management behind that has to be very agile. So we&rsquo ll be adjusting our capital structure.
 
The more recent divestment of 21 Collyer Quay is one action plan that allows us a good balance-sheet position as we enter 2025. Today, I would quite comfortably say that we are quite prepared.
 
In your portfolio, which assets do you consider super core and not for sale? Which assets are you more open to selling?
 
Some of the bigger assets will naturally be very core. Given the size and contribution, any shift would have quite a material impact on the overall financial impact.
 
Some of the smaller assets, we&rsquo ll think about optimisation. Earlier, I talked about intensification &ndash whether we can look at an upgrade, upscaling. If that&rsquo s possible, then we may continue to hold. Otherwise, it could be an asset that, at an appropriate time, we can look at redeployment from the capital angle.
 
Your recent moves have increased your weightage in retail and decreased your weightage in office space. Is this a deliberate move and do you expect to continue to go down this direction?
 
We shouldn&rsquo t read too much into that. We don&rsquo t look at that split defined that clearly. No, there&rsquo s no magic number. Should it be at 40 per cent, 50 per cent retail? It so happened that the opportunity was available for us to acquire Ion. The retail space goes up.
 
But as a product type, generally we like a mixed-use integrated product, whether you have office, retail or other relevant components &ndash serviced residences, or even residences. They tend to be able to withstand different cycles. So we own a few (mixed products), including Raffles City, Funan, Plaza Singapura Atrium.
 
We&rsquo ll continue to explore opportunities for that, whether we are acquiring from a third party or... we redevelop ourselves.
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chengwh1
Elite |
20-Nov-2024 20:36
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Thank you for your replies, brother,... I' m hoping CICT will acquire another property or set of properties now,... which is highly dpu-accretive,... just like what Keppel DC REIT announced yesterday. | ||||
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MrBear12
Supreme |
20-Nov-2024 05:28
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Yes they shld know. But cannot let us know then. Thus, they cannot include in their proforma calculations.
Based on what you say, all things being equal, dpu should fall after those acquisitions and disposals. But again, cict may compensate by giving us a special distribution out of capital in the same way kreit does over five years. We do not know what management has in mind. Mrbear is not insider
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MrBear12
Supreme |
20-Nov-2024 05:24
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Thanks Cheng, your attention to detail is unparalleled on Share Junction.
I believe you really scrutinise those proforma workings to determine if any acquisition increases the dpu. Mrbear is quite with you on this. Except that those workings, as you say, do not take into consideration future disposals and acquisitions. So each time they do a disposal they should also do a proforma calculation to see how dpu drops and whether that disposal was yield accretive or detrimental to dpu. Thanx again, you have a good eye for details. Much needed for investment
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chengwh1
Elite |
20-Nov-2024 03:49
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I remembered I pressed hard onto the board of directors abt this matter in the recent EGM near end-October this year. But Mr Tony Tan kept insisting they could only do their best to give the best possible proforma calculations. A few weeks later, 21 Collyer Quay was disposed-off,... wouldn' t they have known it was in their plans when the timeline for the disposal and the fund-raising was so near to each other ?   |
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chengwh1
Elite |
20-Nov-2024 03:43
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Emm,... I was talking more along the line of having an increased dpu payout post-EFR and post-acquisition,... not too much on the unit price. And I depend a lot on the proforma workings to help me decide my dpu payout will be more after all has been completed.. | ||||
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MrBear12
Supreme |
19-Nov-2024 20:23
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I suppose, paying off some debt will help. Or returning some capital to shareholders via a capital distribution will help the price.
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chengwh1
Elite |
19-Nov-2024 19:43
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Tq Bear, I recalled the ' absolute amt of dpu-accretion' was very small,... less than 1% in the proforma calculation against FY2023' s dpu payout. That proforma calculation took into consideration the rental contribution from 21 Collyer Quay. Looking at that 21-flr building called 21 Collyer Quay, I am sure this bldg will contribute MORE THAN 1% of the dpu payout. TRemoving 21 Collyer Quay' s ' dpu contribution' would then cause the proforma dpu payout to drop into negative territory. I agree with your final statement - I know this too,... CICT has to buy a better property now to ' patch back this dpu hole' .... |
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MrBear12
Supreme |
19-Nov-2024 17:02
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Not necessarily so that one transaction cancels out the DPU accretion of the other. While DPU may fall because of asset disposals, if the capital is recycled to other DPU accretive assets, the overall DPU may not decrease.
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chengwh1
Elite |
19-Nov-2024 16:51
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With the divestment of 21 Collyer Quay, the proforma working which estimated earlier that the acquisition of 50% of Ion Orchard is DPU-ACCRETIVE is voided because the working was based on having 21 Collyer Quay in the balance sheet. I wonder how much will the dpu be reduced with this divestment.
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Joelton
Supreme |
13-Nov-2024 10:00
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CICT sells 21 Collyer Quay for S$688 million trust earlier reported to be eyeing up to S$850 million
Proceeds from the sale will be used to repay debt and finance capital expenditure, among other uses
 
CAPITALAND Integrated Commercial Trust : C38U -0.51% (CICT) has divested 21 Collyer Quay, an office building located in Raffles Place, for S$688 million.
 
The sale price is in line with the property&rsquo s independent valuation, said the trust&rsquo s manager on Tuesday (Nov 12). Savills &ndash the independent property valuer of the deal &ndash has valued the asset at S$688 million as at Oct 31.
 
Excluding divestment-related expenses, net proceeds from the sale would amount to about S$681.7 million.
 
This amount will be used to repay debt and finance capital expenditure, asset upgrading works, as well as investments. It will also be used to fund general corporate and working capital requirements.
 
Based on CICT&rsquo s annualised net property income for the period ended Sep 30 and the consideration price, the exit yield of the property is below 3.5 per cent, said the manager.
 
Assuming the divestment was completed, and net proceeds were used to repay existing debt on Jun 30, 2024, the trust&rsquo s pro forma aggregate leverage is expected to fall from 39.9 per cent to about 38.3 per cent.
 
The transaction is not expected to have any material effect on CICT&rsquo s distribution per unit and net asset value per unit for the financial year ending Dec 31.
 
The 21-storey building, which has a net lettable area of 213,000 square feet, is fully occupied by co-working operator WeWork.
 
The co-working operator took over the lease of the former HSBC building in 2021 after the bank shifted to Marina Bay Financial Centre Tower 2. WeWork has a seven-year lease for the lettable area until 2028.
 
CICT&rsquo s manager referred to the buyer of 21 Collyer Quay as an &ldquo unrelated third party&rdquo .
 
The Business Times had previously reported that in late 2023, CICT received interest in the office building, which has a leasehold tenure of 999 years. Potential buying interest fell in the range of S$3,600 to S$3,700 per square foot (psf) on the property&rsquo s net lettable area.
 
But, CICT was said to be eyeing a higher price of S$3,900 to S$4,000 psf, translating to between S$830 million and S$852 million.
 
Rather than bearing risk and uncertainty, CICT may divest 21 Collyer Quay at a premium to valuation, reported BT in February this year. As at Dec 31, 2022, the building was valued at S$634 million, based on 3.45 per cent cap rate.
 
Analysts from various brokerages had also said previously that CICT&rsquo s divestment of its Singapore assets could further strengthen its balance sheet and position it to acquire higher-quality assets from its sponsor. A potential candidate for divestment pointed out by one of the analysts was 21 Collyer Quay.
 
The latest divestment comes a few months after CICT said it will purchase a 50 per cent interest in Ion Orchard and its connecting underpass, Ion Orchard Link, for S$1.85 billion.
 
Tony Tan, chief executive of CICT&rsquo s manager, described the Ion deal as a &ldquo transformational move&rdquo towards a diverse trade mix that allows the trust to capture Singapore&rsquo s luxury retail market, leverage domestic and international spending power, while benefitting from resilient demand for essentials across economic cycles.
 
The trust&rsquo s manager also noted that acquiring Ion Orchard would consolidate CICT&rsquo s retail presence in a &ldquo tightly held&rdquo downtown precinct.
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MrBear12
Supreme |
05-Nov-2024 14:43
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Well done CICT. But its gearing is still near 40%, so that can be improved over the coming years. Safest to buy this REIT. Large is good in the REITS sphere. Just as the largest bears get the best fishing grounds. |
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Joelton
Supreme |
05-Nov-2024 12:41
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CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust announces higher revenues and NPI for 9MFY2024
in its 3QFY2024 business updates, CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust C38U (CICT) announceded a 2% y-o-y rise in revenue for the nine months to Sept 30 (9MFY2024) to $1,189.8 million. 
Net property income (NPI) for the same period rose by 5.4% y-o-y to $872.1 million, driven by higher gross rental income from existing properties and lower operating expenses, despite the absence of income from Gallileo which has been undergoing an asset enhancement initiative (AEI) since February 2024.
 
Committed occupancy in 3Q2024 was 96.4% with weighted average lease expiry of 3.5 years. Total rental reversions for 9MFY2024 was a positive 9.2%. Tenans sales rose by 1.4% y-o-y while shopper traffic rose by 3.7% y-o-y for the same period. CICT announced total new and renewed leases for YTD Sep 2024 at 677,200 sq ft with a tenant retention rate of 86.1%.
 
The office portfolio experienced positive reversions of 11.7% for 9MFY2024. Total new and renewed leases for YTD Sep 2024 at 778,900 sq ft with tenant retention rate of 84.9%. This is despite consultants such as Cushman & Wakefield cautioning that Grade A office supply office supply could stymie rent growth in 2H2024, limiting it to 1% to 2%.  
 
Aggregate leverage eased to 39.4% as at Sept 30 compared to 39.8% as at June 30, and the average cost of debt crept up to 3.6% compared to 3.5% as at June 30. Average debt term to maturity rose to 3.8 years as at Sept 30 compared to 3.5 years as at June 30. The lower leverage was likely due to a placement which raised $350 million and completed on Sept 16. As at Sept 30, borrowings on fixed rates remained unchanged q-o-q at 76%. Following the issuance of $200 million of green bonds at 3.3%, CICT' s FY2024 debt is fully refinanced.
 
On Oct 29, in an EGM, CICT obtained unitholders&rsquo approval to acquire a 50% interest in ION Orchard and completed the acquisition on Oct 30. Very little new supply is likely within the Orchard Road area in the next year and beyond. 
 
Elsewhere, CICT achieved 100% committed occupancy for Phase 1 and 2 AEI at IMM Building, an outlet mall. The AEI at Gallileo continues and is scheduled to be completed in 2H2025. The anchor tenant will be the European Central Bank. 
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kt3152
Supreme |
06-Oct-2024 22:59
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Yes. 5-6% return over 2 weeks is quite a good return especially this round got all the excess rights.... | ||||
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Alignment
Master |
28-Sep-2024 11:58
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That' s a fair point, it depends on what your opportunity cost is. But buying this company at $2 with your money locked up for only half a month is a pretty good deal. Of course one coiuld do better - I was happy though to oversubscribe to see if I could get more. | ||||
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pasttime
Elite |
27-Sep-2024 22:18
Yells: "peace, love, joy be upon you" |
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at a time that other stocks are running. not really a lost. invest in the right stock make even more. in a way the selling of ion to raise shows that there is enough demand base on their study. it' s like a good hint to tell that bull run is coming. |
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Alignment
Master |
27-Sep-2024 20:58
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The 18% that did not take up their rights lose out. | ||||
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Joelton
Supreme |
27-Sep-2024 12:32
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CICT&rsquo s preferential offering closes with 82% valid acceptances
A total of 377.3 million new units will be issued to raise gross proceeds of S$757.2 million
 
CAPITALAND Integrated Commercial Trust : C38U +1.9% (CICT) received valid acceptances of 82 per cent at the close of its preferential offering on Tuesday (Sep 24).
 
In a bourse filing on Thursday, the manager of the real estate investment trust said that it received valid acceptances of 309.5 million new units and excess applications of 183 million units.
 
The pro-rata non-renounceable offering put forward a basis of 56 new units for every 1,000 existing units held as at 5 pm on Sep 11, at an issue price of S$2.007 per new unit. A total of 377.3 million new units will be issued to raise gross proceeds of about S$757.2 million, said the manager.
 
Together with around S$350.3 million raised from an earlier private placement, gross proceeds totalling about S$1.1 billion were raised from the equity fundraising.
 
The exercise, announced on Sep 3, was intended to raise gross proceeds of at least S$1.1 billion to fund a proposed acquisition of a 50 per cent interest in Ion Orchard mall and its connecting underpass, Ion Orchard Link, from its sponsor CapitaLand Investment.
 
The manager intends to use some S$1.08 billion, or 97.8 per cent, of total gross proceeds to finance the proposed acquisition.
 
Around S$4.7 million, or 0.4 per cent of gross proceeds, will be used to repay and refinance debt and/or capital expenditures, as well as asset enhancement initiatives.
 
About S$19.9 million, or 1.8 per cent, will go towards the payment of estimated fees and expenses, including professional fees and expenses incurred by the trust in connection with the equity fundraising.
 
On Sep 4, CICT&rsquo s manager said its private placement &ndash which closed at S$2.04 per new unit &ndash was 3.7 times subscribed with &ldquo strong demand&rdquo from new and existing institutional, accredited and other investors.
 
The preferential offering units are expected to be listed and quoted on the mainboard of the Singapore Exchange from 9 am on Oct 2.
 
Units of CICT closed Thursday up S$0.04 or 1.9 per cent at S$2.14, before the announcement.
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MrBear12
Supreme |
12-Sep-2024 08:46
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Good potential. Has been rock solid for last 22 years. Here's to the next 22 years!
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Kandee
Senior |
12-Sep-2024 00:14
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Price is holding good even after the rights issue...    | ||||
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