Month: May 2010
CMT – OCBC
Share price correction presents fresh buying Opportunity
Groundbreaking at JCube development. Last Friday, CapitaMall Trust (CMT) held the groundbreaking ceremony for the new retail mall on the site of the former Jurong Entertainment Centre. The new mall, named JCube, will have net lettable area of approximately 204,000 sq ft, which is twice the original size. The project is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2012. We expect JCube to be the key DPU growth driver for CMT in 2012 and 2013. Based on the enlarged NLA, we expect JCube to generate gross rental income of S$34.7m and net property income of S$23.9m when fully operational. With the changes in our NLA and rental estimates on JCube, our RNAV estimate has been raised by S$0.02 per share.
Development of Jurong Lake District to boost human traffic flow. Long-term outlook for the JCube development is also positive with development of the Jurong Lake District now gaining momentum. In Apr, URA launched a 205.854 sq ft land parcel for mix development in Jurong Lake District after a developer committed to bid at least S$350m for the site. In addition, URA recently sold a residential site at Boon Lay Way to Keppel Land for S$303m. Upon the completion of these projects, we expect higher human traffic flow in the Jurong Lake District and JCube, which is strategically located near the Jurong East MRT Interchange, should be a key beneficiary from the development of the region.
Positioned to grow over the long term. In the near term, we see DPU growth catalysts coming from positive rent reversion and asset enhancement (AEI) initiatives at Raffles City basement, Junction 8 (new 2-storey F&B Annex Block) and Tampines Mall (reconfiguration of shop units and side entrance). These AEI works will complete by end-2010. Over the longer term, there is still a healthy pipeline of AEIs that CMT could undertake. CMT has received planning permission from URA to increase the GFA of Tampines Mall by 94,938 sq ft for office use. For Funan DigitaLife Mall, CMT has also received planning permission from URA to increase the GFA by 360,375 sq ft (163,180 sq ft for office use and 197,195 sq ft for retail use). These projects are likely to start once when the development of JCube is completed.
Share price correction presents fresh buying opportunity; Upgrade to BUY. Our fair value, which pegged at parity to our RNAV estimate, has been raised to S$1.95 (previously S$1.93). Recent correction in CMT’s share price presents fresh buying opportunity for investors. With a projected total return of 13%, we are now upgrading CMT to BUY.
CCT – DBSV
Enhancing 6 Battery Rd
• 6 Battery Rd AEI could yield additional $7.4m NPI
• Small but positive move to maximize returns
• Maintain Hold with TP $1.24
CCT to enhance 6 Battery Rd. CCT has proposed to embark on asset enhancements for 6 Battery Rd, including upgrading of interior specifications such as facelift of ground lift lobby and reception areas, improving existing lifts, renewing restroom facilities, increasing ceiling height to 2.8m, enhancing building management system and putting in a Next Generation National Broadband Network. To be completed in phases over Oct 2010-2015, the $92m initiative will be funded internally (current gearing 33.8%) and yield a ROI of 8.1% or $7.4m additional NPI.
Small but positive move to maximize return. While the impact is relatively small, we see this move to tap low hanging fruits from its existing portfolio as positive and in line with its portfolio reconstitution strategy. With the bottoming out of the office rental market, this exercise is also timely. 6 Battery Rd is well located in the prime Raffles Place area with direct access to MRT nodes and has a long remaining underlying land lease of 815 years. The upgrading works will be done in tandem with tenant lease expiries to minimize downtime. This would coincide with major tenant Standard Chartered’s (SC) plan to give up 70k sf of space (14% of building, 2% of portfolio space) upon expiry in 2011. Potential candidates to take up the slack have already been identified. SC will retain c120ksf of NLA in the building.
Slight uplift in TP to $1.24. We have maintained FY10 and FY11 DPU estimates of 7cts and 6.7cts respectively, as the expected vacancy of 5% during the AEI period is within expectations. We expect the impact of additional income to be felt post FY13, which will raise DCF by 1ct to $1.24. CCT is currently trading at 6.4-6% FY10-11 yield and 0.8x P/BV. Other share price catalysts such as plans to redevelop Starhub Centre are still awaiting approvals and acquisitions are unlikely to materialize any time soon. As such, we maintain Hold.
CCT – CIMB
Revamping 6 Battery Road
S$92m to revamp crown jewel
Maintain Outperform. The manager of CCCT announced last Friday that it will be spending S$92m on the asset enhancement of its crown jewel, 6 Battery Road. Separately, Standard Chartered will be giving up 70,000sf of its space in 2011. We believe the asset enhancement is a defensive move to position CCT’s crown jewel positively against new buildings which will be completed over the next few years. We also believe management will be able to find replacement tenants for Standard Chartered’s space in view of improving indicators for office space. We factor in higher capex costs, but not potentially higher rents as these would only come through after 2015. We also maintain our renewal rent estimates for 6 Battery Road as a 35% decline in FY11 rents had been incorporated earlier. We make no material change to our DPU estimates and target price of S$1.37, still based on DDM valuation (discount rate 7.8%). CCT offers a dividend yield of 7.1% and remains the cheapest large-cap SREIT (0.8x P/BV). We see stock catalysts from improving office demand indicators.
No change to net lettable area (NLA). The asset enhancement work will include a revamping of common areas (lobby, reception area, turnstiles), M&E upgrade of electrical power supplies, “green features” etc. and enhancement of office space (increasing ceiling heights, air-conditioning and sprinkler systems, lift lobbies and restroom finishing). There will be no change to net lettable area.
Completion expected in 2013. The work will be carried out from 3Q10 to 2013. However, the rectification of defects may stretch into 2015. To minimise disruptions to tenants, refurbishment of the interior of tenants’ space and restrooms will be carried out only during the interim period when new tenants fit out their space. Hence, we do not expect significant downtime. The estimated cost of S$92m will be spread over six years with chunkier payments in 2012 (S$30m) and 2013 (S$28m). The manager will be funding the capex with cash on hand.
Returns on investment (ROI) of 8.1% have been forecast on a stabilised basis by management. This translates into incremental net property income of S$7.4m. The manager expects 20% of this increment to come from cost savings from “green features” to be installed, and 80% from potentially higher rental reversions.
Key tenant, Standard Chartered, will give up 70,000sf of space by 2011. This represents 14% of the NLA at 6 Battery Road. Nonetheless, StanChart will retain 120,000sf of space in a separate lease which will expire only in 2020. Management is in talks with prospective tenants for the space which will be given up, both new and existing tenants who are looking to expand. We believe this is an opportune time for CCT to reduce its tenant-concentration risks by leasing out the space to more than one tenant.
Decline in renewal rents anticipated. From CCT’s 1Q10 results presentation, expiring leases in 6 Battery Road have a high average rent of S$15.93psf. We have assumed a 35% decline in renewal rents to S$10.35psf. We believe the prospect of leasing the space to more than one tenant is likely to limit any southward march in renewal rents.
Impact on CCT. In our view, the asset enhancement is a defensive and necessary move to position CCT’s crown jewel positively against new buildings which will be completed over the next few years. Furthermore, a lack of new supply in 2013 when the bulk of the refurbishment work will be completed should appeal to prospective tenants, since there will not be much competition. We are not overly concerned about Standard Chartered giving up its space in FY11 as we believe a revival in demand for office space is increasingly apparent (refer to our report “Four turning points in office rents” dated 20 May 10). We increase our capex assumptions to factor in the cost of the asset enhancement, but not any increased rents as these would only come through after 2015. There is no material change to our DPU forecasts and target price of S$1.37, still based on DDM valuation. CCT offers a dividend yield of 7.1% and remains the cheapest large-cap SREIT (0.8x P/BV). We see stock catalysts from improving office demand indicators.
CCT – BT
Stanchart to lighten up, CCT gears up for $92m improvement
Bank gets ready to give up some space at Six Battery Road when lease expires next year
STANDARD Chartered Bank will be vacating about 70,000 sq ft at Six Battery Road when its lease at the building runs out next year. However, the bank will retain its remaining space of 129,000 sq ft in the building on which the lease expires in 2020. The latter space is understood to include the banking hall.
The building’s owner, CapitaCommercial Trust (CCT), has already identified prospective tenants to take up the space Stanchart will be vacating, and will take advantage of the transitional downtime in occupancy during the changeover of tenants to execute a $92 million asset enhancement at the building, which will be done in phases from October this year to 2013 to minimise inconvenience to tenants.
Earlier this week, Six Battery Road was awarded the Building and Construction Authority’s Green Mark Platinum award, the first time an operating office building here has won the highest Green Mark accolade. The award has been conferred for the proposed environmentally sustainable features CCT is implementing as part of the asset enhancement works for the 42-storey building. The Grade A office property contributed 22 per cent of CCT’s net property income in Q1 this year and ‘the asset enhancement ensures this robust income continues from this asset’, said Lynette Leong, CEO of CapitaCommercial Trust Management Ltd (CCTML).
‘We believe that market rents have reached a trough and we’re positioning this asset for the recovery of the market and we believe this is an opportune time to undertake asset enhancement so that it will continue to offer value-for-money office accommodation to tenants and sustain the building’s high occupancy and rental rates,’ she added.
CCTML is projecting a return on investment of 8.1 per cent on a stabilised basis for the $92 million asset enhancement works based on incremental annual net property income of $7.4 million once the works are completed. A fifth of the increase in income will arise from cost savings due to improved operating efficiency, while the other 80 per cent will be from higher rental projection. CCTML expects rents in the building to appreciate 10-15 per cent arising from superior specifications following the upgrade.
The increase in value of the building (net of the investment cost) is projected at about $82.9 million when the works are completed at end-2013. Six Battery Road was valued at $1.114 billion at end-2009. CCT will fund the asset enhancement from internal cash resources.
The upgrading works will kick off in October with the ground-floor lift lobby, turnstiles and reception area. Other planned works include redesigning of the chiller plant room system, incorporating a thermal energy storage system which will improve efficiency. The onyx wall in the main lobby will make way for the largest ‘green’ wall with living plants in a Singapore office building. This will help reduce indoor heat gain; the onyx will be reused in other parts of the lobby.
Rainwater will be harvested to irrigate the green wall. Exhaust air will be used to power a wind turbine that will in turn power the green wall’s irrigation pumps and lighting. To nudge tenants to use cleaner emission vehicles, CCT will set aside carpark lots for hybrid cars.
The canopy at the building’s entrance will be extended to cover the entire length of the drop-off area. For lettable areas, CCT will raise ceiling height from 2.6 metres to 2.8 metres and install variable air volume box and carbon dioxide sensors to improve indoor air quality. But these works will be done only for units for which leases have expired, before new tenants move in. The intention is to tie the upgrading of interior office spaces with the natural lease expiry profile. Six Battery Road received Temporary Occupation Permit in 1984 and was last retrofitted in 2000 at a cost of about $37 million.
The space to be vacated by Stanchart covers six to seven floors and CCTML’s plan is to upgrade the interiors of this space before leasing it out to other tenants.
The 70,000 sq ft that Stanchart will be giving up represents 14 per cent of the building’s net lettable area of 496,851 sq ft and 2 per cent of the 3.3 million sq ft total net lettable space in the trust’s portfolio.
Stanchart’s two main premises will be at Marina Bay Financial Centre (which it will start to move to by Q4 2010) and Changi Business Park (which it has already moved into). However, Stanchart will continue to house its flagship branch at Six Battery Road. Some consumer banking and group functions will also remain at this location, a Stanchart spokesman said.
K-REIT – BT
K-Reit eyes space in Sydney office tower
K-REIT Asia is set to increase its Australian footprint. The Singapore-listed real estate investment trust is in talks to buy the bulk of the space in a high-profile office tower in Sydney’s CBD area, the Australian Financial Review reported earlier this week.
The tower, 77 King Street, is in on the corner of George Street and houses the landmark glass-box Apple Store. However, the Apple Store is not part of the deal; rather, the office tower and remaining retail space is being sold as a single stratum, Australian Financial Review reported.
Interest in the tower is likely to change hands for more than A$110 million (S$130 million) on an expected city-wide rise in rental and capital values. The total area in the stratum on offer is about 13,500 sq metres. CB Richard Ellis and Savills are brokering the deal.
The tower has been reworked by private investor Victor Comino, who has invested about A$60 million over the past decade in the asset.
AFR reported that a host of offshore bidders expressed interest in the Sydney tower including the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation, Swiss-based AFIAA Foundation for International Real Estate Investments, Hong Kong-based CLSA Asia Pacific Markets unit and German pension fund giant Deka Immobilien Investment.
When contacted, a spokesman for K-Reit Asia Management said: ‘K-Reit Asia is actively on the lookout for suitable pan-Asian acquisition targets, and will make the appropriate announcements if and when such deals materialise.’
The icing on the cake for Singaporean investors looking at the Australian real estate market now is the slide in the Australian dollar, said market watchers.
Earlier this year, K-Reit Asia made its first overseas purchase when it bought a 50 per cent stake in a Grade A commercial building in Brisbane. It paid A$166 million (S$210.4 million at the time) for the stake in 275 George Street from a wholesale fund managed by Charter Hall Group.
That building, which was nearly fully let at the time, comprises nearly 434,000 sq ft of office space over 30 levels and about 15,400 sq ft of retail space.