INDUSTRIAL MARKET
Industrial property
hot spots emerging
Woodlands,
Bedok and Geylang have emerged as hot spots for industrial property investors
this year, as the red-hot sector draws growing interest.
Developers
sold a total of 435 new industrial units in the third quarter, with 37 per cent
of sales in the Geylang and Kallang planning areas, an analysis of caveats
lodged with the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) has found.
Projects
in these areas include AZ @ Paya Lebar, Oxley Bizhub and CT Hub 2.
Industrial
prices have now charged up by more than 60 per cent in under two years, new
figures out earlier this week showed.
Sales
volumes have also been climbing, with 2,894 transactions in the first 10 months
of the year. This is up 14 per cent from the same period last year, and is 28
per cent more than in 2010.
This
sharp increase has prompted a property expert to call for more detailed data to
properly understand the phenomenon - especially as government cooling measures
may in the offing.
URA
data out on Monday showed that industrial property prices surged 8.8 per cent
in the three months to Sept30.
This
took price gains to a whopping 27 per cent in the first nine months of the
year. Last year, they surged 27 per cent.
A
growing number of older industrial units at projects like Eunos Techpark and
Tan Boon Liat Building have eclipsed the $1,000 per sq ft (psf) mark, costing
more than many homes in the suburban areas. Meanwhile, new projects like Apex @
Henderson in the Bukit Merah area, Oxley Bizhub in Ubi Road, and CT Hub 2 in
Lavender Street have continued to enjoy keen third-quarter sales.
The
highest psf price for a new unit sold in the three months to September was a
3,035 sq ft first-floor factory space that sold for $3.95 million in August at
the freehold Apex @ Henderson. This works out to $1,300 psf.
For
the year, freehold project AZ @ Paya Lebar topped the price table with a sale
at $2,100 psf in June for a 1,098 sq ft unit.
Experts
say while prices have generally climbed across the board, surging industrial
prices are partly due to new high-priced launches, some of which are less
common freehold developments. As benchmark prices are attained, this pulls up
the values of nearby resale units, they add.
The
Trade and Industry Minister reiterated in April that the Government will ensure
there are sufficient measures to keep industrial space affordable.
Source: The Straits Times – 31 October 2012
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