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Singapore fund likes Hong Kong property as curbs to stay at home

Singapore fund likes Hong Kong property as curbs to stay at home

Hong Kong skyline view from the Victoria Peak. Photo: iStock

12 May 2016 03:17PM (Updated: 13 May 2016 12:35AM)

SINGAPORE —  SC Capital Partners, a Singapore private equity real estate firm with US$1.2 billion (S$1.6 billion) in assets, said recent price declines make investing in Hong Kong property attractive.

Founder Suchad Chiaranussati said he expected the Singapore Government to maintain residential curbs in the city-state until the end of next year. Hong Kong offered more value ­after prices for homes, offices and ­hotels dropped, he said in an interview at his bungalow office just off Orchard Road.

“Singapore property measures are working, they are working like clockwork, I see no reason why they would remove the curbs,” said Mr Chiaranussati. “The big correction in prices has ­already happened in Hong Kong” and SC ­Capital sees value emerging, he said.

Hong Kong housing prices have dropped about 13 per cent from a peak in September, according to data compiled by Centaline Property Agency, weighed by a rising supply of homes, higher short-term interest rates and slowing growth in China. Meanwhile, prices in Singapore have fallen 1.2 per cent since September and 9 per cent from the peak in 2013 as property curbs have cooled demand.

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SC Capital’s bet on Hong Kong contrasts with the more bearish views on the city’s real estate market. Mr Kyle Bass, a hedge fund manager who is wagering on a slowdown in China’s economy, told a Las Vegas conference that Hong Kong’s property market is in “free fall”, while Goldman Sachs predicted last week a 20 per cent ­decline in home prices.

SC Capital is bidding on a residential and commercial portfolio in Hong Kong which could be valued at as much as HK$1 billion (S$176 million), said Mr Chiaranussati, without giving details.

The fund is evaluating investments in Japan, Australia and China. Office and retail assets in Tokyo’s suburbs and in Osaka look attractive, while the fund is also looking to buy offices and develop residential apartments in Sydney and Melbourne, said Mr Chiara­nussati. He also favours commercial assets in Shanghai and other gateway cities in China, where prices have fallen 10 per cent to 20 per cent.

SC Capital plans to raise a new US$1 billion property fund next year, said Mr Chiaranussati. Half of the firm’s fourth fund, with US$850 million of committed equity, has already been invested, with the rest expected to be deployed over the next six to nine months. The company has ­divested about half of the investments made from the third fund and fully liquidated its first two funds, he said.

Singapore has rolled out curbs since 2009 as low interest rates and demand from foreign buyers raised concerns that the market was overheating. They include a cap on debt repayment costs at 60 per cent of a borrower’s monthly income, and higher stamp duties on home purchases.

Prices and volumes will continue to languish while the curbs remain in place, said Mr Chiaranussati. He expects the government to remove stamp duties for buyers when the curbs are rolled back, but says the tightened mortgage rules will stay.

“As long as measures are not being removed, I don’t see a bottom forming yet, even though we won’t see a major collapse either,” he said.

SC Capital booked S$12 million in losses when it sold 18 units at a condominium project to Blackstone Group in January 2015. The firm bought the properties just before the curbs came in and Mr Chiaranusatti said then they were caught by surprise by the severity of the measures. BLOOMBERG

Source: TODAY
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