Yishun industrial properties have a combined site area of 13,326.2 sq m
Edmund Tie, the sole marketing agent for the sale of 539 and 543 Yishun Industrial Park A, announced on Feb 12 that it is pleased to offer the two adjoining light industrial buildings for sale via an expression of interest (EOI) exercise.
539 and 543 Yishun Industrial Park A have a combined site area of 13,326.2 sq m (approximately 143,442 sq ft) and a total existing gross floor area of 14,318.9 sq m (approximately 154,127 sq ft). The two properties have a balance lease term of around 32 years and 34 years respectively. According to URA Master Plan 2019, they are zoned for ‘Business 1’ use with a plot ratio of 2.5. Both properties will be sold with vacant possession.
Situated within an established industrial park area that is surrounded by housing estates, the Yishun industrial properties have prominent dual road frontage along Yishun Industrial Park A and Yishun Avenue 8.
The Yishun industrial properties are within a short drive to Canberra and Yishun MRT stations and have convenient access to amenities and services at nearby markets, food centres and shopping malls. Major roads and expressways, including Yishun Avenue 2, Seletar Expressway (SLE) and Tampines Expressway (TPE), provide connectivity to other parts of Singapore.
Executive director of investment advisory, Tan Chun Ming, commented, “Sites with a remaining lease tenure of more than 30 years are rarely available for sale. Given its attributes, the subject properties might be ideal for companies looking to expand or consolidate their operations within the Yishun area. The sites’ existing gross floor areas are low and have the potential to be refurbished or redeveloped to a maximum total gross floor area of approximately 358,605 sq ft.”
The indicative guide prices for No. 539 and No. 543 are $9.8 million and $19.2 million respectively. Parties are welcome to submit offers for either one or both Yishun industrial properties.
The EOI exercise for the Yishun industrial properties will close on Wednesday, 18 March 2020 at 3pm.
The latest JTC industrial property market statistics showed that overall rents across Singapore’s industrial sector remained unchanged quarter-on-quarter (QOQ) in Q4 2019, the second straight quarter of no-change. For the full year 2019, industrial sector rents were up 0.1% year-on-year (YOY), mainly due to the improvement in business parks.
Commenting on the industrial market performance in the last quarter of 2019, Mr Desmond Sim, CBRE’s Head of Research for Southeast Asia, said, “the factory submarket displayed mixed performances this quarter. The JTC Single-User Factory Rental Index inched up by 0.1% q-o-q, whereas occupancy rate fell by 0.3 percentage points q-o-q to 90.8%, partly because of excess supply from previous quarters which is still in the midst of being absorbed by the market.”
The JTC Multiple-User Factory Rental Index on the other hand eased by 0.1% q-o-q, which can be mainly attributed to the West region where a large pool of existing vacant stock remains; this is despite that the islandwide occupancy rate increased by 0.4 percentage points q-o-q to 87.5%.
Mr Sim added, “The warehouse sector saw an improvement from its slowdown from preceding quarters, with the JTC Warehouse Rental Index edging up by 0.1% q-o-q. However, it was also noted that warehouse occupancy dipped marginally by 0.1 percentage points q-o-q to 88.0%. Nonetheless, it is likely that the tight upcoming warehouse supply will lend support to occupancy.”
CBRE said that moving forward, with overall industrial rents remaining unchanged this quarter, there is some optimism that rents may have bottomed out in the industrial market.
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CBRE Research is of the view that warehouse rents are poised to be more resilient, supported by a limited supply pipeline. Meanwhile, factory rents are expected to stay flat in 2020, suppressed by a prevailing vacancy volume of 40.1 million sq ft and a substantial amount of upcoming multiple-user factory stock.
Dominic Peters, Senior Director of Industrial Services at Colliers International, commenting on industrial market said:
“The Singapore manufacturing sector is expected to improve slowly in the coming quarters on the back of a gradual recovery of the global electronics cycle, driven by the normalisation of inventory in the global electronics supply chains, and the adoption of 5G technologies in telecommunication equipment and smartphones. However, with new supply of factory space in 2020 remaining sizable at around 15.6 million sq ft (net) – equivalent to about 4% of current factory stock – we anticipate that overall factory rent will likely remain subdued as supply outstrips demand in 2020.
Warehouse supply is set to increase to 3.6 million sq ft in 2020 (net) – equivalent to about 3% of current warehouse stock. Given the challenging global trade outlook and the elevated vacancy rate of 12.0% at the end of 2019, we expect warehouse rent to remain soft, stabilising in 2020-2021 before recovering from 2022 as supply diminishes.
Meanwhile, we forecast the flight to quality in business park and high-specs segments to continue due to limited supply amid higher demand for premium space. Centrally-located business parks and high-spec buildings with good amenities should attract healthy demand while those older and further away from MRT stations in the suburbs could face more difficulty in finding tenants, despite lower rents. Overall, we expect business park and high-specs rents to see slight upticks in the coming quarters, increasing by 1-2% YOY by the end of 2020.”
Brenda Ong, Cushman & Wakefield’s executive director and head of logistics and industrial, said she expects industrial rents for multi-user factories and single-user factories to moderate against an increase in supply in 2020.
Ms Ong added, “The single-user factory segment recorded some negative absorption as industrialists gave up or reduced their footprints in the space required for their business. Warehouse rents are also expected to stabilise and increase marginally because of healthy take-up in the past year, which we envisage will continue in 2020.”
But Tay Huey Ying, head of research and consultancy at JLL Singapore, says: “The industrial property market remains exposed to downside risks in 2020. While there are nascent signs of a turnaround in the manufacturing sector and economic growth is expected to pick up in 2020, this could be derailed by unexpected external events such as the Wuhan virus.”
She added: “Barring any unforeseen external shocks, we expect demand prospects to remain uneven across the various industrial property segments. Industrial developments with higher building specifications catering to the needs of new-economy firms (e.g. technology companies) and firms from higher value-added industries are likely to outperform the broader market.”
Ms Tay expects a surge in new business park completions this year. She noted that “five of the seven upcoming projects are purpose-built facilities with pre-commitments from major occupiers like Grab, Wilmar International and TÜV SÜD. Moreover, efforts by landlords to spruce up their older assets should enhance their marketability and ability to command higher rents on completion of upgrading works.”
Mr Paul Ho, chief mortgage officer at iCompareLoan, said, “commercial properties obviously command more rents than real estate like the Yishun industrial properties.”
He added, “any newer industrial properties sitting on Business 1 (B1) zones are increasingly sophisticated and looking like Commercial buildings. In fact you might not even tell them apart unless you refer to the URA Zoning Master Plan. Since industrial B1 zones are better located nearer to housing estates or regional centres and no longer mainly in Jurong, there is substantial advantage to break the zoning rules.”
Mr Ho noted that with the rolling out of the 5G wireless network and with Singapore’s being at the forefront of smart nation initiatives, the industrial market as a whole will remain optimistic.