Question No 88 in Notice Paper No 108 of 2011
Name and Constituency of Member of
Parliament
Mr Zaqy Mohamad, Member for Chua Chu Kang GRC
Question
To ask the Minister for Trade and Industry (a) if he will
provide an assessment on the REIT segment and its influence on rising rentals
for industrial real estate; (b) whether the Ministry has performed any studies
on the difference in rental and real estate valuations between industrial real
estates run by REITs and non-REITs; (c) for the past 10 years, what is the
proportion of industrial space under the Ministry that has been divested to
REITs for industrial rental and whether the published rental prices have
followed economic conditions well; and (d) what is the Government's assurance
that industrial rents and real estate remain affordable to local businesses.
Answer
There are 7 industrial REITs in Singapore, which together
own about 17% or 6.6 million sqm of the total industrial space in Singapore. The
industrial REITs play a useful role in Singapore’s industrial property market.
For example, they develop customised facilities on behalf of some
industrialists, and then lease the facilities to them. This allows the
industrialists to operate in customised facilities without having to pay
development costs upfront. Industrial REITs may also buy completed facilities
from industrialists, and then lease the facilities back to them. These two
models help industrialists lighten their balance sheet, and channel the freed-up
resources into their business operations or expansion plans.
Before JTC embarked on its divestment exercise, it had
4.4 million sqm or 12.8% market share of industrial space, in terms of lettable
area. In 2008, JTC divested 1.2 million sqm. Initially, there were strong
foreign interests. But with the onset of the financial crisis, foreign bidders
stayed away and the successful bidder was Mapletree Investments Pte Ltd. In
2011, JTC divested another 0.3 million sqm in two tranches. One tranche was won
by Soilbuild Group Holdings Ltd and the other tranche by Mapletree Industrial
Trust.
As part of the divestment, JTC required buyers of the
industrial properties to ensure business continuity for existing tenants. As a
result, rental escalation caps were put in place by the buyers for the existing
tenants. For properties divested to Mapletree in 2008, rental rates for existing
tenants were capped at 5% growth per annum over JTC’s July 2007 posted rentals
for three years. For properties divested to Mapletree in 2011, rental rates for
existing tenants were capped at 5% growth per annum over JTC’s July 2011 posted
rentals for three years. There were also discounts for tenants who had more than
10 years of continuous tenancy.
Based on publicly available information, the average
gross rental of Mapletree Industrial Trust’s properties has also been broadly in
line with Singapore’s economic conditions, as can be seen in this chart that has
been circulated:
Source of Mapletree Industrial Trust’s gross rental:
http://www.mapletreeindustrialtrust.com
I assure Members that MTI and JTC will continue to keep a close watch on the industrial property market. Where necessary, we will release more land through our Industrial Government Land Sales programme, and implement other measures as needed, to ensure that the industrial property market remains stable and sustainable.
Source of Mapletree Industrial Trust’s gross rental:
http://www.mapletreeindustrialtrust.com
I assure Members that MTI and JTC will continue to keep a close watch on the industrial property market. Where necessary, we will release more land through our Industrial Government Land Sales programme, and implement other measures as needed, to ensure that the industrial property market remains stable and sustainable.