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No more fire sales from Nan Fung .
(23-03-2014, 08:16 PM)greengiraffe Wrote: [ -> ]An even older archive... but shows why so many high profile companies and individuals have tied up with him in the many projects that he is taking a leading role...

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/Real...pics/16991

New kid on the block with a big reputation
Year-old firm set up by ex-CapitaLand man has already scored a coup

By Esther Teo
IT WAS the property world's own David and Goliath story - a tiny property firm takes on the biggest guns in real estate and pulls off an improbable victory.
The David in this tale is Perennial Real Estate, founded by Mr Pua Seck Guan in November 2009. Mr Pua roped in two larger players, who then managed to clinch a $250 million tender to redevelop an iconic stretch of colonial buildings in Stamford Road.
The Goliaths? They don't get any bigger than Wing Tai Group, Far East Organization and CapitaLand.
With the heavy hitters dispatched, Perennial - staff size about 30 - will oversee the site's transformation into a retail, hotel, residential and arts precinct, and all under the watchful eyes of Singa-poreans who love the old buildings there.
A 15-storey development with shops, eateries and apartments will rise above those conservation heritage buildings - Stamford House, Capitol Building and Capitol Theatre - under a $700 million makeover, while Capitol Centre will be demolished.
Mr Pua, 46, has had little time to savour the real estate coup he and his consortium partners, Pontiac Land co-owner Kwee Liong Seen and Top Global, have pulled off.
He told The Straits Times in his 25th-floor office in Suntec Tower 4: 'When I started the project, I wasn't sure I'd win, but I told myself, 'Never mind, I'll spend a few hundred thousand dollars so my team can have something to work on, to perfect our skill and to be in the market so people can see how good we are.''
Like an underdog making the FA Cup final, Perennial has suddenly found itself on a huge stage with high expectations that it will perform and, in this case, 'do the site justice'.
The consortium wants to create a striking landmark, providing a 'compelling lifestyle' that could rival the experience at London's Canary Wharf or Rockefeller Centre in New York.
'A tourist doesn't just want to go to another shopping mall,' said Mr Pua.
'These buildings have the culture and the historical background and, more interestingly, it has the Capitol, which can create the entertainment part of it.'
It will all be about putting together the right mix: retail, food and beverage, entertainment, and a good use of the theatre to provide a multi-sensory setting on a site with a history comparable to that of Raffles Hotel, he added.
His memories of Capitol Theatre in its glory days as a vibrant cultural epicentre also shaped his winning concept for the site. Capitol, Singapore's first cinema, screened its last movie in 1998.
'When I was a kid, this theatre was where I watched all the blockbusters: James Bond and Star Wars; where you had to buy tickets three days in advance. There were many hawker stalls and we must bring some of this history back, but in a modern way,' said the father of four.
He is aware that some people fear the area's historical character may be overshadowed by the modern twist he has envisaged.
But he stressed that the development had been designed 'sensitively, carefully and with respect' to make sure its modern elements do not kill its historical richness.
Mr Pua visited the Stamford location more than six times and at different times of the day, visualising viable concepts for both day and night use - a process he undertakes before bidding on any site.
'I must say I like conceptualising, and when I take on a project, without a lot of people knowing, I actually go to the place by myself many times and I conceptualise it and keep on thinking and thinking what to do with it,' he said.
While the Stamford Road deal is the firm's most high-profile win, it also secured the Katong Mall site and a large portion of Chinatown Point, both for about $250 million each.
Mr Pua is quick to credit his team for the year-old company's dramatic impact on a highly competitive market.
'I'm an individual; I don't have capital to compete with all the big organisations. What we have is our thinking, our skills, and the challenge is to make sure we have capital on our side to secure opportunities,' he said.
He is also thoroughly enjoying life as his own boss more than two years after he took a huge leap and left CapitaLand.
Mr Pua uses the phrase yin shui si yuan to describe his relationship with his CapitaLand former colleagues, a Chinese idiom meaning one should not forget the source of one's success.
He believes in establishing strong relationships, and says he has always left previous appointments on a good note.
'As we are all working in the real estate industry and for different corporations, it is sometimes inevitable that we can't be seen to be too friendly with a competitor. However, as long as we remain professional, it is not an issue,' he added.
His humble background - his father owned a small provision shop and his mother was a washerwoman - also influenced his decision to strike out on his own.
He lived in a one-bedroom HDB rented flat near Old Airport Road until he was 25, and made it through school with the help of bursaries and scholarships.
After his father died when he was 13, he and his two siblings gave tuition to help support the family.
After a high-flying career at CapitaLand - and after watching colleagues start their own firms - he felt he was ready to 'take a chance and seize the opportunity'.
'I had been a corporate soldier at CapitaLand and I told myself there's nothing for me to lose. If it doesn't happen after five years, I can still go back to corporate life and I've seen so much opportunity in countries like China, so I told myself, 'Let's try.''
His business philosophy is simple: If you have good skill sets, you will find projects to create value; and with good projects, capital will follow.
'Ours is a management company. I don't have the equity to match others so we must be transparent in our dealings, have very good governance, be disciplined in our approach, thorough in our financial calculations, and deliver the returns they are looking for,' he said.
'We think something might work, but we can't just think. I can't just tell an investor to trust me. You must use your technical skill sets to undo constraints. If you can undo constraints, you'll create value.'
Those skills came to the fore when the firm secured Katong Mall, its first site.
The building had been on the market for almost three years without a buyer before Mr Pua went to have a look at the urging of a friend.
'I went there, shook hands with the guy and closed the deal in a little over two weeks. After I closed the deal and put in my money, then I went to find the money. I'm glad I have bankers that are willing to support me,' he said.
It was his proven track record and contacts built up over the years in the industry that smoothed the process.
The mall is now more than 60 per cent leased and Mr Pua is confident he will 'deliver the financial performance promised to investors and a product that will wow the market'.
'This business involves a lot of human capital, so we must make sure we uphold the quality,' he said. 'We can't just keep wanting to do more if we don't have the right skill set to do a good job, because then we'll be looking for trouble.'
He is now looking ahead, with a special focus on China.
Perennial is involved in managing more than a million sq m of retail space in over 30 shopping malls in China, a country that the firm believes has huge potential.
'There are still opportunities in Singapore although they are more abundant in China. It's the same all over the world; there are not many retail operators and that's where we feel we have a niche. But we have to be very focused,' he said.
Perennial is also reported to be planning an initial public offering of a business trust here - consisting mainly of Chinese assets - to raise $1 billion. The firm has declined to comment.
Mr Pua's driving force is not to let down the investors and colleagues - most are former CapitaLanders - who have supported him.
'Without all my colleagues who have given me their support, I would not be what I am today. They supported me over the years, even when I had zero, nothing, no business but just an idea.
'The challenge now is to deliver.'
esthert@...
http://www.straitstimes.com/STI/STIMEDIA..._ETPUA.jpg
Mr Pua Seck Guan, 46, with staff of Perennial Real Estate, which he founded in November 2009. The tiny firm, with the help of two larger players, beat out industry giants to clinch the $250 million tender to redevelop an iconic set of Stamford Road buildings. -- ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM
His resignation shook the market

NOT many bosses send the stock market reeling when they step down, but real estate veteran Pua Seck Guan managed it.
The jolt came in September 2008 when Mr Pua, 46, announced that he would be stepping down as chief executive of the firm that manages CapitaMall Trust.
The news, in the midst of a tumultuous week for the stock market, helped wipe $300 million off the shopping mall giant's value.
Although part of the slide can be attributed to the financial crisis - his resignation came in the same month as the Lehman Brothers collapse - it also reflected the market's high regard for the man credited with spearheading CapitaLand's rise to become Asia's largest mall owner.
He has spent more than 20 years in real estate, and previously headed CapitaLand Retail and CapitaMall Trust Management. He kick-started the real estate investment trust (Reit) market here with the creation of Singapore's first and still largest Reit, the $8.1 billion CapitaMall Trust.
As head of CapitaLand Retail, he was responsible for sizeable retail investments, including Ion Orchard, Raffles City, Bugis Junction and the integrated lifestyle hub at one-north.
Since 2002, he has acquired, developed and managed more than 70 malls in over 45 cities in China.
He also sits on the board of trustees to the International Council of Shopping Centres and is the chairman of its Asia-Pacific Advisory Committee.
Perennial now manages the Katong and Chinatown Point malls and recently won the tender of the prime Capitol mixed-use site.
Mr Pua says he is focusing on Singapore, China and India while looking towards creating a Perennial-sponsored vehicle, either private or listed, for each market.
He holds a bachelor's degree in building from the National University of Singapore and a master's in civil engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

I think the talk about buying land in china, building a shopping mall and then running it to generate rental has been overhyped. Many developers are doing that.

PCRT is a small player compared to big boys like capitaland or Wharf Holdings in Hongkong. There should be many other big players that are listed in china. To bulid malls, it takes capital/cash, the big boys can borrow money at much cheaper rates than PCRT, that's when the advantage or economies of scale come in.

IMHO, in the long run, PCRT will lose out to the bigger players because of higher refinancing/ interest costs for a project of similar size. The talk about connections, knowing officials, etc... well the other big players also have that
Nan Fung is not without grey matter when it comes to cutting losses - the fact that there is no price recovery also means that there remains fear and uncertainty in the mkt.

Nan Fung will be a seller when price is right but it will be a matter of pricing and how they will be eventually bailed out that matters.

GG

(25-03-2014, 10:10 AM)cfa Wrote: [ -> ]No more fire sales from Nan Fung .
(25-03-2014, 10:23 AM)safetyfirst Wrote: [ -> ]
(23-03-2014, 08:16 PM)greengiraffe Wrote: [ -> ]An even older archive... but shows why so many high profile companies and individuals have tied up with him in the many projects that he is taking a leading role...

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/Real...pics/16991

New kid on the block with a big reputation
Year-old firm set up by ex-CapitaLand man has already scored a coup

By Esther Teo
IT WAS the property world's own David and Goliath story - a tiny property firm takes on the biggest guns in real estate and pulls off an improbable victory.
The David in this tale is Perennial Real Estate, founded by Mr Pua Seck Guan in November 2009. Mr Pua roped in two larger players, who then managed to clinch a $250 million tender to redevelop an iconic stretch of colonial buildings in Stamford Road.
The Goliaths? They don't get any bigger than Wing Tai Group, Far East Organization and CapitaLand.
With the heavy hitters dispatched, Perennial - staff size about 30 - will oversee the site's transformation into a retail, hotel, residential and arts precinct, and all under the watchful eyes of Singa-poreans who love the old buildings there.
A 15-storey development with shops, eateries and apartments will rise above those conservation heritage buildings - Stamford House, Capitol Building and Capitol Theatre - under a $700 million makeover, while Capitol Centre will be demolished.
Mr Pua, 46, has had little time to savour the real estate coup he and his consortium partners, Pontiac Land co-owner Kwee Liong Seen and Top Global, have pulled off.
He told The Straits Times in his 25th-floor office in Suntec Tower 4: 'When I started the project, I wasn't sure I'd win, but I told myself, 'Never mind, I'll spend a few hundred thousand dollars so my team can have something to work on, to perfect our skill and to be in the market so people can see how good we are.''
Like an underdog making the FA Cup final, Perennial has suddenly found itself on a huge stage with high expectations that it will perform and, in this case, 'do the site justice'.
The consortium wants to create a striking landmark, providing a 'compelling lifestyle' that could rival the experience at London's Canary Wharf or Rockefeller Centre in New York.
'A tourist doesn't just want to go to another shopping mall,' said Mr Pua.
'These buildings have the culture and the historical background and, more interestingly, it has the Capitol, which can create the entertainment part of it.'
It will all be about putting together the right mix: retail, food and beverage, entertainment, and a good use of the theatre to provide a multi-sensory setting on a site with a history comparable to that of Raffles Hotel, he added.
His memories of Capitol Theatre in its glory days as a vibrant cultural epicentre also shaped his winning concept for the site. Capitol, Singapore's first cinema, screened its last movie in 1998.
'When I was a kid, this theatre was where I watched all the blockbusters: James Bond and Star Wars; where you had to buy tickets three days in advance. There were many hawker stalls and we must bring some of this history back, but in a modern way,' said the father of four.
He is aware that some people fear the area's historical character may be overshadowed by the modern twist he has envisaged.
But he stressed that the development had been designed 'sensitively, carefully and with respect' to make sure its modern elements do not kill its historical richness.
Mr Pua visited the Stamford location more than six times and at different times of the day, visualising viable concepts for both day and night use - a process he undertakes before bidding on any site.
'I must say I like conceptualising, and when I take on a project, without a lot of people knowing, I actually go to the place by myself many times and I conceptualise it and keep on thinking and thinking what to do with it,' he said.
While the Stamford Road deal is the firm's most high-profile win, it also secured the Katong Mall site and a large portion of Chinatown Point, both for about $250 million each.
Mr Pua is quick to credit his team for the year-old company's dramatic impact on a highly competitive market.
'I'm an individual; I don't have capital to compete with all the big organisations. What we have is our thinking, our skills, and the challenge is to make sure we have capital on our side to secure opportunities,' he said.
He is also thoroughly enjoying life as his own boss more than two years after he took a huge leap and left CapitaLand.
Mr Pua uses the phrase yin shui si yuan to describe his relationship with his CapitaLand former colleagues, a Chinese idiom meaning one should not forget the source of one's success.
He believes in establishing strong relationships, and says he has always left previous appointments on a good note.
'As we are all working in the real estate industry and for different corporations, it is sometimes inevitable that we can't be seen to be too friendly with a competitor. However, as long as we remain professional, it is not an issue,' he added.
His humble background - his father owned a small provision shop and his mother was a washerwoman - also influenced his decision to strike out on his own.
He lived in a one-bedroom HDB rented flat near Old Airport Road until he was 25, and made it through school with the help of bursaries and scholarships.
After his father died when he was 13, he and his two siblings gave tuition to help support the family.
After a high-flying career at CapitaLand - and after watching colleagues start their own firms - he felt he was ready to 'take a chance and seize the opportunity'.
'I had been a corporate soldier at CapitaLand and I told myself there's nothing for me to lose. If it doesn't happen after five years, I can still go back to corporate life and I've seen so much opportunity in countries like China, so I told myself, 'Let's try.''
His business philosophy is simple: If you have good skill sets, you will find projects to create value; and with good projects, capital will follow.
'Ours is a management company. I don't have the equity to match others so we must be transparent in our dealings, have very good governance, be disciplined in our approach, thorough in our financial calculations, and deliver the returns they are looking for,' he said.
'We think something might work, but we can't just think. I can't just tell an investor to trust me. You must use your technical skill sets to undo constraints. If you can undo constraints, you'll create value.'
Those skills came to the fore when the firm secured Katong Mall, its first site.
The building had been on the market for almost three years without a buyer before Mr Pua went to have a look at the urging of a friend.
'I went there, shook hands with the guy and closed the deal in a little over two weeks. After I closed the deal and put in my money, then I went to find the money. I'm glad I have bankers that are willing to support me,' he said.
It was his proven track record and contacts built up over the years in the industry that smoothed the process.
The mall is now more than 60 per cent leased and Mr Pua is confident he will 'deliver the financial performance promised to investors and a product that will wow the market'.
'This business involves a lot of human capital, so we must make sure we uphold the quality,' he said. 'We can't just keep wanting to do more if we don't have the right skill set to do a good job, because then we'll be looking for trouble.'
He is now looking ahead, with a special focus on China.
Perennial is involved in managing more than a million sq m of retail space in over 30 shopping malls in China, a country that the firm believes has huge potential.
'There are still opportunities in Singapore although they are more abundant in China. It's the same all over the world; there are not many retail operators and that's where we feel we have a niche. But we have to be very focused,' he said.
Perennial is also reported to be planning an initial public offering of a business trust here - consisting mainly of Chinese assets - to raise $1 billion. The firm has declined to comment.
Mr Pua's driving force is not to let down the investors and colleagues - most are former CapitaLanders - who have supported him.
'Without all my colleagues who have given me their support, I would not be what I am today. They supported me over the years, even when I had zero, nothing, no business but just an idea.
'The challenge now is to deliver.'
esthert@...
http://www.straitstimes.com/STI/STIMEDIA..._ETPUA.jpg
Mr Pua Seck Guan, 46, with staff of Perennial Real Estate, which he founded in November 2009. The tiny firm, with the help of two larger players, beat out industry giants to clinch the $250 million tender to redevelop an iconic set of Stamford Road buildings. -- ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM
His resignation shook the market

NOT many bosses send the stock market reeling when they step down, but real estate veteran Pua Seck Guan managed it.
The jolt came in September 2008 when Mr Pua, 46, announced that he would be stepping down as chief executive of the firm that manages CapitaMall Trust.
The news, in the midst of a tumultuous week for the stock market, helped wipe $300 million off the shopping mall giant's value.
Although part of the slide can be attributed to the financial crisis - his resignation came in the same month as the Lehman Brothers collapse - it also reflected the market's high regard for the man credited with spearheading CapitaLand's rise to become Asia's largest mall owner.
He has spent more than 20 years in real estate, and previously headed CapitaLand Retail and CapitaMall Trust Management. He kick-started the real estate investment trust (Reit) market here with the creation of Singapore's first and still largest Reit, the $8.1 billion CapitaMall Trust.
As head of CapitaLand Retail, he was responsible for sizeable retail investments, including Ion Orchard, Raffles City, Bugis Junction and the integrated lifestyle hub at one-north.
Since 2002, he has acquired, developed and managed more than 70 malls in over 45 cities in China.
He also sits on the board of trustees to the International Council of Shopping Centres and is the chairman of its Asia-Pacific Advisory Committee.
Perennial now manages the Katong and Chinatown Point malls and recently won the tender of the prime Capitol mixed-use site.
Mr Pua says he is focusing on Singapore, China and India while looking towards creating a Perennial-sponsored vehicle, either private or listed, for each market.
He holds a bachelor's degree in building from the National University of Singapore and a master's in civil engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

I think the talk about buying land in china, building a shopping mall and then running it to generate rental has been overhyped. Many developers are doing that.

PCRT is a small player compared to big boys like capitaland or Wharf Holdings in Hongkong. There should be many other big players that are listed in china. To bulid malls, it takes capital/cash, the big boys can borrow money at much cheaper rates than PCRT, that's when the advantage or economies of scale come in.

IMHO, in the long run, PCRT will lose out to the bigger players because of higher refinancing/ interest costs for a project of similar size. The talk about connections, knowing officials, etc... well the other big players also have that

Indeed, you have strike on a very valid point. Perhaps, its Singaporean's inexperience with Chinese market that they need to tap on someone like pua whom they think could have better odds. The will be cultural reasons as to why many such local companies and high profile individuals didn't explore the possibilities of tying up with HK and even Taiwanese companies to do it big in China.

Agree, there are always 2 sides to a coin.
(25-03-2014, 10:10 AM)cfa Wrote: [ -> ]No more fire sales from Nan Fung .
What made them sell in the first place you think? I doubt very much they needed the money.
(25-03-2014, 10:23 AM)safetyfirst Wrote: [ -> ]
(23-03-2014, 08:16 PM)greengiraffe Wrote: [ -> ]An even older archive... but shows why so many high profile companies and individuals have tied up with him in the many projects that he is taking a leading role...

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/Real...pics/16991

New kid on the block with a big reputation
Year-old firm set up by ex-CapitaLand man has already scored a coup

By Esther Teo
IT WAS the property world's own David and Goliath story - a tiny property firm takes on the biggest guns in real estate and pulls off an improbable victory.
The David in this tale is Perennial Real Estate, founded by Mr Pua Seck Guan in November 2009. Mr Pua roped in two larger players, who then managed to clinch a $250 million tender to redevelop an iconic stretch of colonial buildings in Stamford Road.
The Goliaths? They don't get any bigger than Wing Tai Group, Far East Organization and CapitaLand.
With the heavy hitters dispatched, Perennial - staff size about 30 - will oversee the site's transformation into a retail, hotel, residential and arts precinct, and all under the watchful eyes of Singa-poreans who love the old buildings there.
A 15-storey development with shops, eateries and apartments will rise above those conservation heritage buildings - Stamford House, Capitol Building and Capitol Theatre - under a $700 million makeover, while Capitol Centre will be demolished.
Mr Pua, 46, has had little time to savour the real estate coup he and his consortium partners, Pontiac Land co-owner Kwee Liong Seen and Top Global, have pulled off.
He told The Straits Times in his 25th-floor office in Suntec Tower 4: 'When I started the project, I wasn't sure I'd win, but I told myself, 'Never mind, I'll spend a few hundred thousand dollars so my team can have something to work on, to perfect our skill and to be in the market so people can see how good we are.''
Like an underdog making the FA Cup final, Perennial has suddenly found itself on a huge stage with high expectations that it will perform and, in this case, 'do the site justice'.
The consortium wants to create a striking landmark, providing a 'compelling lifestyle' that could rival the experience at London's Canary Wharf or Rockefeller Centre in New York.
'A tourist doesn't just want to go to another shopping mall,' said Mr Pua.
'These buildings have the culture and the historical background and, more interestingly, it has the Capitol, which can create the entertainment part of it.'
It will all be about putting together the right mix: retail, food and beverage, entertainment, and a good use of the theatre to provide a multi-sensory setting on a site with a history comparable to that of Raffles Hotel, he added.
His memories of Capitol Theatre in its glory days as a vibrant cultural epicentre also shaped his winning concept for the site. Capitol, Singapore's first cinema, screened its last movie in 1998.
'When I was a kid, this theatre was where I watched all the blockbusters: James Bond and Star Wars; where you had to buy tickets three days in advance. There were many hawker stalls and we must bring some of this history back, but in a modern way,' said the father of four.
He is aware that some people fear the area's historical character may be overshadowed by the modern twist he has envisaged.
But he stressed that the development had been designed 'sensitively, carefully and with respect' to make sure its modern elements do not kill its historical richness.
Mr Pua visited the Stamford location more than six times and at different times of the day, visualising viable concepts for both day and night use - a process he undertakes before bidding on any site.
'I must say I like conceptualising, and when I take on a project, without a lot of people knowing, I actually go to the place by myself many times and I conceptualise it and keep on thinking and thinking what to do with it,' he said.
While the Stamford Road deal is the firm's most high-profile win, it also secured the Katong Mall site and a large portion of Chinatown Point, both for about $250 million each.
Mr Pua is quick to credit his team for the year-old company's dramatic impact on a highly competitive market.
'I'm an individual; I don't have capital to compete with all the big organisations. What we have is our thinking, our skills, and the challenge is to make sure we have capital on our side to secure opportunities,' he said.
He is also thoroughly enjoying life as his own boss more than two years after he took a huge leap and left CapitaLand.
Mr Pua uses the phrase yin shui si yuan to describe his relationship with his CapitaLand former colleagues, a Chinese idiom meaning one should not forget the source of one's success.
He believes in establishing strong relationships, and says he has always left previous appointments on a good note.
'As we are all working in the real estate industry and for different corporations, it is sometimes inevitable that we can't be seen to be too friendly with a competitor. However, as long as we remain professional, it is not an issue,' he added.
His humble background - his father owned a small provision shop and his mother was a washerwoman - also influenced his decision to strike out on his own.
He lived in a one-bedroom HDB rented flat near Old Airport Road until he was 25, and made it through school with the help of bursaries and scholarships.
After his father died when he was 13, he and his two siblings gave tuition to help support the family.
After a high-flying career at CapitaLand - and after watching colleagues start their own firms - he felt he was ready to 'take a chance and seize the opportunity'.
'I had been a corporate soldier at CapitaLand and I told myself there's nothing for me to lose. If it doesn't happen after five years, I can still go back to corporate life and I've seen so much opportunity in countries like China, so I told myself, 'Let's try.''
His business philosophy is simple: If you have good skill sets, you will find projects to create value; and with good projects, capital will follow.
'Ours is a management company. I don't have the equity to match others so we must be transparent in our dealings, have very good governance, be disciplined in our approach, thorough in our financial calculations, and deliver the returns they are looking for,' he said.
'We think something might work, but we can't just think. I can't just tell an investor to trust me. You must use your technical skill sets to undo constraints. If you can undo constraints, you'll create value.'
Those skills came to the fore when the firm secured Katong Mall, its first site.
The building had been on the market for almost three years without a buyer before Mr Pua went to have a look at the urging of a friend.
'I went there, shook hands with the guy and closed the deal in a little over two weeks. After I closed the deal and put in my money, then I went to find the money. I'm glad I have bankers that are willing to support me,' he said.
It was his proven track record and contacts built up over the years in the industry that smoothed the process.
The mall is now more than 60 per cent leased and Mr Pua is confident he will 'deliver the financial performance promised to investors and a product that will wow the market'.
'This business involves a lot of human capital, so we must make sure we uphold the quality,' he said. 'We can't just keep wanting to do more if we don't have the right skill set to do a good job, because then we'll be looking for trouble.'
He is now looking ahead, with a special focus on China.
Perennial is involved in managing more than a million sq m of retail space in over 30 shopping malls in China, a country that the firm believes has huge potential.
'There are still opportunities in Singapore although they are more abundant in China. It's the same all over the world; there are not many retail operators and that's where we feel we have a niche. But we have to be very focused,' he said.
Perennial is also reported to be planning an initial public offering of a business trust here - consisting mainly of Chinese assets - to raise $1 billion. The firm has declined to comment.
Mr Pua's driving force is not to let down the investors and colleagues - most are former CapitaLanders - who have supported him.
'Without all my colleagues who have given me their support, I would not be what I am today. They supported me over the years, even when I had zero, nothing, no business but just an idea.
'The challenge now is to deliver.'
esthert@...
http://www.straitstimes.com/STI/STIMEDIA..._ETPUA.jpg
Mr Pua Seck Guan, 46, with staff of Perennial Real Estate, which he founded in November 2009. The tiny firm, with the help of two larger players, beat out industry giants to clinch the $250 million tender to redevelop an iconic set of Stamford Road buildings. -- ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM
His resignation shook the market

NOT many bosses send the stock market reeling when they step down, but real estate veteran Pua Seck Guan managed it.
The jolt came in September 2008 when Mr Pua, 46, announced that he would be stepping down as chief executive of the firm that manages CapitaMall Trust.
The news, in the midst of a tumultuous week for the stock market, helped wipe $300 million off the shopping mall giant's value.
Although part of the slide can be attributed to the financial crisis - his resignation came in the same month as the Lehman Brothers collapse - it also reflected the market's high regard for the man credited with spearheading CapitaLand's rise to become Asia's largest mall owner.
He has spent more than 20 years in real estate, and previously headed CapitaLand Retail and CapitaMall Trust Management. He kick-started the real estate investment trust (Reit) market here with the creation of Singapore's first and still largest Reit, the $8.1 billion CapitaMall Trust.
As head of CapitaLand Retail, he was responsible for sizeable retail investments, including Ion Orchard, Raffles City, Bugis Junction and the integrated lifestyle hub at one-north.
Since 2002, he has acquired, developed and managed more than 70 malls in over 45 cities in China.
He also sits on the board of trustees to the International Council of Shopping Centres and is the chairman of its Asia-Pacific Advisory Committee.
Perennial now manages the Katong and Chinatown Point malls and recently won the tender of the prime Capitol mixed-use site.
Mr Pua says he is focusing on Singapore, China and India while looking towards creating a Perennial-sponsored vehicle, either private or listed, for each market.
He holds a bachelor's degree in building from the National University of Singapore and a master's in civil engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

I think the talk about buying land in china, building a shopping mall and then running it to generate rental has been overhyped. Many developers are doing that.

PCRT is a small player compared to big boys like capitaland or Wharf Holdings in Hongkong. There should be many other big players that are listed in china. To bulid malls, it takes capital/cash, the big boys can borrow money at much cheaper rates than PCRT, that's when the advantage or economies of scale come in.

IMHO, in the long run, PCRT will lose out to the bigger players because of higher refinancing/ interest costs for a project of similar size. The talk about connections, knowing officials, etc... well the other big players also have that
A good point, well put across in simple understandable terms.
NEWS SNIPPETS from Lim & Tan Securities, on 26 Mar 2014

------------
The 3rd largest shareholder (Nan Fung Group)
of Perennial China Retail Trust (PCRT) (53.5
cents, unchanged) continues to pare down their
stake in the company with yesterday’s disclosure of
them having sold another 1,274,000 shares at 54
cents each, reducing their stake to 101,964,000
shares or 8.9% of the company. On 17 Mar’14,
they had sold 29,593,000 shares at 56 cents each.
This is not good as it signals that Nan Fung Group
(helmed by Chen Wai Wai, Lee Pui Ling, Wong Suk
Han and Wong Wai Pat) is not confident that the
pre-conditional takeover offer of PCRT by SGXlisted
ST James at 70 cents a share (equivalent)
can succeed.

Ref: http://remisiers.org/cms_images/research...326_LT.pdf
Quote:His resignation shook the market

NOT many bosses send the stock market reeling when they step down, but real estate veteran Pua Seck Guan managed it.
The jolt came in September 2008 when Mr Pua, 46, announced that he would be stepping down as chief executive of the firm that manages CapitaMall Trust.
The news, in the midst of a tumultuous week for the stock market, helped wipe $300 million off the shopping mall giant's value.
Although part of the slide can be attributed to the financial crisis - his resignation came in the same month as the Lehman Brothers collapse - it also reflected the market's high regard for the man credited with spearheading CapitaLand's rise to become Asia's largest mall owner.

This event was just preceded by the acquisition of the Atrium (beside Plaza Singapura) in 2008 which was made yield accretive only with the use of Convertible Bonds with very low interest rates but that were heavily backend loaded. Talk about financial engineering! CMT already started selling off after this, even before the CEO departed.

Gearing also shot up a lot above CMT's historical level as a result and played badly into the ensuing credit crunch of the GFC, resulting in a massively dilutive rights issue subsequently. It seems to me this acquisition is the major contributor to CMT's underperformance for the past 6 years, with the side effects of the CBs only cleaned up finally recently with the maturity of the CBs in question.

The reporter of the article above probably did not notice or chose to ignore under whose watch this disastrous acquisition took place, which included use of heavy financial engineering.
(26-03-2014, 08:56 PM)CityFarmer Wrote: [ -> ]NEWS SNIPPETS from Lim & Tan Securities, on 26 Mar 2014

------------
The 3rd largest shareholder (Nan Fung Group)
of Perennial China Retail Trust (PCRT) (53.5
cents, unchanged) continues to pare down their
stake in the company with yesterday’s disclosure of
them having sold another 1,274,000 shares at 54
cents each, reducing their stake to 101,964,000
shares or 8.9% of the company. On 17 Mar’14,
they had sold 29,593,000 shares at 56 cents each.
This is not good as it signals that Nan Fung Group
(helmed by Chen Wai Wai, Lee Pui Ling, Wong Suk
Han and Wong Wai Pat) is not confident that the
pre-conditional takeover offer of PCRT by SGXlisted
ST James at 70 cents a share (equivalent)
can succeed.

Ref: http://remisiers.org/cms_images/research...326_LT.pdf

NF sells but others buy. Those who buy have confident that the Takeover offer can succeed.Smile
(27-03-2014, 08:46 AM)cfa Wrote: [ -> ]
(26-03-2014, 08:56 PM)CityFarmer Wrote: [ -> ]NEWS SNIPPETS from Lim & Tan Securities, on 26 Mar 2014

------------
The 3rd largest shareholder (Nan Fung Group)
of Perennial China Retail Trust (PCRT) (53.5
cents, unchanged) continues to pare down their
stake in the company with yesterday’s disclosure of
them having sold another 1,274,000 shares at 54
cents each, reducing their stake to 101,964,000
shares or 8.9% of the company. On 17 Mar’14,
they had sold 29,593,000 shares at 56 cents each.
This is not good as it signals that Nan Fung Group
(helmed by Chen Wai Wai, Lee Pui Ling, Wong Suk
Han and Wong Wai Pat) is not confident that the
pre-conditional takeover offer of PCRT by SGXlisted
ST James at 70 cents a share (equivalent)
can succeed.

Ref: http://remisiers.org/cms_images/research...326_LT.pdf

NF sells but others buy. Those who buy have confident that the Takeover offer can succeed.Smile

NF's remaining 100m shares is a spanner in Pua's works. In hindsight, my assumptions that he had consulted all his IPO cornerstone appears flawed.

Whatever it is, while we have confidence that Pua and his partners will eventually deliver, the immediate tasks appear to be to find a strong hand to takeover the overhang.

Until then, the next step will just be plans on paper and speculation on our part.

Divested (ouch)
GG
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