OUE Names Three Banks for S$1.0-billion Hospitality REIT: Report
by Admin on Mar 20, 2013 • 6:23 pm
Singapore property firm Overseas Union Enterprise (OUE) is said to have chosen three banks for its planned US$800 million (S$1.0 billion) listing of a hospitality real estate investment trust (REIT) in the second half of the year, Reuters reported Wednesday.
OUE has chosen Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs and Standard Chartered to advise on the listing, the Reuters report said, citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
Led by Indonesian tycoon Stephen Riady, OUE revived plans for the REIT listing soon after it lost the battle to buy Fraser and Neave (F&N) to Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, the sources said.
OUE’s hotel properties include Mandarin Orchard Singapore, Marina Mandarin Singapore, Meritus Pelangi Beach Resort & Spa Langkawi, Meritus Mandarin Haikou and Meritus Shantou China.
The firm, which also owns commercial properties, had earlier planned a REIT in 2011, but it was delayed.
At that time Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BofA) was roped in for the REIT, but the US bank is no longer in the list of banks selected, one of the Reuters sources said. BofA was also OUE’s adviser on the F&N deal.
OUE has been on the lookout for assets despite its failed bid for F&N.
Recently it bought US Bank Tower in Los Angeles, the tallest US building west of the Mississippi, and related properties for US$367.5 million.
The sources declined to be identified as OUE had yet to publicly reveal the names of the banks involved in the listing, added the Reuters report.
The REITs raised S$3.4 billion or 68 per cent of the S$5.0 billion of stock sold in Singapore IPOs in the past 12 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The biggest share sale was the S$1.6 billion raised by Mapletree Greater China Commercial Trust, a REIT that owns assets including the Festival Walk shopping mall in Hong Kong and an office complex in Beijing.
The trust, which was also Asia’s biggest share sale this year, surged 13 per cent since its trading debut on March 7.
More REITs are expected this year. Singapore Press Holdings said a week ago it is exploring a real estate investment trust, which Bank Julius Baer & Co estimates may have S$3.1 billion of assets.
Singapore REITs posted a one-year total return of 45 per cent, trailing Japan’s 63 per cent in Asia. The measure tracking REITs in Singapore climbed 29 per cent in the past year, compared with the 8.2 per cent increase in the Singapore benchmark Straits Times Index.
A total of 30 REITs and property trusts were listed in the citystate with a combined value of S$56.0 billion, making up 6 per cent of the total market capitalisation of stocks traded, said Lawrence Wong, head of listings at the Singapore Exchange.
Singapore also has the highest number of cross-border asset REITs in Asia, he added.
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