CDL cutting debt woh

k1976

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
May 16, 2023
Messages
37,747
Points
113

CDL to sell $2.75 billion Singapore office site to cut debt​

Bloomberg
Wed, 4 June 2025 at 12:49 PM SGT2-min read

City Developments Ltd. has agreed to sell its majority stake in the South Beach complex. (Photo by ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

City Developments Ltd. has agreed to sell its majority stake in the South Beach complex. (Photo by ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images) (ROSLAN RAHMAN via Getty Images)
By: Low De Wei

(Bloomberg) — City Developments Ltd. agreed to sell its majority stake in one of Singapore’s most iconic office complexes, according to a person familiar with the matter, as the developer seeks to reduce debt and regain investor confidence after a family feud.

CDL will sell its 50.1% stake in South Beach to minority owner IOI Properties Group Bhd, the person said, requesting not to be identified because the information is private. Malaysian developer IOI will have full ownership following the deal. The deal values the complex at about S$2.75 billion ($2.1 billion), the person said.

ADVERTISEMENT

An IOI spokesperson declined to comment. CDL didn’t immediately respond to an emailed query. Shares of CDL rose about 1.6% before a trading halt Wednesday morning, pending an announcement.

CDL has been under pressure to sell assets after a feud divided the Kwek family, the wealthiest clan in Singapore. Despite mending relations with his father and Chairman Kwek Leng Beng, the firm’s Chief Executive Officer Sherman Kwek acknowledged in April that the dispute had hurt shareholders’ confidence, and said that reducing the growing debt load is a priority.

The deal will help CDL to meet a pledge to exceed the roughly S$600 million in divestments it made in 2024, which fell short of a S$1 billion target.

The complex in Singapore’s central business district includes retail space, a 34-story office tower, and a 45-story building housing a JW Marriott Hotel.
 

US growth likely to slow to 1.6% this year, hobbled by Trump's trade wars, OECD says​

PAUL WISEMAN
Updated Tue, 3 June 2025 at 7:50 PM SGT3-min read

4a64271042f9209ca8b93778c40baa42

FILE - The United States Steel Corporation's Edgar Thomson Plant in Braddock, Pa., on Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. economic growth will slow to 1.6% this year from 2.8% last year as President Donald Trump’s erratic trade wars disrupt global commerce, drive up costs and leave businesses and consumers paralyzed by uncertainty.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast Tuesday that the U.S. economy — the world's largest — will slow further to just 1.5% in 2026. Trump’s policies have raised average U.S. tariff rates from around 2.5% when he returned to the White House to 15.4%, highest since 1938, according to the OECD. Tariffs raise costs for consumers and American manufacturers that rely on imported raw materials and components.

World economic growth will slow to just 2.9% this year and stay there in 2026, according to the OECD's forecast. It marks a substantial deceleration from growth of 3.3% global growth last year and 3.4% in 2023.
 
China's Factory Activity Contracts for Second Straight Month Amid Modest Uptick, Official PMI Shows
ZHU YANRAN
DATE: JUN 03 2025
/ SOURCE: YICAI
China's Factory Activity Contracts for Second Straight Month Amid Modest Uptick, Official PMI Shows
China's Factory Activity Contracts for Second Straight Month Amid Modest Uptick, Official PMI Shows
(Yicai) June 3 -- Activity in China's manufacturing sector remained in contraction territory for the second month in a row in May, though the official figure climbed, indicating improving and stabilizing economic conditions.

The manufacturing purchasing managers' index came in at 49.5 last month, up from 49 in April, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on May 31. The figure was 50.5 in March and 50.2 in February. A reading below 50 indicates contraction.

Production and demand grew in May, with the production and new orders sub-indexes climbing to 50.7 and 49.8 from 49.8 and 49.2, respectively. The new export orders sub-index jumped to 47.5 from 44.7, showing a rebound in market demand.

The rebound in manufacturing PMI last month shows that the implementation of a more proactive macroeconomic policy has begun to show its effects, said Zhang Liqun, a special analyst at the China Federation of Logistics & Purchasing. The production, purchasing volume, and new orders indexes all increased, indicating that business expectations are improving and signs of recovery in production and operational activities, Zhang added.

The PMI for large enterprises rose to 50.7 from 49.2. The major raw materials' purchase prices and ex-factory prices sub-indexes fell 0.1 point to 46.9 and 44.7, respectively.

The slight decline in price indexes highlights that an oversupply characterizes the market, and the macroeconomic imbalance caused by a contraction in demand has not yet changed, Zhang pointed out.

The 90-day suspension of some additional tariffs between China and the United States will help manufacturing production through an export rush, noted Wu Chaoming, chief economist of Hunan Chasing Financial Holdings. The short-term resurgence in overseas demand may drive a recovery in exports, Wu said.

The non-manufacturing PMI fell to 50.3 from 50.4 in May from the previous month, data from the NBS also showed. The composite PMI output index, which combines the production sub-index of the manufacturing PMI and the non-manufacturing PMI, climbed to 50.4 from 50.2, remaining in expansion territory since January 2023.

In the non-manufacturing sector, the civil engineering and construction industry is experiencing strong demand for new exports, while the water transportation industry also shows robust business activity. In addition, the business activity index and new orders index for telecommunications and internet/software services performed well.

The tariff agreement reached during the China-US Economic and Trade Meeting in Geneva last month has positively influenced related industries, leading to a concentrated demand release, said Wu Wei, an expert from the China Logistics Information Center. In addition, holiday consumption has had a significant impact on related sectors, Wu added.

The information services industry continues to grow and develop, providing a solid foundation for the ongoing recovery and positive performance of China's economy, according to Wu.

Editor: Martin Kadiev
 

Bank of Japan chief voices confidence over economy withstanding U.S. tariff hit​

PUBLISHED TUE, JUN 3 2025 9:17 PM EDT
Reuters

WATCH LIVE

In this article

Kazuo Ueda, governor of the Bank of Japan (BOJ), speaks during a conference hosted by the bank's Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies in Tokyo, Japan, on Tuesday, May 27, 2025.

Kazuo Ueda, governor of the Bank of Japan (BOJ), speaks during a conference hosted by the bank's Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies in Tokyo, Japan, on Tuesday, May 27, 2025.
Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the country's economy can withstand the hit from U.S. tariffs and sustain a cycle of rising inflation accompanied by wage growth, signaling the bank's readiness to raise interest rates further.

Uncertainty over U.S. trade policy and the range of tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump's administration could hurt Japan's exports, prod firms to delay capital expenditure plans, and discourage them from raising wages, Ueda said on Tuesday.
 
New World’s distress worsens after delay on bond interest
By Trista Xinyi Luo & Pearl Liu / Bloomberg
02 Jun 2025, 09:32 pm

main news image

(June 2): Hong Kong developer New World Development Co is sliding deeper into distress after jolting investors by delaying interest payments on some bonds, marking the latest flashpoint in a years-long crisis in China’s property market.
New World, which is grappling with HK$220 billion (US$28 billion or RM119 billion) of liabilities, said in a filing late Friday that it’s planning the deferment for coupons on four perpetual notes. In total, that means it’s postponing US$77.2 million of debt obligations, according to Bloomberg calculations.
The bonds concerned slid to record lows earlier Monday before a late rebound helped three of them end Asian trading with gains. Its 4.8% perpetual securities dropped by more than six cents on the dollar to about 20, according to prices compiled by Bloomberg. The company’s shares slid as much as 11%, the biggest intraday drop in about two months, before paring the loss to 6.5% at the market’s close.
“While this will not trigger a default, the total amount to be repaid will pile up so the headwind should remain in the long run,” said Jeff Zhang, an analyst at Morningstar.
A company spokesperson said Friday that the company was continuing “to manage its overall financial indebtedness whilst taking into account the current market volatility and continues to comply with its existing financial obligations.”
The news that New World would defer the perpetual note interest payments came on the eve of the Tuen Ng Festival, or the Dragon Boat Festival, in Hong Kong at around 7pm local time.
It stunned holders, according to six of them who asked not to be identified.
It also made for a late night for a fixed-income analyst at an international asset management firm and another such analyst at a hedge fund. They said that their bosses contacted them after the news, asking them to clarify the situation and explain their previous more positive recommendations on the perpetual securities.
While the market moves earlier Monday underscore how investor unease is worsening, there have also been some more positive developments for the builder, which is controlled by the family empire of tycoon Henry Cheng.
Bloomberg reported earlier Monday that as of May 30 the company had received written commitments from banks for 60% of HK$87.5 billion of loan refinancing that it’s seeking by the end of June, according to people familiar with the matter. The developer said it expects to receive more commitments following the public holiday, they added.
New World didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.
The company also said Friday that total contracted sales year-to-date amount to about HK$24.8 billion, representing over 95% of the annual sales target, according to its monthly business update.
But markets clearly need more certainty on debt repayment plans after a years-long property slump in the city and mainland China has left New World with one of the highest debt burdens of any Hong Kong developer. Investors have also become increasingly skeptical after New World reported its first loss in 20 years for the financial year ended last June.
The builder had total liabilities of HK$220 billion, according to its latest financial report, including 17 regular bonds with US$3.44 billion in principal outstanding.
While it does not have any US dollar notes maturing this year, it has two Hong Kong dollar-denominated bonds with a combined US$168.6 million due in March next year.
“We believe there is a possibility of repurchasing senior bullet bonds to cut debt,” Nomura Holdings analysts wrote in a note on Monday, referring to the deferral as a credit negative move.
Separately, debt adviser PJT Partners Inc has been in talks with a group of New World bondholders since January, according to people familiar with the matter, adding that no immediate action is being planned.
New World is not the only casualty in Hong Kong of the broader property slump in both mainland China and the Asian financial hub.
Years of high interest rates and softening rents in the city are threatening the local commercial real estate sector, with no end in sight. The city’s prime office vacancies are set to increase, driving rents down by 8% to 10% this year, according to Colliers International Group Inc. That has put some heavily indebted smaller developers and local tycoons under severe liquidity pressure.
However, most of New World’s major rivals, including Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd and CK Asset Holdings Ltd, are in a better position with a lighter debt burden.
The company’s stock is trading at a price-to-book ratio of just 0.07, with a market capitalisation of US$1.4 billion versus about US$17 billion at its peak in 2019.
 
Careful…Careful
Mega Roti Prata coming


Bitcoin ‘Going To Take Over’—Tesla CEO Elon Musk Backs Shock $40 Trillion U.S. Dollar Collapse Warning Amid Price Boom​

ByBilly Bambrough,

Senior Contributor.
I write about how bitcoin, crypto and blockchain can change the world.

Follow Author
Jun 04, 2025 at 02:29am EDTJun 04, 2025 at 04:40am EDT
Share
SaveComment0
Bitcoin has surged over the last year, propelled higher by Wall Street’s embrace of crypto and U.S. president Donald Trump’s support (despite Google revealing a serious BlackRock bitcoin nightmare just got a lot worse).


Front-run Donald Trump, the White House and Wall Street by subscribing now to Forbes’ CryptoAsset & Blockchain Advisor where you can "uncover blockchain blockbusters poised for 1,000% plus gains!"


The bitcoin price set a new all-time high of $112,000 per bitcoin last month, surging 50% from its April low and helped by U.S. vice president JD Vance issuing a huge crypto prediction.



Now, as the Covid-era meme stock craze turns to bitcoin, Tesla billionaire Elon Musk has restarted his campaign against out-of-control U.S. government spending, backing a warning that bitcoin could “take over” from the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency.
 

Trump's Truth Social takes step toward launching bitcoin ETF with NYSE Arca filing​

PUBLISHED TUE, JUN 3 2025 8:00 PM EDT

MacKenzie Sigalos@KENZIESIGALOS
WATCH LIVE

KEY POINTS
  • A division of the New York Stock Exchange has filed to list a spot bitcoin ETF tied to Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform.
  • The filing follows a broader partnership between Trump Media and Crypto.com to launch digital asset products, including token baskets and ETFs.
  • Trump Media recently unveiled a $2.5 billion bitcoin treasury plan, deepening its push into crypto as spot bitcoin ETF assets top $130 billion.
 

1 in 5 Singapore workers worried they can’t afford healthcare; confidence in employer support drops​


Gemma Iso
ByGemma Iso
June 4, 2025
https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php...lthcare-confidence-in-employer-support-drops/
https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?te...ort-drops/&via=The+Independent+Singapore+News
https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=...lthcare-confidence-in-employer-support-drops/
https://www.linkedin.com/shareArtic...lthcare;+confidence+in+employer+support+drops
https://telegram.me/share/url?url=h...lthcare;+confidence+in+employer+support+drops
- Advertisement -

SINGAPORE: Only 67% of workers in Singapore think their managers are attentive to their health and welfare, a reduction from 71% two years ago. This data is based on the Health on Demand 2025 Asia Snapshot by Mercer Marsh Benefits featured in a recent SBR article.

Such a decline reflects increasing apprehensions about the accessibility and affordability of healthcare, with one in five workers voicing out uncertainties of whether they can manage to pay for medical care, either for themselves or their families. The gap between healthcare prices and income growth is among the biggest in the region, with medical expenditures in Singapore snowballing at 3.3 times the pace of salary increases.
 

COE prices fall again in Singapore, but motorcycles break the trend​

Latest COE prices and bidding results.​

Singapore Editorial Team
Updated Wed, 4 June 2025 at 5:28 PM SGT2-min read

Latest Singapore COE prices and bidding results (4 June). (PHOTO: Getty Images)

Most COE premiums are down in the latest bidding Singapore COE prices and bidding results Wednesday, (4 June), but motorcycles climb instead. (PHOTO: Getty Images)
SINGAPORE — Certificate of Entitlement (COE)premiums dropped across nearly all categories, in the latest round of bidding on Wednesday (4 June), signalling a potential cooling in the car market – but motorcycles bucked the trend with a surprise jump.

Category A, covering smaller cars up to 1,600cc and 130 bhp and electric vehicles up to 110kW, saw the steepest dip, falling 5.4 per cent to $96,999 – the first time it’s dipped below the $100,000 mark in recent tenders. This marks the second consecutive drop, offering some relief to budget-conscious car buyers.

Category B, which is used for larger and more powerful cars, slipped 3.4 per cent to $113,000, while Open Category (Category E) COEs, which can be used for all vehicle types except for motorcycles, dropped 3.5 per cent to $113,900. Commercial vehicle COEs (Category C), which includes buses and goods vehicles, also edged down by 1.9 per cent to $62,000.
 
SINGAPORE: A 25-year-old Singaporean took to social media to express his worry that his poor credit score might once again stand in the way of landing a job.

Posting on the r/askSingapore forum, he shared that he has accumulated about S$50,000 in debt, largely from credit cards and personal loans. And while he has consistently made minimum payments and never defaulted, his credit score has still dropped to “EE.”

“I’ve got another job interview lined up (not banking, more IT side) and not gonna lie, I’m scared. Scared they’ll check my credit and reject me again,” he said. “It’s eating me up. I haven’t even started work, and I already feel like it’s slipping away,” he added.

The man added that ever since he was laid off in February, “everything has been rough”—he lost his source of income, his mental health took a hit, and the debt continued to pile up.

- Advertisement -

In an effort to turn things around, he said he made several lifestyle changes.“I’ve been trying to fix myself, quit smoking, hit the gym again, cut off distractions, just trying to get back on my feet.”

See also Rising debt problem: The global economy's elephant in the room
Despite these efforts, he admitted that the weight of his financial situation remains a constant source of stress.

“I just wanna know, do non-finance companies even check credit reports? Like gov, IT, healthcare sector roles? Or am I just overthinking?” he asked. “If you’ve been through this or know how it works, please let me know. I just wanna make it out of this. Appreciate anyone who takes the time to read this.”
 

Cramer says ‘be ready for disappointment’ as the White House continues to shape market action​

PUBLISHED MON, JUN 2 20257:10 PM EDT
thumbnail

Julie Coleman@ITSJULIECOLEMAN
WATCH LIVE
KEY POINTS
  • CNBC’s Jim Cramer reviewed Monday’s market action, chalking up the day’s performance to expectations about the White House’s next move.
  • He advised that investors prepare for turbulence, even as some on Wall Street continue to have optimism about President Donald Trump’s impact on big business.
  • “We have to be ready for disappointment, because we’ve seen it over and over and over again,” he said. “This administration is perfectly willing to disappoint the stock market…to advance their agenda, and it’s foolish that you should believe otherwise.”
 

Singapore’s AAA Bills Offer an Opportunity for US Carry Trade​


By Catherine Bosley and Masaki Kondo
June 5, 2025 at 8:00 AM GMT+8
Save
Translate

Takeaways NEW​

Some of the safest assets in Asia offer investors a yield pickup to Treasuries in the wake of the US losing its last AAA credit rating.

Investors looking to rotate out of the dollar and into Asia can buy securities issued by the Monetary Authority of Singapore, which is using them to steer the amount of cash in the banking system. Three-month MAS bills offer yield of about 13 basis points over similar-tenor US government debt when currency-hedging costs are taken into account, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Have a confidential tip for our reporters? Get in Touch
Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Terminal

 

143 million-dollar HDBs drive May 2025 resale market, comprising 6.3% of total sales​

Updated: June 4, 2025·7 min read·by Kumari Trishya
exterior of public houses in singapore - million dollar hdb flat transaction


The big news for the HDB resale market? May 2025 hit an all-time high with 143 HDB flats selling for a million dollars or more. That’s an incredible 6.3% of all HDB resale transactions for the month!

This isn’t just a random spike; it’s a clear sign that demand for top-tier HDB homes is incredibly strong, and these properties are holding their value remarkably well. Now that we’re done with the celebrations, let’s dive deeper into this month’s trends.

Table of Contents​

  1. HDB resale prices continued to show steady climb
  2. HDB sales volume: A slight pause, but still active
  3. The million-dollar HDB resale market: Why so pricey?
  4. Final thoughts

HDB resale prices continued to show a steady climb​

HDB-resale-May-2025-price
 

Why Some 30-Year-Old Leasehold Condos Are Still Outperforming New Ones​

Published 30 May 2025 | 0 comments | 319 shares | 4 min read

Pitfalls and Advantages of Older Leasehold Condos (Frontrunner)


One of the most common worries about leasehold condos (which are the majority of projects in Singapore) is lease decay. At some point, as the lease runs down, appreciation has to flatline and eventually become depreciation. But when exactly does this happen? Is it in the first 30 years? Is it at the mid-point of a 99-year lease? Or does it come much later? This question has become more complex in the aftermath of COVID, when we’ve seen older condos show unexpected price spikes, and with more investors showing an interest in these ageing properties. Here are the numbers we’re seeing today:

In this analysis of older leasehold condos, we find that:​

1. Older leasehold condos (built in the 1980s–1990s) matched or outperformed newer ones in annualised price growth, over 3% per annum.
2. COVID-driven demand and WFH trends helped boost prices, especially for affordable, larger units in good locations.
3. While lease decay is real, short- to mid-term upside remains strong, and some of these ageing condos may still hold en-bloc potential.
 

US tariffs, export controls not directed at Singapore, says Rubio in meeting with Vivian​

Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan (left) meeting US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington, DC on June 4.

Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan (left) meeting US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington, DC, on June 4.PHOTO: AFP
Anjali Raguraman

Anjali Raguraman
UPDATED JUN 05, 2025, 07:02 PM


SINGAPORE – Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan has raised the impact of America’s tariffs and export controls with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who said these were not directed at Singapore.

“Nevertheless, there is a lot of work in the next few months to ensure that there are no adverse secondary impacts on Singapore, so we will have to continue to engage the administration very, very closely in the months ahead,” said Dr Balakrishnan in a statement after they met on June 4.

Dr Balakrishnan is in Washington on a working visit. He and Mr Rubio had a “substantive and wide-ranging discussion” on bilateral ties and international developments, said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA).

US tariffs, export controls not directed at Singapore, says Rubio in meeting with Vivian​

Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan (left) meeting US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington, DC on June 4.

Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan (left) meeting US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington, DC, on June 4.PHOTO: AFP
Anjali Raguraman

Anjali Raguraman
UPDATED JUN 05, 2025, 07:02 PM

SINGAPORE – Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan has raised the impact of America’s tariffs and export controls with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who said these were not directed at Singapore.
“Nevertheless, there is a lot of work in the next few months to ensure that there are no adverse secondary impacts on Singapore, so we will have to continue to engage the administration very, very closely in the months ahead,” said Dr Balakrishnan in a statement after they met on June 4.
Dr Balakrishnan is in Washington on a working visit. He and Mr Rubio had a “substantive and wide-ranging discussion” on bilateral ties and international developments, said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA).
 
Back
Top