St Regis penthouse bought for $28m in 2007 sold at record $15.8m loss

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SINGAPORE - The owner of a penthouse at St Regis Residences booked an eye-popping loss of $15.8 million when he sold the apartment last month. It is the biggest loss ever made on an apartment sale here.

The two-storey unit in Tanglin Road, with a swimming pool on the upper floor and views over Nassim Road greenery, first made headlines in 2007 when Japanese billionaire Katsumi Tada shelled out a record-smashing $28 million - or $4,653 per sq ft - for it.

Mr Tada's generous offer back then gave the lucky seller a profit of $12.77 million, but it has turned out to be a bad investment and underscores how fortunes have turned in the high-end property market, where more instances of loss-making transactions are surfacing.

The new owner is Mr Andy Chua, who owns Yun Nam Hair Care. He snapped up the 6,017 sq ft apartment at the 173-unit project in a cash transaction of $12.2 million, or $2,028 psf, according to records lodged with the Singapore Land Authority.


The sale was executed in Tokyo and took just two weeks to complete, instead of the usual eight to 12 weeks, possibly due to it being a cash sale or when either party was "in a haste to wrap it up", said market watchers. Mr Tada is believed to have left the property vacant all this time.

Mr Samuel Eyo, managing director of Singapore Christie's Homes, said Mr Chua probably got a bargain as the price was low for luxury projects in the area, which sell for between $2,500 psf and $3,000 psf. What sealed the deal was probably because Mr Chua paid in cash.

Mr Tada is by no means the only high-end owner to want to cut his losses as luxury home values have dived 20 per cent from their peak in 2013. A 2,626 sq ft unit at luxury condo The Coast at Sentosa Cove went for just $1,190 psf in January, booking a loss of $1.215 million for its seller.

Mr Tada, the 17th richest man in Japan with a fortune of US$1.7 billion (S$2.4 billion) according to Forbes, is the president of Daisho Group. The firm acquired The Westin Singapore hotel from BlackRock for $468 million in December 2013, setting a record at $1.5 million per hotel room key.

Mr Chua made headlines last year when he paid US$2.2 million to score a private lunch with US investment guru Warren Buffett.

Mr Eyo believes more bargains of the St Regis kind will emerge as interest rates rise. Cash-rich investors, too, are shopping around for a good deal.

"The ultra-rich would rather cash out of assets they have no use for, to invest in other assets that could rake in a profit larger than the loss," said Mr Eyo. "To them, it's just part and parcel of investing."

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/bu...8m-sold-record-158m-loss-20150318#xtor=CS1-10
 
huat ah....
squat on it for few yrs to make at least 10 mio.....!!
 
SINGAPORE - The owner of a penthouse at St Regis Residences booked an eye-popping loss of $15.8 million when he sold the apartment last month. It is the biggest loss ever made on an apartment sale here.

The two-storey unit in Tanglin Road, with a swimming pool on the upper floor and views over Nassim Road greenery, first made headlines in 2007 when Japanese billionaire Katsumi Tada shelled out a record-smashing $28 million - or $4,653 per sq ft - for it.

Mr Tada's generous offer back then gave the lucky seller a profit of $12.77 million, but it has turned out to be a bad investment and underscores how fortunes have turned in the high-end property market, where more instances of loss-making transactions are surfacing.

The new owner is Mr Andy Chua, who owns Yun Nam Hair Care. He snapped up the 6,017 sq ft apartment at the 173-unit project in a cash transaction of $12.2 million, or $2,028 psf, according to records lodged with the Singapore Land Authority.


The sale was executed in Tokyo and took just two weeks to complete, instead of the usual eight to 12 weeks, possibly due to it being a cash sale or when either party was "in a haste to wrap it up", said market watchers. Mr Tada is believed to have left the property vacant all this time.

Mr Samuel Eyo, managing director of Singapore Christie's Homes, said Mr Chua probably got a bargain as the price was low for luxury projects in the area, which sell for between $2,500 psf and $3,000 psf. What sealed the deal was probably because Mr Chua paid in cash.

Mr Tada is by no means the only high-end owner to want to cut his losses as luxury home values have dived 20 per cent from their peak in 2013. A 2,626 sq ft unit at luxury condo The Coast at Sentosa Cove went for just $1,190 psf in January, booking a loss of $1.215 million for its seller.

Mr Tada, the 17th richest man in Japan with a fortune of US$1.7 billion (S$2.4 billion) according to Forbes, is the president of Daisho Group. The firm acquired The Westin Singapore hotel from BlackRock for $468 million in December 2013, setting a record at $1.5 million per hotel room key.

Mr Chua made headlines last year when he paid US$2.2 million to score a private lunch with US investment guru Warren Buffett.

Mr Eyo believes more bargains of the St Regis kind will emerge as interest rates rise. Cash-rich investors, too, are shopping around for a good deal.

"The ultra-rich would rather cash out of assets they have no use for, to invest in other assets that could rake in a profit larger than the loss," said Mr Eyo. "To them, it's just part and parcel of investing."

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/bu...8m-sold-record-158m-loss-20150318#xtor=CS1-10

hahahah. I told you so.I told you so.I told you so. tell it to that narong guy who is still in denial. Knew it since 2012-3 and post it here multiple times that orchard rd properties have crashed 30-40% but there would still be clowns trying to talk up a dying market. having a last laugh. anyway the show only have started. a real horror show. Don't be surprised if it crashed 60-80%. when I mention 30-40% crash 2 years ago, people like narong were mocking me. hahhaha. Now having the last laugh. Heard from insider banking sources, alot of indon and rich FT all cashing out even if it means a 60% loss like above as they have all lost confidence. only problem is no buyers even when going for a 60-70% discount. the really rich knows something and would keep quiet and quietly dispose of these laibilities. only idiots try to talk up the market. gave them tips since 2-3 years ago and they laugh. hope they are still laughing . when old man goes the market would collapse very badly. the high end would pull down the mid and then low end. interests rates hike is another killer. having a really good time seeing those greedy speculators panicking and crying mother father. they deserved it.
 
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On cue the resident tycoon billionaire sure pop in to gloat.....
Hehe one swallow dun make the summer.....
You cash in? Unless you're mr Chua of yunnan no one else benefited from this deal except maybe the housing agents.....
So you pick up some cheap bargains on high end properties recently?
Dun talk cock.....you still waiting for 2rm bto prices to crash.....muahahaha
 
What kind of gahment running this cuntry ... until value of property goes to the dog
 
Property market plunges as LKY calls it a day to be with the Lord.
 
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