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Golden Mile Complex to be conserved, with incentives to attract developers in future en bloc sale: URA

October 9, 2020 by www.straitstimes.com Leave a Comment

SINGAPORE – The iconic Golden Mile Complex building, with its terraced facade facing Nicoll Highway, is being proposed for conservation because of its historical and architectural significance, the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) said on Friday (Oct 9).

The decision, taken after a two-year study, starts the process to have it gazetted as a conserved building.

But to help ensure that the move will not inhibit a future collective sale, the URA, in an unusual move, is offering developers additional planning incentives, including a one-third increase in floor area with a waiver of part of its development charge (DC) and the option to adjust the boundary of the 1.3ha site.

In turn, developers have to abide by the conservation guidelines.

Most importantly, they have to retain the development’s landmark main building that is famed for its signature stepped terraces atop the podium facing Nicoll Highway.

Other key features that have to be kept include the stepped building profile and plinth-like profile on the side facing Beach Road.

The URA, however, assured builders that it is open to consider creative design ideas that respect the architectural and structural character of the building.

The decision to conserve the 47-year-old complex comes after two unsuccessful collective sales , both times with the same price tag of $800 million. Both tenders closed with no bids.

One of the major incentives is the URA letting the development have an increased total gross plot ratio of 5.6 for the site. This one-third increase in floor area is the equivalent of an additional 30-storey tower.

It will sit on the site of an existing multi-storey carpark adjacent to the main building.

Part of the DC for the extra floor area will be waived but capped at 10 per cent of the market value of the entire development, or 10 per cent of the estimated land value, based on the DC rate in last month’s revision, depending on the approved mix of use for the development, whichever is lower, the URA said.

Developers will also be given the option to adjust the site boundary to have a more regular-shaped site for optimal layout of the new tower.

These incentives come on top of the typical planning incentives for conserved buildings, in which DCs are waived for enhancement in value arising from a change of site use and a lease top-up to 99 years.

More than 7,000 buildings in Singapore have been conserved, many of which are in historic districts such as Chinatown, Little India and Kampong Glam.

The decision to conserve the strata-titled Golden Mile Complex comes after inputs gathered over two years by the URA from various stakeholders, heritage groups and industry players.

The 718-unit, 16-storey property in Beach Road is zoned for commercial use under the URA Master Plan 2014.

Golden Mile Complex was completed in 1973 and has about 48 years left on its lease. It was one of the first developments in Singapore to feature offices, shops and residences.

When it finds a developer in a collective sale, Golden Mile Complex will be Singapore’s first large-scale strata-titled conserved development to be sold.

Filed Under: AseanNews URA, CONSERVATION/PRESERVATION, HERITAGE, EN BLOC SALES, when golden mile en bloc, hudc en bloc sale, dismay over future of golden mile complex

Mandarin Gardens fails in collective sale attempt despite record reserve price of $2.9 billion

March 25, 2019 by www.straitstimes.com Leave a Comment

SINGAPORE – Mandarin Gardens, a leasehold condominium in Siglap, has failed in its attempt to sell en bloc, despite a record high asking price of $2.927 billion.

On Sunday (March 24), the day the collective sales agreement expired, the agreement had only been signed by 68 per cent of the units, below the 80 per cent required for the land to be put up for sale.

The property’s collective sale committee chairman, Mr Vincent Teo, said in a letter to owners on Sunday that while the committee would be dissolved on Monday, he hoped that those who had signed the current agreement would support an attempt to form a new committee.

“This being our first attempt at collective sales, we have learnt valuable lessons, which will certainly be very helpful in our next journey,” he said.

An attempt in 2008 failed before a collective sale agreement was prepared, as the global financial crisis had started, he said.

Last month, the 1,017-unit leasehold condo raised its asking price to $2.927 billion to encourage more owners to agree to the collective sale.

It first raised its asking price to $2.788 billion in November last year from $2.479 billion after owners discovered that the land parcel was undervalued.

If the collective sale had gone through, it would have been the biggest transaction in dollar terms struck here.

Mr Teo said in the letter that the general feeling is that current market sentiment for collective sales is heading south, as evidenced by a lack of bids in the recent tender process of several large estates.

For example, Horizon Towers closed on Jan 28 after it was launched for a second time at the same reserve price of $1.1 billion.

But Mr Teo noted that should market sentiments permit, a fresh collective sale process can be initiated without having to wait for a two-year lapse period, if 50 per cent of owners by share value sign a requisition for a general meeting to form a new collective sale committee.

He said the committee would like to thank all the owners who voted for the collective sale and hoped that they will continue to support the effort when the next round of collective sale is launched, “hopefully in the not too distant future”.

He told The Straits Times on Monday (March 25) that among the reasons some owners did not want to sell is the attractiveness of the location, which is sea-facing and has an MRT station coming up nearby on the Thomson-East Coast Line.

“Some people also said it would be hard to find a replacement unit that is so spacious,” he said.

The units range from 732 sq ft to 3,800 sq ft.

Property expert Nicholas Mak, who is the executive director of ZACD Group, said that as Mandarin Gardens is such a large site, it would be an uphill task to get the required number of signatures for the collective sales agreement, compared with a small site of, say, 30 units.

The cooling measures implemented by the Government last July “knocked the wind out of the sails of quite a few en bloc sales”, he added.

Filed Under: Uncategorized SOLD EN BLOC, SINGAPORE PROPERTY, MANDARIN GARDENS, abandoning garbage collection after 3 failed attempts, collectible lp records prices, collectible vinyl records for sale, most failed world record attempts

People’s Park Complex, People’s Park Centre, Golden Mile Complex and Golden Mile Tower attempting collective sales

March 7, 2018 by www.straitstimes.com Leave a Comment

SINGAPORE – Riding on the wave of the en bloc fever, four post-independence landmarks in Singapore, known for their gritty appearances, might disappear from the Republic’s landscape.

The fate of People’s Park Complex and People’s Park Centre in Chinatown, as well as Golden Mile Complex and Golden Mile Tower in Beach Road, hangs in the balance.

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Towie’s Chloe Brockett suspended for breaking lockdown to ‘meet Jack Fincham’

April 16, 2021 by www.mirror.co.uk Leave a Comment

Chloe Brockett was suspended from Towie after breaking lockdown rules by reportedly meeting up with her rumoured boyfriend Jack Fincham .

The telly star, 20, is believed to have visited Jack in the garden of his home in Kent before lockdown rules were eased, and they were not in a bubble together.

Chloe was “reminded of the guidelines” by Towie bosses three weeks ago and was ordered to stay away from set until she could provide a negative Covid test.

A spokesperson for Lime Pictures, the production company behind Towie, told The Mirror: “A member of our cast was reminded of the guidelines three weeks ago after appearing to visit the garden of someone not in their bubble.

“Consequently they were not permitted to continue filming until providing negative Covid-19 results.”

A source added to Mail Online: “Chloe broke coronavirus rules by going to Jack’s house, so TOWIE had to suspend her…

“Chloe knew she had let the team down but she’s so infatuated by Jack, she couldn’t resist travelling from Essex to Kent to see him.”

Chloe and Jack were first linked back in 2019, but they are rumoured to have grown close during lockdown.

They have yet to comment on the romance rumours, but the Towie star did recently admit there’s a new man in her life.

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In a post on Instagram earlier this month, she explained: “Yes, I am dating someone. I get asked this question quite a lot, but yes I am dating someone.”

She’s believed to have returned to work now and told fans she was filming for the show this week.

It’s been a busy week for Chloe as well as being back at work, she’s also managed to get a hair cut after months of salon closures and head out on a shopping spree.

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Chloe joined Towie back in 2019 and was lined up as a love interest for Harry Lee, but the romance didn’t last.

Jack dated fellow Love Island winner Dani Dyer after winning the show together in 2018, but they parted ways in 2019.

He went on to become a dad to a daughter named Blossom with ex Casey Ranger, and Dani welcomed a little boy, Santiago, with her boyfriend Sammy Kimmence in January.

The Mirror has contacted representative for Lime Pictures for comment.

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Robinhood failed to disclose certain trade executions to public feed:Report

April 9, 2021 by www.gadgetsnow.com Leave a Comment

Retail brokerage Robinhood Financial did not report a certain type of stock trade it executed for customers last year to a public data feed, according to regulatory data analyzed by Reuters and a source familiar with the matter.

So-called fractional shares are offered by many brokerages. They let investors buy a slice of a share instead of the whole thing, so rather than forking out more than $3,000 on a share of Amazon.com Inc , an investor can buy as little as $1 worth.

Brokerages are required to report all their trades to trade execution facilities (TRFs), according to Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules.

FINRA’s enforcement has fined other brokerages, including Merrill Lynch and Deutsche Bank AG ‘s U.S. securities division, for violations of its reporting and supervisory rules in the past.

Robinhood launched its fractional share service in December 2019, according to its website, but only began publicly reporting trade executions the week of Jan. 25, 2021, FINRA data relating to over-the-counter transactions show. Data before then does not show any trades reported by Robinhood.

Robinhood’s lack of reporting to a trade execution facility was confirmed by a person familiar with the company who asked not to be identified in order to discuss a matter that is not public.

Reuters could not determine how many trades Robinhood failed to report. As of Dec. 31, Robinhood users held $802.5 million in shares bought through its fractional share program, the brokerage said in a regulatory filing. Many of those purchases may have been executed by wholesale brokers.

A spokeswoman for Robinhood declined to comment on the reporting issue, but said the company, which had 13 million customers as of November, only executes a “very small percentage of its fractional orders from its own inventory.”

A spokesman for FINRA, which polices brokerages, declined to comment.

When stocks trade on exchanges, everyone can see the activity. But when stocks trade over-the-counter, as is the case with Robinhood, investors rely on brokers to report the trades to the TRF. The information helps determine share prices. When certain trades are not publicly reported, it diminishes the amount of information available to market participants, and could create an unlevel playing field, FINRA says.

Still, some experts said that while the omission was sufficiently serious to warrant fines to keep it from happening again, it was not a major lapse. That’s because the number of trades that went unreported would be a small fraction of the overall trading, these people said.

“Should they deserve to get a parking ticket for it? Yes. Should it be painful enough that they don’t do it again? Yes,” said James Angel, finance professor at Georgetown University who specializes in market structure, when Reuters presented the data to him. “Should it be so overwhelming that it puts them out of business? Heck no.”

The reporting lapse came as the company, which last month filed for an initial public offering that sources told Reuters values it at around $30 billion, was expanding rapidly and legions of new retail traders were entering the market.

FINRA rules state that all trades have to be reported – including trades of less than a share – in the name of transparency, since market participants may base decisions on understanding not just prices but who is trading what and when.

Unlike orders for full shares, which Robinhood sends en-masse to wholesale brokers to execute, Robinhood says its clearing broker arm, Robinhood Securities, executes fractional trades from its own account, which it is licensed to do by the FINRA.

Robinhood executed around 1.86 million tier-one shares during the week of March 15, and around 3.51 million tier-two shares the week of March 1, the latest FINRA data show. Tier-one securities include stocks in the S&P 500 Index, the Russell 1000 Index, and exchange-traded products, while tier-two includes smaller companies.

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