The buyers: A good deal that turned sour
While the sellers are probably bearing the brunt of the failed sale,
the buyers - HPL, Morgan Stanley Real Estate and Qatar Investment
Authority - are far from happy either.
The consortium thought it had bagged a good deal when it inked the deal to
buy the estate for $500 million, or $800 per sq ft, at the start of the
huge property upswing. Within six months of the sale, Horizon Towers’
value had doubled on paper.
But the profits the buyers envisioned never materialised.
Instead, HPL and its partners found themselves dragged through legal brawl
after legal brawl as owners who objected to the sale vigorously contested
it.
HPL, a property and hospitality group, is run by Singaporean tycoon Ong
Beng Seng. It was expected to develop a super-luxury block of apartments
on the Horizon Towers plot. Indeed, soon after the purchase, HPL’s stock
price shot up as the luxury property market boomed.
But the sale kept running into snags. A mediation session was organised by
the Strata Titles Board (STB) but failed to reach a satisfactory
conclusion, leading to the formation of a formal STB tribunal. STB
rejected the sale on a technicality, prompting the HPL consortium to sue
the majority sellers for lost profits.
The majority sellers scrambled to fix the deal, taking the case up to the
High Court. High Court judge Choo Han Teck threw out the STB decision to
abort the sale in October 2007, leading the STB to finally approve it. The
buyers’ luck continued when the minority owners appealed to the High Court
against the STB approval and lost.
But then the minority owners’ last-ditch attempt to block the sale -
culminating in the Court of Appeal judgment last Thursday - finally put
the last nail in the coffin of the Horizon Towers deal.
Now the buyers are an estimated few million dollars out of pocket in legal
fees - with no land to show for it.
Then again, in today’s property slump, that may not be such a bad thing
after all.
‘Prices are back to about the 2007 level, which was when HPL closed the
deal,’ said Mr Nicholas Mak, director of research and consultancy at
Knight Frank. ‘Now that developers want to offload their assets and trim
their debt, losing this site may be a blessing in disguise.’
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