Tulip Garden en bloc may be called off
Buyer Bravo will ‘accept costly missed opportunity’ if it’s not
granted payment extensions
The owners of Tulip Garden met over the weekend and BT understands that
most of them have taken the view to rescind the $516 million collective
sale to an associate company of Bravo Building Construction - if the
second 5 per cent instalment due to them is not paid by the deadline of
midnight yesterday.
BT understands the owners could not accede to the Bravo unit’s request for
another extension to pay up the second 5 per cent instalment which was to
have been paid yesterday, to June 7, as well as to extend the completion
date of the transaction, which is when it would have to pay up the
remaining 90 per cent of the purchase price, from May 28 to Aug 7.
However, Tulip Garden’s owners, through their lawyers, are understood to
have informed Bravo yesterday that the payment deadline will not be
extended and that they reserve their rights to rescind the sale.
A Bravo spokeswoman said yesterday the consortium buying Tulip Garden is
seeking an ‘unconditional extension of time’ for making the two payments,
that is, it is not prepared to make any further payment to the sellers in
exchange for the extensions, until June 7.
If the sale is rescinded, Tulip Garden owners will keep the $25.8 million
or 5 per cent of the purchase price they had been paid so far, BT
understands.
‘If these extensions are not obtained, the consortium will accept this
costly missed opportunity to develop a stunning 350-unit condo with
unmatched features in a prominent Holland Road corner,’ Bravo said in a
statement.
Bravo has a minority stake in the consortium buying Tulip Garden. The en
bloc sale of Tulip Garden was approved by Strata Titles Board in February.
In its statement, Bravo said that it and its majority consortium partners
for the purchase of Tulip Garden intend to complete the purchase. Bravo
did not identify the consortium partners. ‘Since December 2007, major
foreign institutional investors and a few local investors have expressed
strong interest to form the consortium. The current turmoil in financial
and stock markets matched with sporadic bad news have caused unforeseen
delays in securing ultimate approvals to commit funds,’ Bravo said in its
statement.
Bravo also indicated that approval for Tulip Garden’s sale from Strata
Titles Board in February came earlier than anticipated. ‘Coupled with the
consortium’s strategic decision to significantly increase equity to
balance the current cautious lending by banks, the current deadlines for
next payments have become too constricted and no longer practical,’ it
added.
BT understands that Tulip Garden owners declined to further extend the
completion date of the sale of Tulip Garden as the STB had already given
its order for the sale, binding all owners to a sale, and the sales
committee does not have the powers to vary the completion date of the sale
beyond the originally agreed May 28. The date was based on three months
from receiving the STB order for sale, as stipulated in the sale and
purchase agreement for Tulip Garden inked last year.
Assuming Tulip Garden’s sale is rescinded, it may be a while before the
prime District 10 site is back on the en bloc bandwagon. If owners wish to
do a fresh en bloc sale, they would have to do it under revised collective
sales rules that took effect in October last year and which are more
stringent.
The $516 million deal for the property worked out to a unit land price of
$1,018 psf per plot ratio. No development charge is payable.
Last month, the $162.8 million collective sale of Makeway View in the
Newton area to another associate of Bravo was rescinded. BT reported that
one per cent of purchase price paid by Bravo so far was forfeited.
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