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                    | The Metropolitan: Over the weekend, CapitaLand/Lippo sold              188 units of the condo, next to Redhill MRT Station, at an average              price of $780 psf | 
       'My view is that next year will be good. We're marketing Singapore as a        global gateway city. Home prices will continue to do well next year,'        CapitaLand Residential Singapore CEO Patricia Chia said.
       She expects overall private home prices to rise by about 10-15 per cent        next year. 
       The official Urban Redevelopment Authority's private home price index        has risen 6.1 per cent in the first nine months of this year since        end-2005, and Ms Chia estimates the year will close nearly 10 per cent        higher.
       Despite the steep increase in luxury home prices (21 per cent in the        first nine months of the year according to some property consultants), Ms        Chia believes there's still room for further price growth for well-located        projects with good design in this market segment. 
       The $780 psf average price (after discounts) achieved for the 45-storey        Metropolitan is higher than the average of around $750 psf for Tanglin        View and around $700 psf for Tanglin Regency fetched between April and        August this year, according to The Metropolitan's marketing agent ERA        Realty Network president Jack Chua. 
       The two completed 99-year developments are opposite The Metropolitan        but are lower, at just 20 storeys.
       Generally, apartments on higher floors fetch higher prices which means        that taller condos tend to command a higher average per square foot price        on a project basis.
       However, The Metropolitan's average price of $780 psf is shy of the        over-$800 psf that Tanglin View recorded when it was launched in 1997.
       ERA's Mr Chua predicts net rental yields in excess of 4 per cent for        units at The Metropolitan Condominium.
       Analysts reckon CapitaLand could book a pre-tax profit of about $60        million or even more from its half-share in The Metropolitan Condo.
       The other half in the project is held by Lippo Group. The two teamed up        to bid for the site at a state tender which closed last November. 
       Their winning bid reflected a unit land cost of about $350 psf per plot        ratio.
       CapitaLand said buyers started to queue at The Metropolitan's showflat        from 3 am Saturday morning. The showflat opened for sales at 9 am.
       The condo, which is expected to be completed in 2010, comprises a total        of 382 units, of which 250 have been launched so far.
       Of these, 188 had been sold by Sunday evening. Absolute prices range        from about $511,000 for a two-bedroom unit on the fifth level to $1.45        million for a four-bedroom unit on the 42nd storey. The development has 11        penthouses, which have yet to be released. Their prices start from $2.5        million.
       The Metropolitan is being developed on the last of CapitaLand's 99-year        leasehold site.
       Another of the group's earlier 99-year projects, CityLights near the        Lavender MRT Station, is over 70 per cent sold, Ms Chia revealed. 
       The average price CapitaLand is selling units in the condo has        appreciated around 16 per cent, from an initial $600 psf in November 2004,        to about $700 psf currently.
       The three condos which CapitaLand is likely to launch next year will be        developed on the Silver Tower site in Cairnhill which it bought this year,        at Meyer Road and at Jalan Mutiara. 
       The group will release its financial results for the third quarter        ended Sept 30, 2006, on Thursday this week.