Elitist residential project in Newmarket, Auckland by U.S developer An alarmingly élitist step in residential development has received consent from the Commission. U.S. investor, Christopher Lorillard Norrie, has consent to, through the Middleton Trust, enter into a joint venture to acquire land in the central business district of Newmarket, Auckland for the purpose of development and sale of residential units. Norrie bought the land from New Zealand Rail as part of its disposal of Crown assets in 1992. The Sunday Star-Times reported (“Dreamland becoming a reality”, 13/3/94) that “Last April, American investor Christopher Norrie … embarked on a speculative residential project that should result in more than $200 million of apartments, duplexes and houses being built over the next four years.… Project general manager, Trevor Bolland says demand, already strong, should be assured by a heightened interest in inner-city living, zoning constraints on existing properties, the changing desires of an aging population and the opportunity to create an estate with various densities in a style not seen in New Zealand.” It will be called “Broadway Park” and is clearly aimed as an enclave for the rich and insecure:
Prices are likely to be from $500,000 per property up: construction costs will be (by covenant) a minimum of $200,000+GST, and section prices (450 to 800 square metres) between $230,000 and $400,000. This is highly reminiscent of Robert Reich’s description of how what he calls “symbolic analysts” – the highly paid professionals, executives and capitalists who make up the wealthiest 20% of society – are “quietly seceding from the large and diverse publics of America into homogeneous enclaves within which their earnings need not be redistributed to people less fortunate than themselves.”
Meanwhile the Taiwanese Suncern Group are planning a luxury apartment development on a nearby vacant block on Khyber Pass, and the 277 Broadway development is Singapore owned and its supermarket run by Dairy Farm International of Hong Kong. Development of the commercial area is being driven by the recently listed Newmarket Property Trust, 33.3% owned by FAI Metropolitan Life Assurance. It has a $70 million shopping and cinema complex planned, including a three-cinema multiplex. (Sunday Star-Times, 13/3/94, “Bold boost for inner city living”; Press, 19/5/94, p.24, “FAI takes 33.3%”.) Interestingly, none of these developments appear to have been approved by the OIC (or have been approved but details suppressed.) The Sunday Star-Times reports that Norrie “is an American lawyer who was based in California when he bought the land, but has since moved to Seattle, has interests in horticulture in Hawaii and was distantly related to former Governor-General Lord Norrie. … His joint-venture partner is Neville Mahon, who had been running Project Group’s Wellington operation until that company’s demise in 1988. Woodland Group, the company Mr Mahon formed after leaving Project, is the main contractor for the Broadway project.” Fernhill Hotel Ltd buys land for Queenstown Hotel and Condominium In another Norrie/Woodland project this month, with a similar flavour to it, the Queenstown Lakes District Council is selling a 2.5 hectare property at Queenstown to Fernhill Hotel Ltd, for a price that has been withheld. “It is proposed that the property be developed as a resort Hotel/Condominium complex. There is already in existence planning rights for such a development … the vendor (the Queenstown Lake District Council) is disposing of the property in order to promote the objectives…” Fernhill is 25% owned by Norrie and 75% by Woodland Property Holdings Ltd, in turn 50% owned by T.Y. Tseng of Taiwan (see December 1993 decisions.) The other 50% of Woodland Property Holdings is owned by the above Woodland Group. Tiong family’s Neil Construction buys 29 hectares at Albany for subdivision In another residential subdivision development, the Tiong Family of Malaysia (the owners of Ernslaw One, one of the largest overseas owners of Aotearoa forests) is buying 29.3 hectares of land at Albany, North of Auckland for $6.42 million through their company Neil Construction Ltd. The land is apparently for speculative subdivision: the “benefit” of the purchase according to the Commission is that:
Ernslaw One buys 1,330 hectares in Waitotara Valley Their company, Ernslaw One Ltd is also buying further forestry land this month. It is buying 1,330 hectares of land in Makakoho Road, Waitotara Valley for “approximately” $539,440. “The Commission is advised that the proposal represents a further expansion of its New Zealand forestry interests and the choice of the Wanganui/Manawatu region is because Ernslaw manages approximately 5,000 hectares of forests in that area and there is a need to expand this resource base to enable the company to produce wood fibre for a suitable industrial base.” Ernslaw is also acquiring right of ways over land at Slopedown District, Longridge, Southland. The land is owned by Longridge Ltd and Landcorp Investments Ltd. The right of ways are to get access to a 1300 hectare property at Slopedown District, Longridge whose acquisition by Ernslaw was approved by the Commission in May 1993 – but until now that approval had been suppressed. For more on the Tiongs, see the commentary on the December 1993 decisions. U.S. Blakely Pacific buys part of Matakana Islanders’ land and forestry rights A decision highly significant in the denouement of the Matakana Island story concerns Blakely Pacific Ltd which gets approval to acquire approximately 1,981 hectares of land and certain forestry rights on Matakana Island, Tauranga for approximately $15 million. The vendors are Te Kotukutuku Corporation Ltd and Matakana Island Trust Incorporated. The Islanders’ battle to get control of the island’s forestry resources from ITT Rayonier (U.S.A.) and Ernslaw One (Malaysia), included several months blockading the road to prevent continued logging, and a successful, precedent setting, appeal to the courts against the OIC’s decision to give approval to ITT and Ernslaw. It is ironic that having won, the islanders had insufficient resources to develop the forestry on their own and had to sell half of the island to another transnational, Blakely Pacific. However they apparently are confident that this one is better than the long line of corporates who have exploited the island. In the words of the OIC decision: “The vendors … who represent the tangata whenua of Matakana Island state the proposal provides the Maori people on the island with the opportunity to preserve and protect all matters of cultural, religious and historical significance while utilising Blakely finance and expertise to develop the island’s forestry operation.” Blakely Pacific are acting as Trustee of the South Blakely Trust of Washington. It is a subsidiary of 130 year old Port Blakely Tree Farms Ltd (U.S.A.). (For more details of this latest development, see Foreign Control Watchdog, CAFCA, No. 76, September 1994, p. 5.) (This decision was released only on appeal to the OIC.) Sydney Futures Exchange to clear for New Zealand Futures Exchange The Sydney Futures Exchange Clearing House Pty Ltd, a subsidiary of Sydney Futures Exchange Ltd has consent to carry on business in Aotearoa because …
(In other words it is another cost of the uncertainty brought about by open markets, particularly in currency, and another avenue for speculation.) SEABIL, owned by SEA and Brierleys, becomes biggest listed property owner Internal restructuring shows SEABIL NZ Holdings Ltd, a joint venture between SEA Holdings Ltd of Hong Kong (60%) and Brierley Investments Ltd (40%), being set up to own SEABIL NZ Ltd, and Fanion Properties Ltd. The value put on these two subsidiaries was released only on appeal: it was $11,591,648 in the case of SEABIL NZ Ltd and $1,833,457 in the case of Fanion Properties Ltd. According to Fiona Rotherham of the Independent, SEABIL is about to become the biggest listed property owner in Aotearoa with the $218 million acquisition of “the cream of Fletcher Challenge’s remaining property portfolio, five commercial properties in Auckland and Wellington.” The properties include a 40% interest in the ASB Bank Centre in Auckland, FCL’s Penrose head office, Prudential Plaza in Takapuna, the Ministry of Commerce building and Morrison Morpeth House in Wellington. SEABIL already had 34 properties, including recently acquired Lufthansa House in Auckland, and has $450 million in shareholders’ equity. Its property management is contracted out to Terra Firma Group, a company owned by four former Brierley Properties Ltd staff who also manage the Auckland Sky Tower casino project. The SEABIL parent company, SEABIL Pacific, is focussing on investing in China in Chengdu and Sichuan province. (Independent, “$500m portfolio will turn SEABIL (NZ) into NZ’s largest listed property coy”, 15/4/94, p.20) Van Heeren takes shares in Tranz Rail Retrospective consent is given to a businessman to take shares in Tranz Rail Ltd, the holding company for New Zealand Rail. Mr Alex van Heeren (nationality unstated, but a resident of Aotearoa) is given retrospective consent to take up 9,545,455 $1 ordinary shares at par through his company Tessaro Developments Ltd. The consent was requested because “the solicitors acting for Mr Van Heeren have doubts as to whether he is deemed to be an ordinary resident, notwithstanding he has been here for fourteen years.” In commenting on the July 1993 decisions (when the takeover of New Zealand Rail was approved by the Commission) we reported:
M.I.M. subsidiary, Highlands Gold, set up to take over prospecting licences A M.I.M. Holdings Ltd subsidiary, Highlands Gold (NZ) Ltd, is being set up to “take an assignment of 70% interest in each of two prospecting licences granted under the Mining Act.”
Internal restructuring: Toyota Finance; Sumitomo rearranges Nelson Pine In an intriguing “internal restructuring”, Toyota Finance New Zealand Ltd is acquiring new vehicles from TFNZ (Wholesale) Ltd for “approximately $42 million“. Both companies are ultimately wholly owned by Toyota Motor Corporation of Japan, through Toyota Finance Australia Ltd. And Sumitomo Forestry Co. Ltd of Japan is moving its 50% ownership of Nelson Pine Industries Ltd from one subsidiary which is being wound up, Sumirin Capital Investments NZ Ltd, to another, Sumirin NZ Ltd.
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