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Precinct Properties withholds $15.4m of payments to Fletcher Construction for Commercial Bay and likely to withhold more

Tuesday, 19 February 2019

An illustration of One Queen Street, in the foreground, a hotel, hospitality and office development being proposed by Precinct Properties with the PwC Tower in the Commercial Bay development standing behind.
An illustration of One Queen Street, in the foreground, a hotel, hospitality and office development being proposed by Precinct Properties with the PwC Tower in the Commercial Bay development standing behind.

Precinct Properties has withheld $15.4 million of payments to Fletcher Construction and is likely to withhold more for delays to the construction of its Commercial Bay office and retail development on Auckland's waterfront.

Precinct revealed the payment delay in its half-year result for the six months to December 31, 2018.

Precinct chief executive Scott Pritchard said the $15.4m of liquidated damages was related to delays in the construction programme from July to the end of December 2018. 

'All we are saying at the moment is that's the amount of liquidated damages that we have retained so far.'

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Precinct Properties chief executive Scott Pritchard with the model of the 39-storey PwC Tower.
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'Now, that number is likely to grow and what we haven't said is what it will grow to because we don't know yet the extent of delays.'

Pritchard said there was now also a bit of slippage to the current construction programme of about a month that occurred over Christmas and New Year.

Last August Precinct revised the opening dates for Commercial Bay's retail development and the PwC Tower to September 2019 for retail and December 2019 for the office tower because of the construction programme delays.

A depiction of planned new buildings 40 and 44 Bowen Street in Wellington owned by Precinct Properties.
A depiction of planned new buildings 40 and 44 Bowen Street in Wellington owned by Precinct Properties.

The slippage might affect those opening dates 'but we don't know yet'.

'We will continue to closely monitor this development with the next two months being critical in progressing the project,' Pritchard said.

It was the first time the liquidated damages had appeared in its accounts. Before July last year Fletchers had not missed any of their construction 'milestones'.

The liquidated damages would not be updated again until its full year results which would be released in August 2019.

With a development pipeline of more than $1 billion '$15m is not material', Pritchard said.

An illustration of 10 Madden Street, in the Wynyard Quarter, being developed by Precinct Properties.
An illustration of 10 Madden Street, in the Wynyard Quarter, being developed by Precinct Properties.

But it would update the market on the opening dates for Commercial Bay retail and office tower, if they did change.

The Commercial Bay total project cost had risen to $690m compared to $685m in June 2018.

Precinct also announced it was raising $150m from shareholders to reduce its bank debt and fund developments in Wellington and Auckland.

It was offering $130m of shares to wholesale shareholders and another $20m shares to retail investors with the ability to accept $10m of oversubscriptions.

The price of the new shares would be determined through a bookbuild, an auction-type process.

Precinct had $710.4m of total borrowings and total assets of $2.5b.

The PwC Tower is being built by Precinct Properties and is the central part of its $690m Commercial Bay office and retail  development on Auckland
The PwC Tower is being built by Precinct Properties and is the central part of its $690m Commercial Bay office and retail development on Auckland's waterfront.

For the half-year to December 31, 2018, Precinct recorded an after tax profit of $25.5m, 44 per cent higher than the previous half-year of $17.7m.

The difference was mainly the loss on the sale of 10 Brandon Street in Wellington.

Pritchard said the first six months of the financial year had been immensely busy as the company continued to progress its long-term strategy.

'We are achieving continued growth for our shareholders and enhancing our business by transforming the portfolio into a higher quality set of assets.'

It had achieved 100 per cent occupancy in Auckland and Wellington, showing the quality of the portfolio and strong demand for premium inner-city office space.

The company had increased leasing at Commercial Bay to 84 per cent for retail space and 80 per cent for office and completed the redevelopment of the Charles Fergusson Building in Wellington at the end of 2018. It was now occupied by the Ministry for Primary Industries.

The company also announced it had completed the purchase of the other half of Auckland's leading flexible office space provider, Generator New Zealand, after buying 50 per cent in May 2017.

Generator offered a great opportunity to expand further into the fast-growing flexible space market, Pritchard said.

Founded in 2011 by Ryan Wilson, Generator had quadrupled in size since Precinct's investment. It had spaces in five city-centre locations – three in Britomart and two in Wynyard Quarter. 

Precinct paid $4m for half the company in 2017 and $7.4m for the other half.

Generator made up around half of the city's co-working market.

It had committed occupancy levels near 80 per cent, 1,200 members, more than 40 staff, and a footprint of approximately 12,600 square metres which included 16 event and hospitality spaces and 40 meeting rooms, Pritchard said.

'We know there is an increasing demand in the market for businesses with fewer staff to have access to collaborative, flexible work environments that offer the high-end facilities that are typically reserved for large corporate office users.'

Pritchard said Precinct would like to take Generator to the Wellington market in the next 12 months.