While retail store owners and business groups continue to push back against the re-imposition of the tax on commercial properties, the chief executive of Home Construction Ltd (HCL), Richard Le Blanc argues taxing commercial properties in Port-of-Spain is one way to contribute to the revitalisation of T&T’s capital.
While there are certain parts of T&T where retail has died, that is not to be confused with Port-of-Spain, which has suffered a degradation of some of its properties, Le Blanc argues.
“Retail is not dead. Port-of-Spain as a retail destination has now become, in my humble view, outdated. People just don’t go there to shop as they once used to do,” said Le Blanc.
The proof of his theory, the real estate executive said, is the number of people who walk the streets of Port-of-Spain every day and their purchasing power.
Questioned about the number of vacant lots in Port-of-Spain in a Business Guardian interview last Thursday, Le Blanc responded with a question of his own: “Ask yourself the question: Are there vacant lots because there is a lack of purchasing power on the streets or is it vacant because of the decline of the physical amenities of the city?”
He does not think there is a lack of purchasing power in Port-of-Spain
“Let us assume Port-of-Spain has 100,000 people working in it every day. Take those same 100,000 people with their same income and put them on the high street in London. Or put them in New York or even downtown Miami, a bustling, great-looking city with all of the amenities. Let’s see how much of those people shop and spend money there every day versus Port-of-Spain,” he said.
T&T’s capital is not psychologically enticing, he argues, making the point that the reason some people prefer to shop at, for example, The Falls at West Mall is because the entire environment conditions the minds of shopper in a certain way.
“And if I take you and put you in Port-of-Spain, that would condition your mind in another way.”
And he agrees that what the capital lacks is a development vision.
Citing the history of T&T’s capital, Le Blanc said if stores like Woolworth’s, Stevens & Johnsons and Kirpalani’s were to return to the city, and it was beautified, Port-of-Spain’s fortunes would turnaround quickly.
“One of the main contributors for the degradation of a city is a lack of property tax,” said Le Blanc, adding: “The main function of a property tax is to raise revenue. But property tax also performs another function, which is that it ensures that the highest and best use is put to a place.”
He used the Western Main Road in St James as an example.
“How many derelict properties do you see on that stretch? Quite a few. If the owners of those properties were paying the correct property tax—if they were paying tax that was appropriate and justifiable for the Western Main Road, where there are thousands of cars driving through—do you think any of those buildings would be derelict, unused and in a state of disrepair?
“As a matter of fact, quite the opposite would happen because regardless of what business is located on Champs-Élysées in Paris, the property tax that is paid to be there dictates that the business has to be best use. Not necessarily high end, because best use is not always high end. You would see Gucci and Prada on Champs-Élysées, but you would also see the middle-tier brands or a restaurant or cafe,” said Le Blanc.
OWP not sold out
As CEO of HCL, Le Blanc is responsible for the management of Long Circular Mall and Trincity Mall, a landbank of thousands of acres and One Woodbrook Place (OWP)—the 432-unit residential and commercial complex situated on the border of Woodbrook and St James.
OWP’s construction was completed in 2010, and its total project cost is close to $2 billion, Le Blanc said.
“Remember that people define total project cost differently. For us, total project cost includes the construction of the complex, financing costs, interest, soft costs and hard costs, which would be close to $2 billion,” said Le Blanc, adding that the construction cost “could have been between $1.4 and $1.5 billion.”
Asked whether the project had recovered its construction cost with the sale of 392 units, Le Blanc said: “One of the good things about real estate is this: Real estate is sometimes called the forgiving business. Even though you may lose on the initial project cost versus the price, OWP has a commercial component of almost 200,000 square feet and currently has 25 commercial tenants, including First Citizens, the Unit Trust Corporation the Imax cinema as well as a number of restaurants and entertainment places.
“Generally in T&T, over time, the value of commercial real estate goes up. With that are rents and profits...even if there is a financial loss in the short term, the rental income side usually carries you in the long term in terms of acquisition.”
From its commercial tenants, HCL generates about $15 million a year, said the real estate executive.
Le Blanc said while the debt/equity split for the OWP project was completed before his time, financing of the facility “could have been 80 per cent debt and 20 per cent equity.”
HCL’s equity in the project came from its acquisition of the land on which the development is located from the Port-of-Spain City Corporation. The acquisition cost of the land—which included the relocation of the Starlift Steel Orchestra and the facility on the Foreshore for garbage collection—“could have been close to $40 or $50 million,” said Le Blanc.
HCL borrowed $699 million from First Citizens secured by a first mortgage over the lands of OWP. The proceeds of the facility were used to finance the construction of the development, according to the CL Financial 2007 annual report.
Of the OWP’s original stock of 432 units, 40 remain unsold and part of Le Blanc’s current remit is sell those apartments.
Of the 40 unsold units, 36 are three bedrooms, with a selling price of $3.5 million, and four are penthouses, selling for between $4.5 million and $5.5 million. The complex has 30 penthouses. If HCL is successful in selling all 40 units, it would raise about $150 million.
The drive to sell the units began last November, first with an open auction for four apartments in the fourth quarter of last year, out of which two apartments were sold.
“We decided to start off with the auction process so that we could test the market in terms of pricing and it came back spot on in terms of our asking prices now. The auction process gave us the confidence that the market is ready to get back interested in OWP,” Le Blanc said.
Sales of OWP units are continuing through private treaty.
He said part of the reason for the unsold units is that HCL’s parent company, the CL Financial group, collapsed in January 2009, which caused uncertainty about the fate of the complex.
“When that collapse took place, there was a great degree of uncertainty that clouded the entire group. Starting from the collapse, what automatically happened was a drop in the confidence level and uncertainty as to whether we would ever finish One Woodbrook Place as a project. It started with the collapse,” said Le Blanc.
Another reason he put forward for HCL’s inability to sell the original stock of apartments is that everytime the government changed, the board of HCL changed.
“Everytime this happened, it was a new phase because each new board would have its own direction and vision in terms of how they saw the re-emergence of HCL, as a subsidiary of CL Financial and Clico,” said Le Blanc. HCL is now owned 70 per cent by the liquidators of CL Financial and 30 per cent by the Government.
The third reason he posited for just over 10 per cent of OWP’s original units remaining unsold was because between 2018 and 2020, “there was a mass exodus of expatriate rentals from Trinidad. You have seen many expats go to Guyana.”
He explained that one class of buyer that OWP appealed to originally was the purchase of units for the purpose of investment.
“With the slowdown in expat rentals, that is a contributing factor in explaining the inability to sell off all the apartments,” said Le Blanc.
And then came the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, which resulted in the T&T economy being closed for a number of years.