Thursday, 25 July 2024

UTAS:Things must be bad -- Part 2

 

Tasmanian Labor continues to berate anyone not supporting the disposal by UTAS of its Sandy Bay land for residential housing. Liberals, Lambies and Greens are all portrayed as being disinterested in solving the housing crisis by building 2,000+ new homes and/or helping to fund a new STEM building.

UTAS’ surrogate spokesperson Dean Winter has been instagramming images of the proposed development taken from Deloitte’s two reports into the feasibility of the development of Sandy Bay dated November 2021 and March 2022. It’s reasonable therefore to conclude the development plan Dean has been spruiking is the same as described in those Deloitte reports.

In summary this is what we learnt from the Deloitte Reports:

·        The planned development is a 30-year project, mostly for 2,656 new residences, a combination of 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units with an average area of 88 square metres to be sold at an average price of $880,000 (2021 prices).

·        The project will be conducted in stages. Needless to say, outlays will occur before revenue so funds will be required to fund the deficits in the early years. Peak project debt of $234 million will occur in year 5, in 2027, but the project is already 2 years behind schedule. The funds squirrelled away by UTAS to fund the project’s debt have all but disappeared, due to cost overruns and delays with the Hobart rebuilding and the increasing losses from core activities of teaching and research which UTAS is yet to fix. UTAS can’t borrow more without the Treasurer’s permission.

·        The project will reach cash break even in Year 17, after which time the project will start to rebuild UTAS’ equity. Over the ensuing 13 years cash profits of $800 million are predicted. That’s $800 million in future $s, which roughly translates to possibly $400 million in current $ terms. Not a great deal seeing UTAS’s current equity stands at $1,341 million.

·        UTAS initially hoped to run the project itself but due to its deteriorating financial position is now looking at ways to take on a joint venture JV partner and/or selling properties on a leasehold rather than freehold basis. The latter may result from restrictions that may be placed on UTAS by the recently tabled Bill in State parliament.

·        The Deloitte Reports stress that the project is currently only at the 5% design concept stage. To listen to politicians spruiking the deal one could easily start believing they’re ready to turn the first sod.

·        The project doesn’t even manage to meet the minimum target return if land and buildings to be redeveloped are given a zero value. For the project to achieve the target rate of return UTAS will have to pay the developer to take the land off its hands. This won’t occur of course, but what it means is that UTAS will have to accept a lower rate of return if a JV partner wishes to achieve a target rate.

·        If the project proceeds and the project land is given a value whatever that may be, whether it’s zero or $26 million, it will likely be far less than the current book value of the land and buildings. In which case UTAS will suffer a large drop in its equity position, which won’t start to be recovered until Year 17. Sceptics of the redevelopment have been labelled reckless if they don’t sign up as UTAS cheerleaders. It’s much easier to establish recklessness where existing assets are trashed in the hope of getting some back 17 years later. Its craziness on steroids.

·        Given that any surplus cash from the development won’t occur until at least year 17, that’s 2042 at the earliest, the redevelopment proposal has nothing whatsoever to do with funding a new STEM building. For the Labor Party to suggest otherwise reveals a wilful ignorance of reality.

·        Given that the existing land and buildings obviously have a value as part of a continuing institution for learning and research, it is that value that needs to be plugged into any model when trying to assess a rate of return on a project to convert a valuable asset to an above ground cemetery for cashed up baby boomers. It will certainly paint a different picture than the misinformed messaging from the Labor Party.

 

Sunday, 21 July 2024

UTAS: Things must be bad when Labor is asked to assist

 

One has to overlook lots of evidence on the public record to pretend as the Labor Party has that UTAS can be trusted to embark on the largest housing development in Tasmania’s history just so it might be able to fund a new $500 million STEM facility in Hobart City.

A memory refresh is needed.

UTAS, like a lot of universities, has accumulated lots of assets over the years thanks to land gifts, land revaluations, bequests and endowments, and capital grants for building.

Historically any losses from core operations of teaching and research were covered by income from investments mostly bequests and endowments entrusted to UTAS to be spent as per the wishes of the donors.

Universities are mostly publicly owned and have had the freedom to operate without restrictions that are normally applied to public bodies, like say, reporting and being answerable to Parliament.

The one restriction that was imposed on UTAS was via Section 7(2) of its governing Act which required the permission of the State Treasurer if it wished to borrow money. Ivory tower academics who used to run universities were presumably thought to need a fail-safe mechanism.

Paradoxically the fail-safe mechanism failed when it was most needed. 

Friday, 5 July 2024

UTAS sells hotels?

 

UTAS may have sold the Mid City Hotel to the Singaporean owned Fragrance Group and the Fountainside Hotel to the State government for housing if the grapevine is correct. The sale prices aren’t known at this stage.

If true it will be a deft way for the government to inject funds into UTAS without poor old UTAS having to come begging to the government to allow it to borrow more.
Not that lenders are queuing at the door given UTAS can’t service existing borrowings from its core operations.