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As recession fears rise and risk-free rates drop, S-REITs could benefit, JP Morgan says

The Edge Singapore
The Edge Singapore  • 2 min read
As recession fears rise and risk-free rates drop, S-REITs could benefit, JP Morgan says
As recession risks rise to 40%, Fed could have at least 2 rate cuts, benefitting S-REITs borrowing costs while widening yield spreads could trigger a REIT rally.
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Although S-REITs are an unlikely place to "hide" during a recession, JP Morgan reckons that a faster than expected 31% drop in 6-month Singapore benchmark rates and lower 1-month Sora down 100 basis points (bps) to 2.4% may see investors rotating to defensive yield plays.

Against this background, JP Morgan is expecting a 15% upside to the S-REITs' September 2024 highs.

"There is further potential for lower rates, as JPM and the Street are expecting two/three Fed rate cuts by end-2025, with our economists highlighting a 40% risk of a US recession this year. We estimate a 4% upside to S-REITs’ DPU for every 100 bps fall in floating rates, and anticipate that S-REITs will revise down borrowing cost guidance. Yield spreads of 340 bps, the highest level since March 2022 which triggered a rally then, is also supportive," JP Morgan says.

Its top picks are Singapore-focused names including CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust , CapitaLand Ascendas REIT , Keppel DC REIT, Frasers Centrepoint Trust and laggards such as Mapletree Logistics Trust

S-REIT borrowing costs should trend down with two-thirds of S-REITs at or above stabilised borrowing costs, JP Morgan reckons.

In particular, lower floating rates should benefit S-REITs with a high proportion of floating rate debt, such CDL Hospitality Trusts , and those with a larger share of SGD-denominated debt, such as Frasers Centrepoint Trust where borrowing costs could trend lower than the manager's guidance.

See also: DPS growth in sight for Hongkong Land

Additionally, coupons for S-REIT bonds have fallen to a three-year low of 3.2% from reduced spreads and a drop in 3-year swap rates. 

S-REITs are relatively more attractive with yields at 6.3% compared to bank yields at 6.2%, according to JP Morgan.

To this, the caveat has to be added that banks pay out 50% to 60% of their earnings compared to S-REITs minimum payout of 90% of distributable income.

But, alternatives, including Singapore’s 6-month T-bill rates have fallen to 2.75%, and the 10-year bond yield is at 2.7% as of March 10. A widening yield spread could also trigger an S-REIT temporary, no matter how temporary.  

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