Following this, CLSA analyst Wong Yew Kiang has moved his sector rating to “overweight” from “underweight”, adding that the overall risks for S-REITs is subsiding amid firm operational metrics.
Meanwhile, DBS analysts Derek Tan and Dale Lai point out that there are expectations of rate cuts to stimulate growth if required from 2024 onwards. This is conducive for interest rate sensitive sectors like S-REITs in the immediate term, they add.
As recent conversations turn more constructive as more investors seek opportunities to invest into the sector, the DBS analysts see S-REITs outperforming the Straits Times Index in the coming months. They believe that the relative underperformance of interest rate sensitive sectors like S-REITs will start to turn the corner and exhibit relative outperformance going forward.
“With FY2023 yield of 6% implying a yield spread of 4.3% at -1 standard deviation, it is attractive for investors to reconsider re-entering the sector, albeit selectively, with a focus on those S-REITs with the ability to sustain dividends in a continued high interest rate environment,” say Tan and Lai.
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Through the first quarter of the year, operational metrics have remained robust despite the shroud of uncertainty surrounding sustainability as the economic outlook dims. Tan and Lai note that Singapore’s economy is expected to record slowing growth momentum in 2023 of 2.5%.
Amid this, the analysts see strength in retail and industrial segments which are supported by multi-year occupancy rates as well as accelerating q-o-q trend in rental reversions of about 8% to 14% — pointing to a steady organic growth profile. Office rental reversions and occupancy levels remain strong, aided by vacancy rates at record low levels of under 3% although DBS senses that leasing spreads are weakening on the back of an economic slowdown.
The analysts also highlight hospitality S-REITs, which continue to impress with sustained revenue per available room growth as well as levels that exceed those recorded pre-Covid-19, with more strength anticipated on the back of China’s travel reopening.
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Incorporating latest acquisitions and rolling forward its forecasts, CLSA’s top picks of CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (CICT), CapitaLand Ascendas REITand Mapletree Logistics Trust (MLT)remain unchanged. Wong believes the top picks would have more resilient DPU growth from 2022 to 2024, reflecting CLSA’s preference for REITs with defensive earnings in the rising rate environment.
Within his coverage, Wong has also upgraded Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust (MPACT)to “buy” given higher upside and improving operational metrics. He adds that the trust’s valuations are undermanding at 6% forward yield and 0.93x P/B, aside from being a good proxy to China reopening with its key asset Festival Walk expected to see improving performance.
DBS’ Tan and Lai prefer S-REITs within the logistics, retail and hospitality segments for their ability to grow revenues on top of having more resilient capital structure metrics in the face of a prolonged high interest rate environment. Additionally, they expect some organic growth in revenues for these segments, helping to partially cushion rising financing costs. These preferred REITs are MLT, Frasers Logistics & Commercial Trust, Lendlease Global Commercial REIT, MPACT, CICT and CapitaLand Ascott Trust.