In addition, the recovery from the pandemic is uncertain and patchy as recessionary pressures loom. Over and above this, QT and higher risk free rates are likely to pressure the trading price of FHT making it tough to acquire accretively.
“The endemic nature of Covid presents significant risks to the hospitality sector while it recovers gradually. Geopolitical tensions and looming recessionary pressures add further uncertainty to the recovery outlook. The further strengthening of the Singapore dollar could potentially limit any revaluation gains and DPS growth amidst the recovery,” FHT’s manager continues.
While these challenges also pertain to hospitality trusts such as CDL Hospitality Trusts (CDLHT), its sponsor City Developments (CDL) has decided to offload some of its stake in CDLHT to CDL shareholders instead, and ready CDLHT for acquisitions from Millennium & Copthorne. In view of this, FPL should be lauded for doing the right thing, analysts and market observers say.
FHT was listed in 2014, at 88 cents per stapled security, with a forecast yield of 7%. Including a rights issue in 2016, the entry price at IPO would be adjusted to 81.3 cents.