Category: REIT

 

News – BT

ARA and CWT confirm talks to set up Reit

SHARES of ARA Asset Management and CWT rose yesterday, when both companies confirmed plans to launch a regional logistics real estate investment trust (Reit) together.

ARA, a real estate fund manager tied to Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing’s Cheung Kong group, saw its shares hit a year high. They gained seven cents or 7.8 per cent to close at 97 cents.

Shares of logistics firm CWT put on two cents or 2.4 per cent to close at 84.5 cents. The counter has hovered above the 80-cent mark since late December.

Investors were probably cheered by news of the Reit venture between ARA and CWT. In a joint release, the firms said that they are ‘in advanced confidential discussions’ and have made a ‘confidential submission’ to the Singapore Exchange (SGX) to set up and list a logistics Reit here. They have also made submissions to other relevant regulatory authorities.

‘It should be noted that no definitive agreements whatsoever have been executed,’ they highlighted. They added that they have not obtained approvals from regulators, including SGX and the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

ARA and CWT were responding to a Reuters article, which said that the two plan to launch a Reit holding properties worth some $1 billion, and DBS would manage the listing. The information came from ‘a source involved in the transactions’.

While both companies confirmed that they were working together on a Reit, they did not verify the other details mentioned in the Reuters report.

In mid-December, CWT gave the market some clues on its plans. It received a query from SGX on an increase in its share price, and revealed that it was in talks to sell and lease back its logistics facilities for the potential creation of a logistics Reit.

SREITs – UBS

SREIT valuation guide

SREITs – OCBC

Our wish list for 2010

2009 has been an interesting year for the S-REIT sector, with the Great Financial Crisis exposing weaknesses in a structure many thought of as invulnerable. Keeping both the S-REITs’ strengths and weaknesses in mind, here are a few changes we would like to see in 2010…

(1) Increased alignment of incentives. Most REIT managers are currently earning fees based on asset value and on net property income (NPI). Historically, S-REITs have relied heavily on acquisitions to grow both NPI and portfolio size, especially with the added kicker of acquisition fees. Depending on the pricing and financing structure, these two metrics can be increased with no net benefit (or even a cost) to unitholders. A recent RiskMetrics report1 suggests pegging a substantial part of manager fees to total shareholder return. No fee structure is perfect but we feel this issue warrants further attention and discussion.

(2) More transparency of relationship with sponsor. The S-REIT sector has traditionally had a bias towards developersponsored REITs. These REITs are inextricably tied to their sponsors on several levels including property management, REIT management and through acquisition pipelines. In the current de-leveraging environment, we believe several sponsors will sell their assets to their REITs. Pipelines can be a competitive advantage – ultimately an investor may be buying access to quality assets. But pricing and strategic benefit to the REIT is always a concern. We would like to see increased transparency of the acquisition decision-making process that goes beyond a comparison of the acquisition cost versus the independent valuation of the target property.

(3) Renewed focus on value accretion. We expect REITs to return to their growth-via-acquisition strategy. We note that historically the market has focused primarily on yield accretion, which may be more a function of the amount of leverage used to make the purchase than anything else. Third-party or pipeline-driven, we would like to see more attention on the value-add of the proposed acquisition. The market needs to ask harder questions including: Why is the REIT making this purchase? Does this purchase enhance the overall portfolio? What are the strategic considerations behind this decision? Is this a good buy on an un-leveraged basis?

Valuation. Our key ratings drivers in 2010 are 1) earnings trends; 2) leverage and outstanding issues; 3) manager commitment to protecting and creating value; and 4) relative valuations. We maintain our NEUTRAL rating on the REIT sector. Mapletree Logistics Trust [BUY, FV: S$0.78] and Ascott Residence Trust [BUY, FV: S$1.25] are our top picks for the sector.

REITs – BT

Reit takeover guidelines require closer look

WHAT exactly does it mean when a Reit is taken over? In the case of other corporate entities, it’s fairly clear that when a general offer is made after the 30 per cent trigger point is reached, control of the company and the subsequent economic decision-making will pass into the hands of the successful takeover party. With Reits though, the situation is not as clear – mainly because economic decision-making does not lie with shareholders but rests with the Reit manager instead.

It was in June 2007 that the Securities Industry Council announced that the Singapore Code on Takeovers and Mergers will be extended to Reits – about five years after the first Reit was floated on the SGX. This means a party whose stake in a Reit hits the 30 per cent threshold would have to make a general offer for remaining units in the Reit. This is the same as for any listed company on the Singapore Exchange.

But Reits are unlike other listed entities because they are externally managed by a manager appointed by the trust.

In the case of other companies, anyone owning the controlling block of shares can control the company’s management, assets and cashflow.

But when you buy units in a Reit, you own its assets but not the manager. So even if a party owns a controlling stake in the trust, it has no control over distribution of its cashflow as this rests with the Reit manager, as spelled out in the trust deed as well as the Reit guidelines.

One could thus argue that gaining a controlling block of units in a Reit does not necessarily give you control of the trust’s underlying economics, which is vested with the manager.

Another example of the influence that a Reit manager has over the trust’s business is that the manager gets to recommend what assets the trust should buy and on what terms – including pricing and timing of the acquisition. This includes purchases from the Reit’s sponsor, which may also own the manager.

What this means it that if a new entity takes control of a Reit manager, one could argue that control of the Reit’s economics has actually passed to this new investor, even if this party did not buy any units in the Reit or bought less than the 30 per cent threshold that will trigger a takeover offer. The new investor could be prepared to pay a premium for the stake in the Reit manager but not for units in the Reit. In this instance, the new investor would have managed to take control of the Reit’s manager – and the trust’s economics – without making an offer to other unitholders.

In another scenario, even if the incoming investor in the Reit does reach the 30 per cent mark and makes a general offer to other unitholders, it could structure a deal such that the price at which it buys the Reit units reflect no or low premium; in exchange, it pays a handsome premium for a stake in the Reit manager. Hence, current guidelines allow an incoming investor to shift value between units in the Reit and the price of the management company.

The long and short of it is that Reit unitholders are deprived of an offer – or a good offer. What’s more, bad Reit managers are rewarded when an incoming investor pays a premium for the Reit manager as a cheap way to gain control (and where the premium paid for management control is not made available to minority unitholders) instead of making a general offer for the Reit and having to pay a premium for units in the Reit.

There is thus a need for the authorities to study whether transfer of ownership in the Reit manager is tantamount to a passing in control of the Reit itself.

Current interpretation of takeover guidelines for a Reit – defined as gaining control of at least 30 per cent ownership of the trust but without any reference to the Reit manager – is open to being exploited by incoming investors looking for a cheap way to control a Reit as well as bad Reit managers who’ll be handsomely rewarded in the process for their stake in the Reit management company.

The takeover guidelines for Reits require a closer look. Sure it will not be easy. How does one define passing of control of a Reit manager? Should it be when an incoming investor buys a 20 per cent stake in the management company? Or should the limit be set higher – at say, 50 per cent? And requiring the investor to make a general offer for the Reit itself could also have other implications. What happens if this party then turns out to be a bad manager for the Reit? If other unitholders subsequently want to get rid of it, they may not be able to muster enough support to pass a resolution at an EOGM to oust the manager.

Then there will be cries from other quarters that such rules would stifle the property fund management industry in Singapore. There must be room for pure Reit managers, who do not take any stake in the Reit, goes the argument. But such a breed of managers may not have their interests fully aligned with unitholders’, and may engage in activities that boost their fee income but which may be detrimental to unitholders – such as buying assets that could be earnings dilutive but which would enable them to cream off a nice acquisition fee and boost their management fees as the value of the Reit’s deposited property increases.

Still, the issue of when the control of a Reit passes on warrants a re-look by the authorities. This will protect the interests of minority investors as well as the reputation of Singapore as a Reits hub in Asia.

REITs – BT

Acquisitions back on radars of Singapore Reits

SINGAPORE real estate investment trusts (Reits) are poised to take advantage of lower commercial property prices to grow portfolios and boost dividends to shareholders, after spending over a year on the sidelines.

Singapore Reits, which own about US$34 billion of properties across Asia, have come through the financial crisis better than counterparts elsewhere and are well capitalised to weather potential risks from a shaky global economic recovery.

‘Reits offer good value for investors at current prices,’ said Roger Tan, vice president at SIAS Research, adding yields were attractive at double the levels seen during the property boom of 2007.

Singapore Reits currently give investors yields averaging 7.3 per cent compared with 2.5 per cent for 10-year Singapore government bonds and 3.5 per cent for 10-year US Treasuries.

Its Reit index has doubled since hitting a low in March this year, marginally outperforming a 92 per cent rise in the benchmark Straits Times Index, though still one-third off its all-time high in early 2008.

While residential property prices in Singapore have rebounded to their pre-crisis peaks, the recovery in commercial property has lagged and so is now ripe for a pick-up in activity and prices.

‘With the improved operating environment and easing credit conditions, the focus of Reit managers, regardless of asset class, has now shifted to making accretive acquisitions,’ Ascott Residence Trust CEO Chong Kee Hiong told Reuters.

For instance, Parkway Life Reit last month bought eight Japanese nursing homes for $78 million or at a net yield of 8.3 per cent, while its yen borrowing cost was 3.22 per cent, CEO Yong Yean Chau told Reuters.

‘Acquisitions will be a key driver for Reits heading into 2010,’ said BNP Paribas analyst Sandeep Mathew, who has an ‘overweight’ recommendation on Singapore’s Reit sector and ‘buy’ recommendations on Ascott, CDL Hospitality and CapitaMall Trust.

However, some analysts, including CIMB and OCBC Securities, are less upbeat on Reits, warning gains from acquisitions could be offset by the still uncertain global economy. Rentals for offices and factories are still soft and could face renewed pressure if a double-dip recession takes hold in the West.

While Asia’s Reit sector was hammered during the financial crisis when property values plunged and some banks and bondholders refused to roll over existing debt, Singapore’s Reit sector, the region’s third largest, refinanced about $5 billion of debt maturing in 2009.

Frankie Lee, who manages US$950 million of property stocks including Reits as co-head of Asia property equities at Henderson Global Investors, said he preferred Singapore Reits to their regional counterparts as they tend to be better managed and more diversified.

Investor demand for financial instruments that pay higher returns than the miserly interest rates currently given by bank deposits is likely to drive interest in the sector and enable Reits to raise new capital for acquisitions.

Sutha Kandiah, joint head of equity capital markets for Asia at UBS, said there are several Reits listings in the pipeline, although he declined to name the firms.

ARA Asset Management and Qatar’s Regency Group said on Monday they plan to launch the first Reit in Singapore that will comply with Islamic principles in the second half of next year.

Other IPOs in the pipeline include a commercial Reit from Temasek-owned Mapletree Investments that will include Singapore’s largest shopping mall Vivocity. — Reuters