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Singapore REITs ride to 5-year yield high amid market jitters
People queue up to pay their respects to the late first prime minister Lee Kuan Yew at the Padang grounds outside the Parliament House in Singapore yesterday. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters picnn

SINGAPORE, Feb 15 — Dividend yields at the top Singapore-listed property trusts are at their highest in at least five years, a glittering attraction as global investors seek refuge from the slump in oil prices and jitters over China’s weakest economic prospects in 25 years.

A Thomson Reuters analysis of 14 real estate investment trusts (REITs), using comparable month-end data available for the last five years, shows the median dividend yield was 6.7 per cent at end-January — the highest since at least April 2011. The end-January spread between that yield and Singapore’s 10-year government bond yield was also at its highest in that period, at 4.4 percentage points.

The yield trend offers a timely reminder of the lingering allure of investments tied to brick and mortar such as REITs, which typically provide stable income streams, at a time when investors are on a knife-edge amid global market turmoil and fears about the health of banks and the broader economy.

“We believe current (REIT) valuations are attractive re-entry levels and believe that large caps (large-capitalisation trusts) are likely to benefit as investors turn yield-hungry in a tepid growth environment,” DBS analysts Derek Tan and Mervin Song said in a recent note.

Still, there may be clouds on the REIT horizon. Singapore trusts face a potential office and industrial space supply glut, while some prospective tenants may hold off on new leases in the short term, bothered by the same macro-economic concerns that are plaguing financial markets. — Reuters

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