The latest earnings season has revealed diverging fortunes across Singapore’s REIT landscape, with each sector facing its own unique opportunities and challenges.
From data centres capitalising on artificial intelligence demand to suburban retail navigating evolving consumer patterns, and pan-Asian commercial portfolios managing geographic headwinds, the results offer valuable insights into where value and risks lie.
Here’s what investors need to know about each REIT’s performance.
Frasers Centrepoint Trust: Suburban Strength Delivers Consistent Returns
Frasers Centrepoint Trust (SGX: J69U), or FCT, delivered results that showcased the enduring appeal of Singapore’s suburban retail sector, with the REIT benefiting from both strategic acquisitions and organic growth.
For the fiscal year ended 30 September 2025 (FY2025), FCT delivered gross revenue of S$389.6 million, up 10.8% year on year from S$351.7 million in FY2024.
The S$1.17 billion acquisition of Northpoint City South Wing drove much of FCT’s revenue growth.
Net property income rose 9.7% to S$278 million.
Distribution per unit (DPU) increased 0.6% to S$0.12113, up from S$0.12042 in FY2024.
During FY2025, FCT achieved robust rental reversion of 7.8%, demonstrating landlord pricing power and healthy leasing demand across its suburban mall portfolio.
With committed occupancy at 99.9% (excluding Cathay Cineplex exits), the trust continues extracting value from its dominant suburban locations.
Shopper traffic increased 1.6% year on year (YoY) in FY2025, while tenant sales rose 3.7%, suggesting genuine retail vitality beyond mere rental escalations.
This validates FCT’s suburban positioning: as online shopping grows, quality physical retail destinations with strong catchments maintain relevance.
The outperformance of tenant sales versus traffic also indicates higher spending per visit.
Additionally, the REIT’s cost of debt fell to 3.5% in 4Q2025, whilst aggregate leverage of 39.6% provides modest headroom for future growth.
Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust: DPU Resilience Masks Underlying Challenges
Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust (SGX: MPACT), or MPACT, maintained distribution growth in its 2QFY2025/2026 results through active portfolio management, using cost control and strategic divestments to offset underlying revenue challenges.
Gross revenue declined 3.2% YoY to S$218.5 million, while net property income fell 2.2%.
Yet, DPU rose 1.5% to S$0.0201, which was attributable to divestments (Mapletree Anson and two Japan office buildings) and cost savings, rather than organic growth.
The sustainability of DPU growth depends on whether management can stabilise the portfolio and return to revenue growth, particularly in weaker overseas markets.
VivoCity delivered stellar 14.1% rental reversion, offsetting weakness elsewhere.
The Singapore flagship saw shopper traffic rise 0.6% and tenant sales grow 3.5%, with sales growth accelerating to 4.8% in the second quarter despite ongoing enhancement works.
In contrast, Festival Walk in Hong Kong experienced declining tenant sales despite traffic growth.
Committed occupancy of 88.9% sits notably below peers, while overall rental reversion of negative 0.1% for the first half of FY25/26 signals tenant retention challenges.
The completion of VivoCity’s Basement 2 enhancement (targeting 10%+ ROI) offers a bright spot, but management’s focus on “cash flow stability” and broader portfolio metrics that require improvement suggests a defensive stance.
Digital Core REIT: AI Tailwinds Drive Revenue, But Watch the DPU Gap
Digital Core REIT (SGX: DCRU) delivered impressive top-line growth in its 3Q2025 results, though the benefits to unitholders remain modest for now.
The REIT’s gross revenue surged 83.9% YoY to US$132.4 million, while net property income jumped 49.6% to US$67.7 million.
Yet distributable income crept up just 1.9% to US$35.2 million, the stark divergence reflecting the cost of growth with recent acquisitions bringing higher finance costs, temporarily suppressing distribution gains.
With wholesale data centre pricing in Northern Virginia climbing to US$225 per kilowatt monthly (up from US$210 a year ago) the REIT is well-positioned in a supply-constrained market where vacancy rates hit record lows of 0.3%.
These rental escalations should flow through to the REIT’s income over time, particularly as leases come up for renewal.
Trading at a 39% discount to net asset value as at 21 October 2025, Digital Core REIT has been repurchasing units – 1.8 million year-to-date at an average US$0.565.
While the 0.1% DPU accretion from buybacks appears modest, the deep discount suggests significant upside if the market re-rates the REIT.
With 38.5% aggregate leverage and US$431 million in debt headroom, management has ammunition for both acquisitions and further buybacks.
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