Frasers Centrepoint Trust (SGX: J69U) sits in Singapore’s Straits Times Index (SGX: ^STI), while Keppel REIT (SGX: K71U) and Suntec REIT (SGX: T82U) are on the STI reserve list.
Given their pedigree, it’s no surprise that the trio each boast multi-billion dollar market capitalisations.
Here’s another similarity: in November, all three will be delivering distributions to unitholders.
Yet, their latest quarterly results reveal different realities for dividend investors.
Keppel REIT (SGX: K71U): 25 November 2025
Keppel REIT presents an interesting case where headline numbers obscure underlying strength.
For the first nine months of 2025 (9M2025), property income rose 5.5% year on year (YoY) to S$204.5 million while net property income climbed an impressive 8.6% to S$161.3 million.
Yet, distributable income from operations declined 0.6% to S$144.6 million.
The devil lies in the details.
Management’s decision to receive 25% of fees in cash starting from FY2025, rather than in units, created this distortion.
Had fees been paid entirely in units as before, distributable income would have grown 6.7% YoY to S$155.3 million — a materially different story.
Operational metrics remain robust.
Portfolio committed occupancy improved to 96.3% from 95.9% the previous quarter, with rental reversions of 12% achieved across over 1.4 million square feet of committed leases.
The Singapore portfolio, representing 78.5% of assets, saw higher rentals at Marina Bay Financial Centre and One Raffles Quay, lifting the share of results from associates by 15.4% YoY to S$75.4 million.
The proposed acquisition of a 75% interest in Top Ryde City Shopping Centre in Sydney for A$393.8 million marks Keppel REIT’s strategic expansion into retail.
Frasers Centrepoint Trust (SGX: J69U): 28 November 2025
Frasers Centrepoint Trust (FCT) is Singapore’s leading pure-play suburban retail REIT, owning nine suburban malls with approximately three million square feet of retail space.
The REIT manages S$8.3 billion in assets under management.
For the fiscal year ending 30 September 2025 (FY2025), FCT delivered gross revenue of S$389.6 million, up 10.8% YoY from S$351.7 million in FY2024.
Net property income rose 9.7% to S$278.0 million compared to S$253.4 million a year ago.
Distribution per unit (DPU) increased 0.6% to S$0.12113, up from S$0.12042 in FY2024.
The REIT’s retail portfolio committed occupancy stood at 98.1% as at 30 September 2025, down from 99.9% in the previous quarter due to Cathay Cineplexes’ exit at Causeway Point and Century Square.
Excluding this impact, occupancy remained steady at 99.9%.
Rental reversion remained resilient at 7.8% for FY2025.
Shopper traffic increased 1.6% YoY, whilst tenant sales grew 3.7%.
FCT’s strong performance was driven by the acquisition of Northpoint City South Wing, completed on 26 May 2025 for a little over S$1.1 billion, along with a solid retail operating performance across the portfolio.
On the flip side, the REIT divested Yishun 10 Retail Podium on 23 September 2025 as part of its proactive portfolio reconstitution strategy.
Looking ahead, the Hougang Mall asset enhancement initiative progresses well, with over 80% leasing pre-commitment and targeted completion by September 2026.
Notably, FCT strengthened its balance sheet through S$421.3 million in equity fundraising and S$200 million in perpetual securities issuance, reducing its cost of debt to 3.5% in 4Q’FY25 from 4.1% for FY2024.
Suntec REIT (SGX: T82U): 28 November 2025
Like Keppel REIT, Suntec REIT is one of the five STI reserve stocks.
Suntec REIT delivered the most impressive headline DPU growth at 12.5% YoY to S$0.018 for 3Q’25.
Yet, this performance masks a mixed set of results.
Gross revenue fell 0.2% YoY to S$117.5 million while net property income declined 1.6% to S$78.5 million.
The DPU growth story relies entirely on non-operational factors: S$6 million in lower financing costs and a S$2.0 million reversal of withholding tax provisions.
While they had an effect, these aren’t long-term drivers of distribution growth.
Occupancy metrics remain respectable for Singapore: 98.5% for its Singapore offices and 99.3% for its retail. The REIT’s Australian property occupancy was 87.3%, and the UK, 92.5%.
Rental reversions stayed positive at 8.5% for its Singapore office segment, 8.6% for Singapore retail, and 11.9% for Australia.
However, these haven’t translated into revenue or net property income growth.
Management’s planned asset enhancement works at Suntec City Mall in the second half of 2025, targeting returns of 30% to 40%, could provide the operational catalyst the REIT needs.
Until then, distribution growth remains a question once one-off benefits normalise.
Get Smart: Sustainability is key
For dividend investors evaluating these November distributions, the lesson is clear: headline DPU growth can mislead.
FCT offers the most sustainable profile with genuine operational growth, balance sheet improvement, and reduced financing costs.
Keppel REIT demonstrates strong fundamentals temporarily obscured by fee structure changes.
Suntec REIT’s impressive DPU growth relies on unsustainable financial adjustments rather than operational improvements.
When assessing REIT distributions, prioritise net property income growth, occupancy trends, and rental reversions over headline DPU figures.
As these three billionaire REITs prepare their November distributions, investors would be wise to look beyond the payment notifications to the operational health beneath.
In the REIT sector, sustainable distributions beat one-offs every time.
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Disclosure: The Smart Investor owns shares in Frasers Centrepoint Trust.
		


