Singapore REITs have been under pressure over the past two years amid higher financing costs, led by high interest rates and dampened investor sentiment.
With interest rate cuts expected down the road, the outlook is likely to brighten, and REITs may be on the track to recovery.
Lower borrowing costs typically boost distributions, support asset values, and bring confidence back, making it a compelling time to revisit quality names.
We highlight four Singapore REITs that are well positioned to benefit when interest rates eventually decline.
Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust (MPACT, SGX: N2IU)
MPACT owns commercial and retail properties across Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Japan and South Korea.
The REIT posted a distribution per unit (DPU) of S$0.0201 for the second quarter of fiscal year 2025/2026 (2QFY2025/2026), up 1.5% year on year (YoY), driven by its Singapore properties.
NPI fell 2.2% YoY to S$163.9 million due to weaker overseas contributions.
Committed occupancy stood at 88.9%, down from 96.4% a year ago, reflecting challenges in overseas markets.
Aggregate leverage improved to 37.6%, while the cost of debt fell to 3.23%.
VivoCity remains a standout, achieving 100% commitment, 14.1% rental reversion, and 4.8% YoY tenant sales growth.
The REIT faces headwinds from weaker retail demand in Hong Kong and China.
However, MPACT is a quality cross-border REIT supported by defensive Singapore anchors and is well positioned to benefit as funding costs ease.
Mapletree Industrial Trust (MIT, SGX: ME8U)
MIT has a portfolio of industrial properties and data centres across Singapore, North America and Japan, with assets under management of S$8.5 billion.
DPU fell 5.6% YoY to S$0.0318 for 2QFY2025/2026, mainly due to the absence of a one-off divestment gain from the prior year and foreign exchange headwinds.
The portfolio’s occupancy rate was 91.3%, with a weighted average rental reversion of 6.2% for its Singapore portfolio, which comprises 45.2% of AUM.
Leverage improved to 37.3% from 40.1% in the previous quarter after divestment proceeds were used to pare down debt. Average borrowing cost declined to 3.0%.
Data centre demand remains a structural tailwind and long-term growth driver for the trust.
However, borrowing costs are anticipated to increase with the repricing of maturing interest rate swaps.
With stable local performance and growth in the digital economy, MIT is a reliable core holding for patient investors.
AIMS APAC REIT (AA REIT, SGX: O5RU)
AA REIT is a mid-cap industrial REIT investing in industrial, logistics and business park properties in Singapore and Australia.
The REIT reported a 1HFY2026 DPU of S$0.0472, up 1.1% YoY.
Portfolio occupancy stood at 93.3% with a weighted average lease expiry (WALE) of 4.2 years.
Excluding transitory tenant movements, committed occupancy would be 95.1%.
Aggregate leverage stood at 35.0% as at 30 September 2025, with undrawn facilities and bank balances of approximately S$169.7 million.
With 82.5% of gross rental income from tenants in essential and defensive industries, the REIT enjoys stable income.
It achieved positive rental reversions of 7.7% in 1HFY2026.
The portfolio contends with limitations on acquisition flexibility due to its smaller size and exposure to cyclical industrial rents.
AA REIT is a hidden gem among mid-tier industrial REITs, offering high yield and strong income visibility, and could re-rate if interest costs fall.
CapitaLand Ascendas REIT (CLAR, SGX: A17U)
CLAR is Singapore’s first and largest listed industrial REIT, with assets diversified across industrial, logistics, business parks and data centres in Asia Pacific, Europe and the US.
DPU dipped 0.6% YoY to S$0.07477 in 1H2025 due to a larger unit base from the May 2025 private placement.
Aggregate leverage stood at 37.4% as at 30 June 2025, rising to 39.8% by 30 September 2025 following accretive acquisitions.
The REIT achieved rental reversions of 7.6% for renewed leases in the third quarter of 2025 (3Q2025).
CapitaLand, CLAR’s blue-chip sponsor, provides development pipelines, refinancing capacity, and strategic deal flow that many peers cannot match.
In 2025 alone, CLAR completed acquisitions worth S$724.6 million and announced a further S$592.6 million in proposed acquisitions.
The main risks are currency fluctuation from overseas exposure and rising property taxes and operating expenses.
CLAR is a blue-chip industrial REIT offering size, scale and stability, with significant revaluation potential when interest rates stabilise.
Why Rate Cuts Could Spark a REIT Recovery
Lower interest expenses directly boost distributable income and put more cash in the hands of unitholders.
As bond yields decline, REIT yields become comparatively more attractive, drawing investors back into the sector.
Lower rates also encourage asset revaluations and portfolio expansions, further enhancing total returns.
Historically, REITs tend to outperform early in the rate cut cycle as investor sentiment rotates back to yield-focused investments.
Get Smart: The Time to Position is Now
REITs with strong sponsors, conservative gearing, and quality assets are likely to lead the rebound when rates start to decline.
MPACT offers a turnaround story, anchored by high-quality Singapore exposure.
On the other hand, MIT and CLAR combine scale with structural industrial growth, while AA REIT delivers one of the sector’s highest yields alongside improving fundamentals.
With rate cuts on the horizon, investors may want to position early, before the recovery is fully priced in.
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Disclosure: Darien does not own any of the shares mentioned.



