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    Home»Small Cap Stocks»Beyond STI: 3 Singapore Dividend Stocks Still Offering 5%+ Yields
    Small Cap Stocks

    Beyond STI: 3 Singapore Dividend Stocks Still Offering 5%+ Yields

    Investors seeking 5%+ yields beyond the STI can find opportunity in these three Singapore stocks with dividend sustainability at their core.
    Calvina L.By Calvina L.February 16, 20266 Mins Read
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    Digital Core Reit
    Digital Osaka 3 | Image credit: www.digitalcorereit.com
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    The Straits Times Index (SGX: ^STI) crossed the 5,000 mark last week.

    For income investors, there’s a catch. 

    As blue-chip share prices surge, dividend yields compress. 

    This leaves dividend investors hunting further afield for 5%-plus yields. 

    Yet chasing yield alone is a trap. 

    An enticing payout means little if the cash flow behind it is shaky.

    Here are three stocks beyond the STI that still offer attractive yields – and, crucially, each has a distinct driver supporting its dividend sustainability.

    Digital Core REIT (SGX: DCRU)

    Digital Core REIT, or DCR, is a pure-play data centre REIT sponsored by Digital Realty Trust (NYSE: DLR). 

    The REIT owns 11 freehold data centres across the US, Canada, Germany, and Japan with assets under management of US$1.8 billion.

    DCR reported a strong set of results for 2025. 

    Gross revenue surged 72.2% year on year (YoY0 to US$176.2 million, while net property income climbed 43.5% to US$88.7 million. 

    Distribution per unit (DPU) held steady at US$0.0360, unchanged from a year ago.

    The sustainability case here rests on demand-driven rental growth. 

    During the year, the REIT signed US$26 million of annualised rent at a positive cash rental reversion of 31%. 

    DCR also secured a 10-year lease at its Linton Hall facility with an investment grade cloud provider at a 35% premium over the previous rent, lengthening its weighted average lease expiry (WALE) from 4.6 years to 5.5 years on a pro forma basis.

    Aggregate leverage remained decent at 37.1% with over US$500 million of debt headroom, while the REIT established a US$750 million medium-term note programme for financing flexibility.

    That said, DPU was flat despite the revenue surge, suggesting that growth capex, including a US$87 million Osaka data centre acquisition, is absorbing the upside for now. 

    Investors are paying for future DPU growth rather than current growth.

    At US$0.52, shares offer a trailing distribution yield of 6.9%.

    Valuetronics Holdings (SGX: BN2)

    Valuetronics is an integrated electronics manufacturing services (EMS) provider operating through two segments: Industrial and Commercial Electronics (ICE) and Consumer Electronics (CE).

    For the six months ended 30 September 2025 (1HFY2026), revenue declined 3% YoY to just under HK$837 million. 

    However, the headline number masks a deliberate transformation taking place beneath the surface.

    The dividend sustainability story centres on margin improvement through portfolio rationalisation. 

    Gross margin expanded from 16.8% to 18.8% as the higher-margin ICE segment grew to 84.5% of total revenue, up from 77.6% a year ago. 

    The ICE segment itself grew 5.7% to around HK$707 million, driven by new customers in network-access-solutions and cooling solutions for high-performance computing.

    Net profit rose 2.7% YoY to HK$93 million despite lower revenue, while operating profit before interest income jumped 14.5% to HK$73.8 million. 

    Valuetronics declared an interim and special dividend totalling HK$0.08 per share with the special dividend signalling management confidence in the company’s cash position.

    Management expects to complete the phase-out of low-margin traditional consumer lifestyle products by end-FY2026, which should further strengthen the profitability profile. 

    However, interest income fell 29.3% following US Federal Reserve rate cuts, and the group’s AI joint venture incurred losses. 

    Tariff uncertainties also loom, though its Vietnam manufacturing facility provides a strategic buffer for serving North American customers.

    At S$0.86, shares provide a trailing dividend yield of around 5.1%.

    United Hampshire US REIT (SGX: ODBU)

    United Hampshire US REIT, or UHREIT, owns 20 grocery-anchored and necessity-based retail properties along with two self-storage facilities across eight US states, with assets under management of US$731.7 million.

    UHREIT reported mixed results for 3Q2025. 

    Gross revenue rose 1.4% YoY to around US$18 million, while net property income increased 5.7% to US$12.7 million. 

    For 9M2025, however, revenue and NPI declined 1.6% and 1.9% respectively due to the absence of rental contributions from divested properties.

    The sustainability case rests on falling finance costs and disciplined capital recycling. 

    Distributable income surged 15.5% year on year in 3Q2025 to US$7 million, driven by reduced borrowing costs from a 1.5% SOFR reduction since 4Q2024. 

    DPU for 1H2025 rose 4% YoY to US$0.0209.

    Operationally, committed occupancy remained strong at 97.2% for grocery properties and 94.9% for self-storage. 

    On capital management, UHREIT completed a refinancing that enlarged its credit facility from US$250 million to US$350 million, extending its weighted average debt maturity from 1.6 years to 4.8 years and significantly reducing near-term refinancing risk.

    Most recently, UHREIT acquired Wallingford Fair Shopping Center in Connecticut for US$21.4 million (8.2% below independent valuation). 

    The freehold property is 100% occupied by anchor tenant ShopRite with a WALE of 12.8 years and is expected to increase DPU by 2%.

    The risk to watch: the yield tailwind from lower rates could reverse if interest rates rise, and top-line revenue is shrinking from divestments even as distributable income grows.

    At US$0.55, shares offer a trailing distribution yield of 7.6%.

    Get Smart: Look beyond the headline yield

    With the STI at record highs, 5%-plus yields are getting harder to find among blue chips. 

    But yield alone is never enough – what matters is the underlying business supporting the payout.

    DCR’s distributions are backed by strong data centre demand, evidenced by 31% rental reversions and a lengthening WALE. 

    Valuetronics is generating higher profits from lower revenue through a deliberate shift toward higher-margin products. 

    And UHREIT is growing distributable income through lower finance costs and accretive acquisitions anchored by necessity-based tenants.

    Each stock offers a different path to dividend sustainability. 

    As dividend investors, our job is to look past the yield percentage and understand the engine that drives it.

    A new S$5 billion initiative is changing the landscape for Singapore investors. We dug into 5 local companies that could benefit most — names you probably already know. The best part? They’re paying dividends while you wait. See the full findings inside our latest FREE report here.

    Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Telegram for the latest investing news and analyses! 

    Disclosure: Calvina Lee does not own any of the stocks mentioned. Chin Hui Leong contributed to the article and does not own any of the stocks mentioned.

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