A shift is coming. After more than three years of battling high borrowing costs, Singapore’s REITs are finally seeing light at the end of the tunnel. Meanwhile, banks that thrived in the high-rate environment may soon find the wind turning against them.
With Federal Reserve rate cuts expected in September 2025, a major sector rotation could be brewing.
Here’s what Singapore investors need to know about positioning between REITs and banking stocks.
How Interest Rate Changes Impact Singapore Stocks
Interest rate movements create opposite effects across Singapore’s major sectors.
When rates fall, REITs benefit from cheaper financing costs, more sustainable dividend yields, and higher valuations as their distributions become more attractive compared to alternatives such as government bonds.
Singapore bank stocks face the reverse dynamic. Lower interest rates typically squeeze net interest margins – the key profitability metric measuring the spread between lending rates and deposit costs.
This fundamental difference explains why rate cycles often trigger rotations between these heavyweight SGX sectors.
Singapore REIT Performance: Winners vs Strugglers in 2025
CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (SGX: C38U) exemplifies REIT resilience during the high-rate period. Despite elevated debt costs, CICT increased its distribution per unit for four consecutive years, reaching S$0.0562 in 1H2025 (up 3.5% year-on-year).
The retail and commercial REIT maintains strong fundamentals with a 37.9% gearing ratio and 96.3% occupancy. CICT’s recent acquisition of the remaining 55% stake in CapitaSpring positions it well for rate cut benefits, especially as financing costs decline.
Frasers Logistics & Commercial Trust (SGX: BUOU) illustrates the challenges facing leveraged REITs.
The REIT’s distribution dropped to S$0.0632 in 3Q FY2025 as interest expenses surged, with debt costs rising to 3.1%. Overall occupancy fell to 92.5%, primarily due to Alexandra Technopark’s occupancy plunge to 74.3% following Google’s departure.
Lower rates may provide relief for struggling REITs, but those with weak debt profiles will likely recover more slowly.
Singapore Bank Stock Outlook: Diverging Margin Pressures
Singapore’s three major banks are entering the rate cut cycle with different positioning and guidance.
DBS Group (SGX: D05) demonstrated defensive capabilities in 2Q2025, maintaining stable net interest income quarter-on-quarter despite sharp rate declines through proactive hedging.
Management projects 2025 net interest income slightly above 2024 levels, supported by double-digit wealth management growth and mid-to-high single-digit commercial banking fee expansion.
OCBC Bank (SGX: O39) faces steeper margin compression, expecting net interest income to decline by a mid-single-digit percentage in 2025.
The bank projects net interest margins of between 1.90% and 1.95%, down from current levels.
OCBC’s interim dividend already fell 6.8% year-on-year to S$0.41 for 1H2025, reflecting earnings pressure.
UOB (SGX: U11) projects full-year net interest margins of between 1.85% and 1.90%, declining from 1.96% in 1H2025, alongside low single-digit loan growth expectations.
While UOB maintained flat net interest income at S$4.7 billion in 1H2025, continued margin pressure is anticipated.
What Should Investors Do?
Rather than making binary sector bets, successful investors should focus on quality within each category.
For Singapore REITs, prioritise those with strong sponsors, conservative gearing, and proven resilience like CICT.
For Singapore bank stocks, examine diversified revenue streams beyond interest margins. DBS’s wealth management strength and UOB’s fee income growth provide defensive characteristics during margin compression cycles.
Get Smart: Quality trumps timing
The Federal Reserve’s September 2025 decision will reshape the investing landscape. REITs may finally regain their shine, while banks could see their edge soften.
In every rate cycle, winners aren’t simply defined by macro trends, but by their ability to execute well.
The smartest investors prepare early, stay diversified, and let quality lead the way.
Because when the dust settles, it’s not about perfectly timing the rotation.
It’s about owning the right companies when the cycle turns.
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Disclosure: Joanna Sng owns shares of CICT, DBS, FLCT, OCBC and UOB.