HomeNewsOpinionHow the US Federal Reserve will help Singapore REITs outshine banks

How the US Federal Reserve will help Singapore REITs outshine banks

Lower interest rates may make landlords’ incomes more attractive just as lenders’ margins start to compress

August 29, 2024 / 14:08 IST
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US Federal Reserve
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has signaled the start of monetary easing from next month.

Singapore property owners have spent a long time languishing in the shadow of the chart-topping performance of the island’s banks. But with US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaling the start of monetary easing from next month, the landlords’ day in the sun may not be far away.

Higher-for-longer global interest rates pumped up the profitability of loans at Singapore’s three homegrown banks. Last year, DBS Group Holdings Ltd, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank Ltd distributed a combined S$11.3 billion ($8.7 billion) in dividends, double the 2020 payout. This year, too, DBS has been generous in sharing the spoils of high net interest margins with investors. There hasn’t been much reason — yet — for the lenders to make aggressive provisions for loan losses.

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Contrast this bounty with the lackluster performance of real-estate investment trusts.

The members of Singapore’s REIT index have together distributed between S$5 billion and S$5.5 billion annually to unitholders over the past three years, roughly S$1 billion more than what they were paying out as they were being hobbled by Covid-19. The elevated interest cost of the post-pandemic era has been a pain point. Property owners have “taken a big hit from asset impairments over the past 12-18 months, especially for their overseas properties,” OCBC Investment Research said in a recent note.