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 REIT V3, Real Estate Investment Trust

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SKY 1809
post Sep 5 2012, 02:46 PM

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QUOTE(JamesPond @ Sep 5 2012, 02:23 PM)
do hektar right giving any bonus warrant? or 1:1 only?
*
No co warrants to be issued for REITS.

So far I know of.
JamesPond
post Sep 5 2012, 02:47 PM

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compared with the market price. It is not worth to exercise the rights.
better sell
ronnie
post Sep 5 2012, 03:03 PM

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QUOTE(JamesPond @ Sep 5 2012, 02:47 PM)
compared with the market price. It is not worth to exercise the rights.
better sell
*
Based on my earlier buy price of HEKTAR, I will exercise the rights + buy excess rights ... won't be buying HEKTAR-TR from the market
JamesPond
post Sep 5 2012, 04:13 PM

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why dont just sell the rights?
hwo to exercise the rights? your remisier help you or you go to the registrar yourself.
ronnie
post Sep 5 2012, 04:33 PM

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QUOTE(JamesPond @ Sep 5 2012, 04:13 PM)
why dont just sell the rights?
hwo to exercise the rights? your remisier help you or you go to the registrar yourself.
*
Pay by Bank Draft + RM2.15 (Bank Draft Fees) + RM10 (Setem Hasil) + RM3.50 (Pos Ekspress)

This post has been edited by ronnie: Sep 5 2012, 10:05 PM
kiwi_cream
post Sep 5 2012, 04:43 PM

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Hi, anyone can explain what is Excess Rights Application? Do i need to fill in this part if i just want exercise the rights i have?


JamesPond
post Sep 5 2012, 04:55 PM

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QUOTE(ronnie @ Sep 5 2012, 04:33 PM)
Pay by Bank Draft + RM2.15 (Bank Draft Fees) + RM10 (Stamp Duty) + RM3.50 (Pos Ekspress)
*
stamp duty, you go to lhdn personally?
exercise right waste a lot of time. That is why i hate to do it.
just sell the right over the market. simplify your life.
H86
post Sep 5 2012, 07:22 PM

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QUOTE(ronnie @ Sep 5 2012, 04:33 PM)
Pay by Bank Draft + RM2.15 (Bank Draft Fees) + RM10 (Stamp Duty) + RM3.50 (Pos Ekspress)
*
If apply for excess rights, the balance of $ (not successful 1) should be post back to you by cheque or bank draft?

Do you need 2 bank draft for it? Or 1 will do?

This post has been edited by H86: Sep 5 2012, 07:23 PM
cherroy
post Sep 5 2012, 09:43 PM

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QUOTE(JamesPond @ Sep 5 2012, 04:55 PM)
stamp duty, you go to lhdn personally?
exercise right waste a lot of time. That is why i hate to do it.
just sell the right over the market. simplify your life.
*
Stamp duty means those Hasil Stamp that can be bought from Pos Office.



ronnie
post Sep 5 2012, 10:03 PM

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QUOTE(H86 @ Sep 5 2012, 07:22 PM)
If apply for excess rights, the balance of $ (not successful 1) should be post back to you by cheque or bank draft?

Do you need 2 bank draft for it? Or 1 will do?
*
1 bank draft to pay for the Rights Allocated + Rights Purchased from market (4-11 Sep 2012)
1 bank draft to pay for Excess Rights
ronnie
post Sep 5 2012, 10:05 PM

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QUOTE(kiwi_cream @ Sep 5 2012, 04:43 PM)
Hi, anyone can explain what is Excess Rights Application? Do i need to fill in this part if i just want exercise the rights i have?
*
If you don't intend to get the Excess Rights, skip that part.

Rights Issue allocated is based on Mother Share held
Excess Rights is Rights not taken up by anyone ... that'w why call "excess"
prophetjul
post Sep 6 2012, 07:35 AM

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Singapore REITs Yield World’s Best Returns: Southeast Asia

Singapore’s real estate investment trusts, the best performing in the world this year, are luring investors after a shopping spree for properties across Asia gives them a broader stream of rental income.



An elevated view shows the buildings in Singapore's skyline. Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg
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Singapore’s $38 billion REIT market has returned an average 37 percent in 2012, twice the gains in the U.S., U.K. and Japan, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Australia, the largest REIT market in the Asia-Pacific region with $86 billion, advanced 24 percent.

Growth among Singapore REITs was led by asset acquisitions and rental appreciation, with total rental revenue increasing 5.8 percent annually between 2008 and 2011, according to property broker CBRE Group Inc. In the first half, Singapore REITs were the second-most active purchasers after Japan in Asia, buying assets in Australia, China, Japan, Malaysia and South Korea, and accounting for 33 percent of acquisitions by the region’s REITs since 2009, CBRE said.

“Singapore remains amongst the last few AAA rated economies,” Priyaranjan Kumar, Singapore-based regional director of the capital markets group at broker Cushman & Wakefield, said in an interview. “Its real estate market has received unprecedented attention from most investors as it’s seen to offer a good proxy for the increasingly recognized strength of the Asian consumer.”

The gap between their yield and interest rates is double that in Australia, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Property trusts in the island-state offer an average 413 basis- point income return premium relative to 10-year government bonds, while in Australia they average 192 basis points, data compiled by Bloomberg showed. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Game Change

Singapore’s REITs have a dividend yield of 6.47 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That compares with to 4.97 percent in Hong Kong and 5.01 percent in Australia.

Economic growth in the Southeast Asian island-nation across the Johor Strait from Malaysia will probably accelerate to 3.9 percent next year from 2.7 percent in 2012, the International Monetary Fund forecast in its World Economic Outlook report in April. The advanced economies, including the U.S. and U.K., are estimated to expand 2 percent in 2013.

“The game has changed from capital appreciation to capital preservation,” Tim Gibson, a Singapore-based fund manager for Asia-Pacific property equities at Henderson Global Investors, said.

Budget Surplus

Singapore boasts the world’s biggest budget surplus relative to economic output, adding to demand for its currency as Europe’s fiscal woes roil global markets, the IMF said. The Singapore dollar is the best performer this year after the Philippine peso among the 11 most-traded Asian currencies tracked by Bloomberg. Singapore is one of seven nations with AAA ratings and stable outlooks from Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings.

Tax incentives, which include exemptions on foreign income received by Singapore-listed REITs and distributing at least 90 percent of their income as dividends to unit holders, also helped boost demand.

Singapore offers a pipeline of assets from developers, a fair regulatory environment and a base of international investors and quality sponsors, Jason Kern, Hong Kong-based managing director and head of real estate and lodging advisory for Asia-Pacific at HSBC Holdings Plc, said in an interview. A sponsor is a developer with a stake in the REIT and whose properties form the trust’s pipeline of assets to be purchased.

Outperforming Stocks

“Coming out of the global financial crisis, investors have focused on transparent, predictable markets with sustainable income profiles,” Cushman’s Kumar said.

Singapore REITs also have a liquid secondary market, low transaction costs, and low leverage compared with Japan and other large REIT markets, Kumar added.

Four of the top 10 best-performing REITs with assets of more than $250 million in the region are from Singapore, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Including dividend yields, Frasers Commercial Trust (FCOT) has returned 58 percent this year, AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REIT 48 percent, and Keppel Land Ltd.’s K-REIT Asia (KREIT) 46 percent.

Singapore REITs have outperformed the city-state’s benchmark Straits Times Index, which has climbed 13 percent this year. The 10-year government bond yield in Singapore was 1.38 percent as of Aug. 29. Adjusted for inflation, Singaporean savers currently receive a negative real return on their savings of 4.79 percent.

Market Recovery

The REIT market in the Asia-Pacific region is worth $205 billion, more than before the global financial crisis, according to the Asia Pacific Real Estate Association. European REITs are below the levels before the crisis, while North America, the world’s largest REIT market, has seen assets climb 82 percent from December 2007, the data showed.

Singapore is the region’s third-largest REIT market after Australia and Japan’s $45 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The real estate market in Singapore recovered sharply after the first quarter of 2009, with prime rents and capital values increasing in excess of 60 percent over lows during the global financial crisis, according to New York-based Cushman.

Total investment turnover for Asian REITs reached US$7 billion during the first six months of the year, a 14 percent decline from the second half of 2011, on concerns over the eurozone debt crisis and the weaker outlook for the regional economy, Los Angeles-based CBRE said.

More Selective

“Although Asian REITs are expected to remain in buying mode, they will likely turn more selective towards future acquisitions, with yield enhancement and insulation from the global economic slowdown emerging as important criteria,” CBRE analysts Ada Choi and Leo Chung wrote in a report on Asia’s REIT market last month.

Earnings growth, or distribution per unit of Singapore REITs, will slow to 4 percent in the two years ending 2014, with the previous highs of a 13 percent growth rate between 2006 and 2008 appearing unachievable, Singapore-based analysts, led by Derek Tan, at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. said in an Aug. 21 note. Maturing portfolios will add to slowing growth, Tan said.

The outlook for Singapore’s commercial-leasing segment is becoming more challenging and the funding environment is likely to become more volatile over the next two years, Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Wee Khim Loy said in a note on Aug. 2. A dislocation in the credit markets may cause significant financial stress because the trusts rely on bank funding, the rating company said. Leverage levels of most office REITs could become weak if property values decline by as much as 10 percent, it said, maintaining a negative outlook for the office segment.

Uncertain Outlook

Still, Singapore REITs are well placed to weather tight operating conditions as the trusts have increased their financial flexibility and diversified their funding sources, the rating company said.

There remains ample room for future growth in REITs as prime rents remain 25 percent to 30 percent off their peak in the second quarter of 2008, Kumar said. At current yields, Singapore REITs are attractive for investors looking for total returns, he said.

“There are a lot of uncertainties in terms of economic outlook, so investors are actually looking for stability, defensive earnings,” Eddy Loh, a Singapore-based equity strategist for Asia at Barclays Plc, said in a phone interview. “Coupled with the fact that we still have a very low interest rate environment and the dividend yields for some of these REITs can go up 6 percent to 7 percent that seems to be very attractive to investors actually.” Loh is advising clients to bet on industrial and retail REITs.

REIT IPOs

The three-month Singapore Interbank Offered Rate is at an all-time low of just under 0.4 percent, compared with a peak of 3.56 percent in 2006, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The performance of real estate trusts is prompting a flurry of initial share sales by REITs that may top $2 billion, with as many as six companies planning to list their assets, according to HSBC’s Kern. That’s the most since 2010 when Singapore REITs raised $4.13 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Ascendas Hospitality Trust (ASHT) raised about S$459 million ($369 million) in July, while Far East Organization, Singapore’s biggest closely held developer, drew S$717.6 million in an initial share sale of a hotel trust last month.

“If we think we are five years through a lost decade from a global economic standpoint, then we will see money flowing into REITs as people will continue to chase yields,” Gibson said. “Unless we see interest rates increasing at any point in time, then that will stop the party, but I don’t think you need to be dancing too close to the door just yet.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Pooja Thakur in Singapore at pthakur@bloomberg.net

JamesPond
post Sep 6 2012, 08:42 AM

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QUOTE(cherroy @ Sep 5 2012, 09:43 PM)
Stamp duty means those Hasil Stamp that can be bought from Pos Office.
*
can i buy the pos office hasil stamp for my tenancy agreement?
fergie1100
post Sep 6 2012, 09:36 AM

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QUOTE(kiwi_cream @ Sep 5 2012, 04:43 PM)
Hi, anyone can explain what is Excess Rights Application? Do i need to fill in this part if i just want exercise the rights i have?
*
just leave it blank if u do not wish to apply for excess..
as not everyone will accept the rights shares offered to them, u can apply excess to avoid the odd lot..... as the 1st allocation rule normally will be minimizing the odd lot incident.....


Added on September 6, 2012, 9:37 am
QUOTE(JamesPond @ Sep 5 2012, 04:55 PM)
stamp duty, you go to lhdn personally?
exercise right waste a lot of time. That is why i hate to do it.
just sell the right over the market. simplify your life.
*
better call it revenue stamp... u can get it from the post office...


Added on September 6, 2012, 9:57 am
QUOTE(H86 @ Sep 5 2012, 07:22 PM)
If apply for excess rights, the balance of $ (not successful 1) should be post back to you by cheque or bank draft?

Do you need 2 bank draft for it? Or 1 will do?
*
by cheque... but not sure what kind of form... & the cheque definitely wont bounce tongue.gif


Added on September 6, 2012, 10:27 am
QUOTE(JamesPond @ Sep 6 2012, 08:42 AM)
can i buy the pos office hasil stamp for my tenancy agreement?
*
yep, should be the same thing..... u can buy 10 RM1 stamps & stick it all over the form biggrin.gif

This post has been edited by fergie1100: Sep 6 2012, 10:27 AM
JamesPond
post Sep 6 2012, 10:38 AM

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hasil stamp and normal stamp are same?
I dont think so, the hasil stamp got special note with hasil word on it.

I dont understand the whole thing about tenancy agreement. They say once it is stamp by hasil, means it is valid on this date. If you can easily buy the stamp and stick it. Means you can forge the document with the stamping yourself?

Please correct me, if my assumption is wrong.
Smurfs
post Sep 6 2012, 10:50 AM

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new thread is ready !

http://forum.lowyat.net/index.php?showtopic=2498000
JamesPond
post Sep 6 2012, 10:54 AM

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so fast got new threat d?

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