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Perennial China Retail Trust: Weak debut?

Thursday, June 9, 2011

On 19 May, I did a relatively lengthy blog post on why I found Perennial China Retail Trust (PCRT) unattractive as an investment.


At that time, they were going to price it between 70c to 76c per unit. Ultimately, the trust was offered at 70c per unit, the lowest price in the range, and it was only 1.6x subscribed. The suggestion that the market is not enthusiastic about the IPO is not far off the mark.

Today, it closed at 61c or 12.86% lower than its IPO price of 70c. A weak debut? That would be an understatement.

Would I be interested in PCRT if its price were to weaken further? Yes, I would be interested if its distribution yield for 2011 were to be much higher than the 5.3% at its IPO price of 70c.

At today's closing price of 61c, its distribution yield has improved to 6.08% for the year 2011. However, it is still not attractive enough for me to invest for income. In my last blog post on this, I compared the distribution yield to CapitaRetail China Trust which was offering a distribution yield of 6.83%.

So, unless PCRT trades at a much higher distribution yield and this is really to compensate for the rather risky investment that it is, I would not be tempted. At 54c per unit, PCRT would trade at a distribution yield of 6.87% and, perhaps, I would be interested then.

Read article here.

Related post:
Perennial China Retail Trust.

FSL Trust: Private placement.

On 2 June, I blogged about FSL Trust's acquisition of a vessel and I was wondering if it would be a positive catalyst for its unit price since distributable income would likely increase.  Read blog post here.

Fast on the heals of that acquisition is another one. This time, "the acquisition will be fully funded by the drawdown of US$23 million from the trust's existing revolving credit facility and US$23 million in cash - with around US$15 million to come from a private placement of up to 57 million new FSL Trust units." Read full article here.

So, although distributable income would likely increase, distribution per unit might not increase much since there is a private placement involved. The new units would be issued at a discounted price of 35c/unit and represent 8.6% of the total number of units in issue after the placement exercise is concluded.

Read announcement here.


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