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Another special dividend from SPH in future.

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

One of the larger investments in my non-REIT investment portfolio is in SPH. Actually, SPH is also one of my oldest investments for income. 

Most of my investment in SPH is priced between $2.86 to $3.55 a share with a more recent tranche at $4.20 a share purchased in 2013 when SPH REIT was created. 

Wah! $4.20 a share? Then, lost money already lah. Well, some might look at it that way. 


For me, as an investor for income, assuming a DPS of 21c at the time, I was looking at a 5% dividend yield. With a much stronger balance sheet than SPH REIT, SPH made more sense to me as an investment for only a slightly lower dividend yield.

When SPH REIT was created, SPH declared a special dividend of 18c a share while retaining major ownership of both Paragon and Clementi Mall. In fact, when the counter went XD back then, I added to my investment again at $4.03 a share. (See: The mystery of the extra money in my account.)

Will SPH declare another special dividend when it sells a percentage of its stake in Seletar Mall to SPH REIT? Very likely.

Seletar Mall is 70% owned by SPH and the other 30% is owned by UE. It would probably be cleaner for SPH to take 100% ownership of Seletar Mall before injecting the asset into SPH REIT. 

Of course, only time will tell how things progress but we know for a fact that SPH REIT has been granted right of first refusal on Seletar Mall by SPH.

Visiting Seletar Mall has been on my to do list for a while and, recently, I did. 




I didn't see any vacant shop space and I saw a pretty good crowd on a weekday evening.

I am sure it will be a matter of time before SPH REIT is offered Seletar Mall and, as a SPH shareholder, I am looking forward to that day. 

Patience will surely be rewarded.

Related post:
SPH or SPH REIT?


SPH Reit Management CEO Susan Leng said that SPH has granted a right of first refusal to the Reit, but it is only when the sponsor has decided to divest the property that the Reit can evaluate the opportunity... - Source: AsiaOne

Get dividends while preserving or growing capital.

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Hi AK,

I'm new to your blog.

In searching for passive income in the past it was all about property and I never really considered REITS, stocks or funds in general. However I'm slowing accumulating these instruments in recent years to both diversify and bolster my passive income stream.

Too many investment and UT performance reports assume you will keep reinvesting dividends to take advantage of compounding and show wonderful returns. Unfortunately for retirees who cannot afford to roll their dividends back to their investments these numbers do not hold true.

REITS often make cash calls and one can see even the holdings that you've mention like AIMS, LMIR, Cache, Sebana over the past 3 years have lost capital for their investors (assuming you don't reinvest).

If you look at income-focused UT reports purely on a NAV basis most head south. I've seen advice by other investors that say we should look for even higher returns, spend a portion of that and reinvest the rest (eg, get a 10% dividend, spend 8% and reinvest the rest) but that also usually entails taking on much higher risk. Another talks about a hybrid between income and value & growth investing.

So if you're an investor starting out today that needs dividends as income but wants to preserve or grow his capital you're really in a hard place.

How would you advice someone in this situation?

Regards
V




Hi V,

Welcome to ASSI. :)

If we entered at a high price, it is unlikely that we are going to do well. It is not just REITs but the same with everything else, including ETFs.

If we want to invest in REITs, for example, it would be more meaningful to compare within the REITs sector to see which ones have performed better. Why did I choose to stay significantly invested in AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REITs instead of Sabana REIT, for example?

In the current day environment, if we want to preserve our capital (i.e. zero risk and volatility) and yet want to receive income, investment grade bonds or fixed deposits are the best bets. Even so, the risk is not zero.

Grow our capital (and I take this to mean appreciating prices) and yet want some income? I am sure there isn't anything that can provide such certainty although if we have a very long term investment horizon, the chances will improve if we invest in a basket of well run companies that pay dividends.

Best wishes,
AK



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