Capitaland Investment

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Can anyone enlighten me the meaning of "yield accretive" acquisition?
In the case of the latest acquisition of lyf Funan, the acquisition yield is 4.7%. But the dividend yield for unit holders is around 6.7%. How is it that it is yield accretive?
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(01-10-2024, 12:54 PM)Shiyi Wrote: Can anyone enlighten me the meaning of "yield accretive" acquisition?
In the case of the latest acquisition of lyf Funan, the acquisition yield is 4.7%. But the dividend yield for unit holders is around 6.7%. How is it that it is yield accretive?

You're looking at different things. From the announcement, the EBITDA yield for acquisition is 4.7% and for divestment it is 3.2%. The DPS increases by 1.5%. Dividend yield is a per-share measure which depends on unit price.
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(01-10-2024, 12:54 PM)Shiyi Wrote: Can anyone enlighten me the meaning of "yield accretive" acquisition?
In the case of the latest acquisition of lyf Funan, the acquisition yield is 4.7%. But the dividend yield for unit holders is around 6.7%. How is it that it is yield accretive?

Hi Shiyi,

Acquisition yield does not necessarily have to be higher than the dividend yield for it to be accretive. We can think of dividend yield as the "cost of equity". In order to be accretive, the acquisition yield has to be > than the "cost of equity" when equity is required to fund the acquisition.

In this particular case, no new equity is raised. But of course, this still does not explain exactly why. I think the below statement in the announcement should make things clearer:

The entry yield is attractive at 150 basis points higher compared to the exit EBITDA yield4 of Citadines Mount Sophia Singapore of 3.2% for FY 2023. Following the Proposed Acquisition and taking into account the Citadines Mount Sophia Divestment, CLAS’ total distribution is expected to increase by S$3.5 million, which translates to a DPS accretion of 1.5% on a FY 2023 pro forma basis.

In essence, the comparison of "accretive-ness" is done by comparing lyf Funan (higher cap rates) with Citadines Mount Sophia's performance (low cap rates), since this is an asset recycling sort of move. We can also imagine that we swap 100k worth of SSB@2.5% with 6 months T-bills@3.5% - Our 1million portfolio, let's say have a 5% yield (thanks to REITs) before the swap, will now have yield>5% post-swap, isn't it?
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https://www.mingtiandi.com/real-estate/f...c-capital/

CapitaLand Investment Ltd has struck a deal to expand its fund management business with the proposed acquisition of Singapore-based real estate investment manager SC Capital Partners, tripling its funds under management in Japan while growing its business across Asia Pacific.

Under the terms of an agreement announced Wednesday, the Temasek Holdings-backed goliath will acquire an initial 40 percent stake in the firm led by Thai financier Suchad Chiaranussati for S$280 million ($214 million) in cash, with options to acquire two additional 30 percent stakes on the third and fifth anniversary of the transaction closing date, subject to the fulfillment of conditions. The two firms expect the initial investment to close in the first quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approvals, with CapitaLand Investment attaining full ownership by 2030.

Chiaranussati, who will retain full autonomy over the business until CapitaLand Investment completes its acquisition of the remaining 60 percent stake in the fund manager, pointed to the partnership as enabling the firms to capitalise on growth opportunities and dislocations in Asia Pacific’s property markets.
https://adragonhoard.blogspot.com

"A fool is someone who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing"
Oscar Wilde
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https://www.mingtiandi.com/real-estate/o...s-wingate/

Singapore’s CapitaLand Investment is reportedly close to acquiring Melbourne-based fund manager Wingate Group, as the Temasek-backed giant carries out a strategic realignment with Australia as a focus market.

The two sides have been in talks for at least three months with a focus on the private credit and commercial property units of Wingate, a 20-year-old firm with A$8 billion ($5.2 billion) in funds under management, according to a Monday article by the Australian Financial Review.

AFR said a deal was originally expected in August but is yet to be signed after talks dragged. The deal size is likely to be comparable to Regal Partners’ A$235 million acquisition of Melbourne-based private credit specialist Merricks Capital in June, the report said.

A CapitaLand representative had no comment on the AFR report when contacted Monday, saying only that the Singaporean firm would “make an announcement when there are material developments.” Wingate had not responded to Mingtiandi’s inquiries at the time of publication.

Rebalancing Act
As part of its Investor Day festivities last week, SGX-listed CapitaLand Investment announced Thursday that it was committing up to A$1 billion to increase its funds under management in Australia and hiring two Credit Suisse veterans to lead the charge.
https://adragonhoard.blogspot.com

"A fool is someone who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing"
Oscar Wilde
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