Another "non core" divestment by CICT. The exit yield is lower than CICT's current dividend yield and so it will be accretive to shareholders. I had assumed the ideal buyer would be her sister CL Ascott Trust (CLAS) but since CLAS is trading at much higher yields, there isn't a chance. The would-be buyer would have to be folks with deep pockets and looking for wealth preservation/capital gains over consistent payouts.
In general, Mgt contracts are signed for ~10+10years. Since Citadines Raffles Place only started operations in 2022, I would assume that the mgt contract with Ascott Ltd remains as well. There is probably also less reason/s to change your operating partner due to the connections that the CL commercial property manager has with the corporates.
CICT and JV partners divest Citadines Raffles Place at CapitaSpring for $280 mil
CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (CICT) and its joint venture partners — CapitaLand Development and Mitsubishi Estate Asia with respective stakes of 45%, 45%, and 10% — have divested the serviced residence component of CapitaSpring for $280 million. The asset divested is the 299-unit Citadines Raffles Place Singapore, which began operations in February 2022.
Based on CICT’s 45% stake, its estimated proceeds from the sale are about $37.8 million, with an exit yield of approximately 3.6%. The divestment is expected to be completed by 2Q2025.
While CICT declined to disclose the buyers, it was previously reported in October 2024 that the joint purchasers were US investment giant BlackRock and the hospitality arm of Malaysian developer YTL Corp.
https://www.edgeprop.sg/property-news/ci...ng-280-mil