23-11-2010, 10:43 PM
Nick Wrote:I understand that the lease for industrial properties tend to last for 40-60 years while retail properties last for 99 years. Does this means that their assets are depleting as well albeit at a much lower rate or can they renew the leases with minimal capex ? I understand that Indonesian leases can be renewed at extremely low prices according to First REIT CFO and they have renewed leases for 2 plots of land since listing with minimal capex. Is it the same for local properties ?
In Singapore industrial land is leased for 30 years with the option to extend for another 30 years. After that the land reverts to the state. Since Singapore is only 45 years old, no land has reached the end of its second 30-year lease so nobody knows what will happen.
For commercial properties the standard lease term is 99 years but some leases have been successfully topped up to a fresh 99-year lease by paying a premium.
Governments put a limit on leases to ensure that the lessees play ball e.g. create jobs, pay taxes. The threat of non-renewal is a useful bargaining chip, especially when the lessee has already invested significant amounts of money into buildings and fittings.
All things equal, governments would prefer to renew a lease. But conditions - and governments - change. Land that was in a deserted area may now be in the heart of the business district. The shopping mall may be in the way of the train station. And so on. A pro-business government may be replaced by one that is less friendly. A clean government may be replaced by a corrupt one.
When the decision is made to take back a lease the government has a few choices. It may be nice and pay compensation. If it is smart it will time its plans to coincide with lease expiry so that no compensation need be paid. If it is ruthless it will simply take back the lease by eminent domain. In Singapore the equivalent is the Land Acquisition Act which allows the government to take any land they please if it is to be used for the public good. And if you piss off the government they can rezone your precious mall as a road, THEN take it (and pay you the road's market value of $1 for it).
While the prudent thing to do is to factor in the depreciation of a leasehold property, in practice, unless there are less than 30 years to go it doesn't make much difference. If there are 50 years on the lease, the annual depreciation is 2% which is dwarfed by movements in market value. But with 20 years or less to go, the annual cost is 5% which cannot be ignored.
Ships only last 25 years on average so from day one you lose 4% annually. If you own one for long enough you will still see the swings in market value through the business cycle. Astute operators buy new ships towards the end of a bust, when prices are lowest, and shrink their fleet during the mid-late periods of a boom, when prices are highest. That is how shipping fortunes are made - by trading ships, not operating them.
Nick Wrote:Is KGT operating as a self liquidating trust ?
Yes. If you study the KGT prospectus you will notice that no money is being allocated towards renewing the leases in future. In condominium parlance, there is no sinking fund. So when the last lease expires in 2034, that's it - the trust's value goes to zero. The trust has a 90% payout policy which won't allow it to accumulate a meaningful sum. Sometime before the first lease expires in 2024 it will have to do a fundraising to renew that lease, which of course means the unitholders end up giving back all the "income" they received in previous years. Same thing applies for the other 2 leases expiring in 2029 and 2034.
Nick Wrote:I also noticed that quite a number of Western shipping companies tend to pay high yielding dividends.
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Granted that their dividends will fluctuate since shipping rates are always on the move, are such companies better than a shipping trust as a yield investment ?
Dividends are a function of profits, which are a function of freight rates, which are beyond the owners' control. So investing in a shipping company for the yield is not a good idea - the dividend will vary from year to year and may even be omitted in bad years. If the company is not well managed it may also call for a rights issue in a crisis (see: NOL).
If you are after yield it would be better to look in industries where revenues and profits are fairly steady.