Let's do some math to confirm our hypothesis:
Let's assume a REIT has asset A (value=100, distribution=3, cap rate = 3%) and rest of assets (value=900, distribution=57, cap rate= 6.3%).
The profile of this REIT as below:
asset = 1000, debt = 400 (leverage = 40%, within limit)
equity = 600, market cap = 400
no. of shares = 600
NAV = 600/600 = 1
market price per share = 400/600 = 0.667 (0.667x of NAV)
yield = 60/400 = 15%, DPU = 60/600 = 0.1
One day, it sells asset A at valuation and hence locked in the low cap rate --> gets 100cash. Balance sheet becomes:
distribution = 57
asset = 900, debt = 400, cash = 100
equity = 600
Option 1: repays all to debt
distribution = 57
asset = 900, debt = 300 (leverage = 33%)
equity = 600, market cap = 400
no. of shares = 600
NAV = 600/600 = 1
yield = 57/400 = 14.3%, DPU = 57/600 = 0.095
Option 2: pays out all in the form of share buyback
distribution = 57
asset = 900, debt = 400 (44.4%, within limit)
equity = 500, market cap = 333 (assume similar 0.667x of equity)
no. of shares = 600 - 150 = 450 (100 will buy 150shares at market price=0.667)
NAV = 500/450 = 1.11
yield = 57/333 = 17%, DPU = 57/450 = 0.126
(post action, market cap will adjust upwards to reflect the better DPU and compress the yield)
The example above is simplistic in the sense that costs related to debt, trading and supply/demand mechanics are assumed to be zero. A few notes:
(1) From option1, as mentioned by ghchua, low debt is never what REIT managers want. As long as debt costs are low (as they were before 1H22), leveraging up always juices returns for all stakeholders. Of course, interest costs are not accounted here. If debt interest costs are higher than what the asset yields (low cap rate), then it probably make sense on a DPU basis to do so.
(2) It is entirely possible for REIT managers to divest assets and generate value at the same time. An example would be Option2 where assets are sold at valuation (hence low cap rates) when it is in contrast with the REIT's overall market valuation/yield. Sell dear and buy cheap always work. We could argue that this is a way for REIT managers to create value now. But of course, it generally wouldn't happen If divestment do happen, the better way is to use the proceeds from the low yielding asset to repay high interest debt now. Survive now and when times are right in the future, leverage up when your asset valuation starts increasing again. Probably much easier to ask banks than shareholders for money!
Let's assume a REIT has asset A (value=100, distribution=3, cap rate = 3%) and rest of assets (value=900, distribution=57, cap rate= 6.3%).
The profile of this REIT as below:
asset = 1000, debt = 400 (leverage = 40%, within limit)
equity = 600, market cap = 400
no. of shares = 600
NAV = 600/600 = 1
market price per share = 400/600 = 0.667 (0.667x of NAV)
yield = 60/400 = 15%, DPU = 60/600 = 0.1
One day, it sells asset A at valuation and hence locked in the low cap rate --> gets 100cash. Balance sheet becomes:
distribution = 57
asset = 900, debt = 400, cash = 100
equity = 600
Option 1: repays all to debt
distribution = 57
asset = 900, debt = 300 (leverage = 33%)
equity = 600, market cap = 400
no. of shares = 600
NAV = 600/600 = 1
yield = 57/400 = 14.3%, DPU = 57/600 = 0.095
Option 2: pays out all in the form of share buyback
distribution = 57
asset = 900, debt = 400 (44.4%, within limit)
equity = 500, market cap = 333 (assume similar 0.667x of equity)
no. of shares = 600 - 150 = 450 (100 will buy 150shares at market price=0.667)
NAV = 500/450 = 1.11
yield = 57/333 = 17%, DPU = 57/450 = 0.126
(post action, market cap will adjust upwards to reflect the better DPU and compress the yield)
The example above is simplistic in the sense that costs related to debt, trading and supply/demand mechanics are assumed to be zero. A few notes:
(1) From option1, as mentioned by ghchua, low debt is never what REIT managers want. As long as debt costs are low (as they were before 1H22), leveraging up always juices returns for all stakeholders. Of course, interest costs are not accounted here. If debt interest costs are higher than what the asset yields (low cap rate), then it probably make sense on a DPU basis to do so.
(2) It is entirely possible for REIT managers to divest assets and generate value at the same time. An example would be Option2 where assets are sold at valuation (hence low cap rates) when it is in contrast with the REIT's overall market valuation/yield. Sell dear and buy cheap always work. We could argue that this is a way for REIT managers to create value now. But of course, it generally wouldn't happen If divestment do happen, the better way is to use the proceeds from the low yielding asset to repay high interest debt now. Survive now and when times are right in the future, leverage up when your asset valuation starts increasing again. Probably much easier to ask banks than shareholders for money!