REIT Rights Issue Singapore: How to Apply and Whether to Subscribe

REIT Rights Issue Singapore: How to Apply and Whether to Subscribe

When a Singapore REIT conducts a rights issue, it offers existing unitholders the opportunity to buy new units at a discount to the current market price. Knowing how to apply — and whether it makes financial sense to subscribe — is essential for active S-REIT investors. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

REIT Rights Issue How to Apply Singapore

What is a Rights Issue?

A rights issue allows existing unitholders to buy new units at a fixed subscription price — usually 5–15% below current market price. Rights are allocated proportionally based on existing holdings. For example, a 1-for-5 rights issue means you receive 1 right for every 5 units held. You can: (a) subscribe at the subscription price, (b) sell your nil-paid rights on SGX (if traded), or (c) allow them to lapse.

Why Do REITs Conduct Rights Issues?

S-REITs must distribute 90%+ of income, leaving little retained cash for acquisitions. Rights issues are the primary way REITs raise equity capital for property acquisitions, development projects, debt refinancing to reduce gearing below the MAS 50% cap, or general working capital. Well-executed DPU-accretive acquisitions add more income than the dilution subtracts.

Key Terms

Nil-Paid Rights (NPR): The right to subscribe for new units before payment — tradeable on SGX during the acceptance period if the prospectus permits. Subscription Price: The discounted price at which you subscribe. Provisional Allotment: Your entitlement based on holdings at the record date. Excess Applications: Applications above your entitlement — balloted if oversubscribed.

How to Apply for a REIT Rights Issue in Singapore

Step 1: Ensure units are in your CDP account at the record date. Step 2: Receive your Rights Issue Notice from CDP (postal or online portal). Step 3: Apply via: (a) Internet Banking — DBS/POSB, OCBC, or UOB (fastest); (b) ATM (if bank supports it); (c) Broker/Custodian portal — if units are in a custodian account (Tiger Brokers, Moomoo, etc.), apply through your broker’s rights application portal. Step 4: Pay at the subscription price x number of rights exercised. Step 5: New units are credited after the issue closes.

Timeline of a Singapore REIT Rights Issue

Milestone Typical Timing
SGXNet Announcement T
Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) T + 2–4 weeks
Record Date After EGM approval
Nil-Paid Rights trading period ~5 SGX trading days
Acceptance/application deadline ~10–14 days after record date
New units credited to CDP/broker ~2 weeks after close

Should You Subscribe?

Key questions: (1) Is the acquisition DPU-accretive? Check the circular’s pro-forma DPU projections. (2) Is the subscription price genuinely discounted vs intrinsic value? (3) Does gearing remain comfortable post-acquisition? Use our Gearing Ratio Calculator. (4) Do you have cash available to subscribe? If not, sell nil-paid rights (if tradeable) to avoid dilution without cash outlay. For broader S-REIT context, see our Best S-REITs Singapore 2026 guide and the Preferential Offering REIT glossary page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a rights issue in Singapore REITs?
A rights issue is when a Singapore REIT raises capital by offering existing unitholders the right to buy new units at a discount. Unitholders can subscribe, sell their nil-paid rights (if tradeable), or allow the rights to lapse.
How do I apply for a REIT rights issue in Singapore?
Apply via internet banking (DBS/POSB, OCBC, UOB), ATM, or your broker’s rights application portal if units are held in a custodian account. Submit before the acceptance deadline in the rights issue circular.
What happens if I do not apply for a rights issue?
If you do not subscribe or sell your nil-paid rights, they lapse and you receive no compensation. Your existing holding is diluted by the new units issued to other subscribers.
Are REIT rights issues good or bad for unitholders?
It depends on whether the acquisition is DPU-accretive. If the new property increases income proportionally more than the dilution, it benefits unitholders long-term. Poorly priced or non-accretive acquisitions can reduce DPU and unit price.
Can I apply for excess rights in a Singapore REIT rights issue?
Yes. Rights issue circulars typically allow applications for excess units beyond your entitlement. Excess applications are allocated on a balloting basis if the issue is oversubscribed.