Singapore REIT Secondary Offering: What It Means for Unitholders

Singapore REIT Secondary Offering: What It Means for Unitholders

Definition: A Singapore REIT secondary offering is a capital raising exercise where an S-REIT issues new units to institutional or retail investors to raise equity for acquisitions, debt repayment, or capital expenditure. It dilutes existing unitholders but funds growth that may be DPU-accretive.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Please consult a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions. Data current as at Q1 2026.

Table of Contents — Singapore REIT Secondary Offering: What It Means for Unitholders
  1. What Is a Secondary Offering in S-REITs?

    A secondary offering (also called a private placement or equity fundraising) is when a Singapore REIT issues new units to raise fresh equity capital. Unlike a rights issue — where new units are offered to existing unitholders pro-rata — a secondary offering is typically directed at institutional investors in an accelerated book-build process completed within 24–48 hours.

    S-REITs use secondary offerings primarily to fund property acquisitions while maintaining gearing within MAS limits (aggregate leverage below 50%, with most REITs targeting 35–45%).

    How a Secondary Offering Works

    1. Announcement: The REIT announces the proposed acquisition and simultaneous equity fundraising on the SGX
    2. Book-build: Investment banks solicit institutional interest at a range of issue prices
    3. Pricing: Final issue price set — typically 3–8% discount to last traded price or 5-day VWAP
    4. New units issued: Institutional investors receive new units at the placement price
    5. Concurrent retail offer (sometimes): A small tranche offered to retail investors via ATM or internet banking
    6. SGX listing: New units begin trading 3–5 days after issuance

    Impact on Existing Unitholders

    A secondary offering is dilutive — it increases total units outstanding, reducing each existing unitholder’s percentage ownership. If distributable income does not grow proportionally, DPU per unit may fall.

    However, if the acquisition is accretive — the yield on the acquired property exceeds the all-in cost of new capital — total distributable income grows more than the unit count, and DPU can actually increase. This is the key test for any REIT equity fundraising.

    How to Evaluate a REIT Secondary Offering

    Question to Ask Why It Matters
    Is the acquisition DPU-accretive? If yes, long-term unitholders benefit despite short-term dilution
    What is the discount to market price? 3–5% is normal; >8% may signal weak demand or distress
    What is the NPI yield of the acquired asset? Should comfortably exceed the REIT’s cost of capital (~5–6%)
    How does post-acquisition gearing look? Should remain below 40–45% for financial flexibility
    Is there a retail tranche? Retail tranche inclusion is more equitable for existing unitholders

    Secondary Offering vs Rights Issue: Key Differences

    Rights issues give existing unitholders the right to subscribe to new units pro-rata — preserving ownership percentage if you subscribe. Secondary offerings bypass existing unitholders and sell directly to institutions, causing immediate dilution without offering existing holders the chance to maintain their stake. Some REITs combine both approaches. See our Best S-REITs Singapore 2026 guide which tracks recent acquisition and equity fundraising activity.

  2. FAQ

What Is a Secondary Offering in S-REITs?

A secondary offering (also called a private placement or equity fundraising) is when a Singapore REIT issues new units to raise fresh equity capital. Unlike a rights issue — where new units are offered to existing unitholders pro-rata — a secondary offering is typically directed at institutional investors in an accelerated book-build process completed within 24–48 hours.

S-REITs use secondary offerings primarily to fund property acquisitions while maintaining gearing within MAS limits (aggregate leverage below 50%, with most REITs targeting 35–45%).

How a Secondary Offering Works

  1. Announcement: The REIT announces the proposed acquisition and simultaneous equity fundraising on the SGX
  2. Book-build: Investment banks solicit institutional interest at a range of issue prices
  3. Pricing: Final issue price set — typically 3–8% discount to last traded price or 5-day VWAP
  4. New units issued: Institutional investors receive new units at the placement price
  5. Concurrent retail offer (sometimes): A small tranche offered to retail investors via ATM or internet banking
  6. SGX listing: New units begin trading 3–5 days after issuance

Impact on Existing Unitholders

A secondary offering is dilutive — it increases total units outstanding, reducing each existing unitholder’s percentage ownership. If distributable income does not grow proportionally, DPU per unit may fall.

However, if the acquisition is accretive — the yield on the acquired property exceeds the all-in cost of new capital — total distributable income grows more than the unit count, and DPU can actually increase. This is the key test for any REIT equity fundraising.

How to Evaluate a REIT Secondary Offering

Question to Ask Why It Matters
Is the acquisition DPU-accretive? If yes, long-term unitholders benefit despite short-term dilution
What is the discount to market price? 3–5% is normal; >8% may signal weak demand or distress
What is the NPI yield of the acquired asset? Should comfortably exceed the REIT’s cost of capital (~5–6%)
How does post-acquisition gearing look? Should remain below 40–45% for financial flexibility
Is there a retail tranche? Retail tranche inclusion is more equitable for existing unitholders

Secondary Offering vs Rights Issue: Key Differences

Rights issues give existing unitholders the right to subscribe to new units pro-rata — preserving ownership percentage if you subscribe. Secondary offerings bypass existing unitholders and sell directly to institutions, causing immediate dilution without offering existing holders the chance to maintain their stake. Some REITs combine both approaches. See our Best S-REITs Singapore 2026 guide which tracks recent acquisition and equity fundraising activity.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a secondary offering in a Singapore REIT?
A secondary offering is when an S-REIT issues new units to raise equity capital — typically for funding acquisitions. Unlike a rights issue (which offers new units to existing unitholders), a secondary offering is usually directed at institutional investors in an accelerated book-build.
Is a REIT secondary offering good or bad for existing unitholders?
It depends on whether the acquisition is DPU-accretive. If the acquired asset generates more distributable income than the dilution from new units, existing unitholders benefit long-term. A poorly priced offering at a low-yield acquisition can be harmful.
How much discount is typical for a Singapore REIT placement?
Typically 3–8% below the last traded price or 5-day VWAP. Discounts above 8% may signal weak institutional demand, which should be scrutinised carefully.
Can retail investors participate in a Singapore REIT secondary offering?
Sometimes. Some REITs include a concurrent retail tranche (via ATM or internet banking). However, primary allocation goes to institutional investors. Check the offering announcement on SGX for retail tranche details.
What is the difference between a secondary offering and a rights issue for S-REITs?
A rights issue offers new units to existing unitholders pro-rata — they can maintain their percentage ownership. A secondary offering sells new units directly to institutions, immediately diluting existing unitholders without giving them the right to subscribe first.