S-REIT
Singapore REIT Valuation Metrics
Singapore REIT valuation metrics are the financial ratios used to assess whether an S-REIT is fairly priced and financially healthy, including price-to-NAV (P/NAV), distribution yield, aggregate leverage (gearing), interest coverage ratio (ICR), and weighted average lease expiry (WALE).
Key S-REIT Valuation Metrics
Singapore REIT analysis combines real estate fundamentals with trust structure considerations specific to MAS regulations. Unlike equities — where P/E ratio dominates — S-REIT valuation uses a distinct set of metrics. This article is for informational purposes only.
1. Price-to-NAV (P/NAV) Ratio
P/NAV below 1.0x means the unit price is below the appraised property value. As at Q1 2026, the iEdge S-REIT Index median P/NAV is approximately 0.82x. P/NAV below 0.8x signals deep discount; 0.8–1.0x is typical in a high-rate environment; above 1.0x indicates market expects DPU growth or the REIT has scarcity value.
2. Distribution Yield
Distribution yield = Annual DPU / Unit price x 100%. S-REITs must distribute at least 90% of taxable income for tax transparency. As at Q1 2026, S-REIT yields range from 4.5% (large-cap) to 8%+ (smaller, higher-gearing trusts). Compare against the SGS bond yield — a 200–350 bps spread over SGS has historically been the fair value range. Use the S-REIT Yield vs Bond Spread Calculator.
3. Aggregate Leverage (Gearing Ratio)
Under MAS regulations, S-REITs can gear up to 50% with an ICR of at least 1.5x; the soft limit without ICR is 45%. The sector median as at Q1 2026 is approximately 37.5%. REITs above 40% face heightened refinancing risk. Use the Gearing Ratio and ICR Calculator to stress-test under different rate scenarios.
4. Interest Coverage Ratio (ICR)
ICR = EBIT / Interest expense. MAS requires at least 1.5x to access the 50% gearing ceiling. Well-run S-REITs maintain ICR above 3.0x as a buffer. A falling ICR — even if above 1.5x — signals debt costs rising faster than net property income.
5. Weighted Average Lease Expiry (WALE)
WALE measures average remaining lease term weighted by rental income. Higher WALE means more income certainty. Industrial and commercial REITs target WALE above 3.5 years. WALE below 2 years creates near-term income risk.
6. Net Property Income (NPI) Yield
NPI yield = Net Property Income / Property Valuation. Unlike distribution yield, NPI yield reflects the intrinsic earning power of the underlying properties — useful for cross-REIT comparison within the same sub-sector.
Putting It Together
Score each REIT: P/NAV below 0.9x, yield above SGS + 200bps, gearing below 40%, ICR above 3.0x, WALE above 3.5 years, NPI yield above 5%, DPU flat or growing. Six or seven out of seven criteria signals an attractive entry. See Best S-REITs 2026 and the S-REIT Total Return Calculator.