REIT Acquisition Fee Singapore — see definition below. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
Table of Contents
- How REIT Acquisition Fees Work in Singapore
- Acquisition Fee vs Management Fee
- Are Acquisition Fees Good or Bad for Unitholders?
- Evaluating Acquisition Fees When Comparing S-REITs
How REIT Acquisition Fees Work in Singapore
When an S-REIT acquires a property, the REIT manager earns an acquisition fee as compensation for sourcing, evaluating, and executing the deal. Under MAS guidelines (Property Funds Appendix), the fee is typically capped in the trust deed — commonly at 1% of the purchase price for developed properties. Many REITs (MIT, CapitaLand REITs) charge 0.5-0.75% for related-party acquisitions. The fee is almost universally paid in units rather than cash, reducing immediate cash outflow from the trust.
Acquisition Fee vs Management Fee
The management fee is a recurring annual fee (base + performance) for day-to-day REIT management — typically 0.3-0.5% of AUM. The acquisition fee is a one-time transactional fee triggered only when a new asset is purchased. A divestment fee (typically 0.5% of sale price) is charged on disposals. Evaluate both: a REIT that grows AUM through frequent acquisitions generates higher fees for the manager, which may or may not benefit unitholders depending on whether deals are DPU-accretive.
Are Acquisition Fees Good or Bad for Unitholders?
Acquisition fees create a potential conflict of interest: managers are financially incentivised to acquire more properties regardless of whether each deal is accretive. Singapore MAS requires unitholder approval for major acquisitions, and independent valuations are mandatory. Paying the fee in units partly addresses the conflict — if the unit price falls post-acquisition, the manager fee value falls too. Check whether past acquisitions were DPU-accretive: a good manager grows the portfolio with deals that increase distributable income per unit, not just AUM.
Evaluating Acquisition Fees When Comparing S-REITs
Look at the total expense ratio (TER) — sum of management, acquisition, trustee, and other fees as a percentage of AUM. Lower TER means more property income flows to unitholders. Also review historical acquisition track record: has the REIT consistently acquired at or below valuation? Overpaying for assets destroys long-term unitholder value and is a red flag even if it generates fees for the manager.