Rights Issue Singapore: What It Is and What to Do When Your REIT Announces One

Rights Issue Singapore

A rights issue is a fundraising method where a listed company or REIT offers existing shareholders the right to buy additional new shares at a discounted price, in proportion to their existing holdings, before the shares are offered to the public.


If you hold units in an S-REIT and receive a “rights issue” notice, you’ll need to decide whether to subscribe, sell your nil-paid rights, or let them lapse. Getting this decision wrong can dilute your holdings significantly. This guide explains what rights issues are in the Singapore context, why S-REITs use them, and how to evaluate your options. This is not financial advice.



Rights Issue Singapore — Singapore Investing Glossary

How a Rights Issue Works

In a typical rights issue, a company announces it will raise capital by issuing new shares to existing shareholders at a subscription price below the current market price (often 5–20% discount). The ratio tells you how many new shares you can buy per existing share — e.g. “1-for-5” means for every 5 shares you hold, you get the right to buy 1 new share. If you hold 5,000 units, you’re entitled to buy 1,000 new units at the discounted price. You can: (1) subscribe fully and buy all your entitlement; (2) sell your nil-paid rights (if tradeable on SGX) to another investor; or (3) let them lapse, which means you receive nothing but your existing holding is diluted.


Why Do S-REITs Issue Rights?

S-REITs are required by law to distribute at least 90% of their taxable income, which leaves little retained earnings to fund acquisitions or capital expenditure. When a REIT wants to acquire a new property or reduce debt, it typically raises equity via a rights issue or private placement. Rights issues are preferred for large acquisitions because they give all existing unitholders the chance to participate (unlike placements which can be done quickly but at the exclusion of retail investors). Recent S-REIT rights issues include Mapletree Logistics Trust’s equity fundraising exercises to fund European and Asia-Pacific acquisitions. See our coverage of best S-REITs 2026 for context on REIT balance sheet management.


Rights Issue vs Private Placement

Both are equity fundraising methods. Rights issues are slower (require EGM approval, longer timetable) but maintain proportional ownership for all existing shareholders and are generally viewed as more fair. Private placements are faster (can close within days) and typically placed with institutional investors — retail investors get diluted unless they happen to be allocated units. Under SGX Listing Rules, REITs can conduct placements of up to 10% of existing units without shareholder approval (20% with approval) in any 12-month period. Most major fundraisings combine a placement tranche with a rights issue tranche.


How to Evaluate a Rights Issue

Key questions: (1) Is the use of proceeds value-accretive? — check the projected DPU accretion/dilution post-acquisition; (2) What is the implied cap rate on the acquisition vs the REIT’s existing portfolio? Higher is better; (3) What is the subscription price discount? A 15–20% discount gives you a margin of safety; (4) What happens to gearing? — post-rights, the gearing ratio should remain well below MAS’s 50% limit. Use the S-REIT Gearing Calculator to model the impact.


What Happens If You Lapse Your Rights?

If you do nothing (lapse), your existing units are diluted by the new shares issued. Concretely: if a REIT issues 20% more units via a rights issue and you don’t subscribe, your ownership percentage falls by ~16.7%. If the DPU is maintained or grows post-acquisition, the dilution in ownership may be offset — but if DPU is cut, you’ve lost twice. The nil-paid rights can typically be sold on SGX during the rights trading period (usually 5 trading days), so at minimum you should sell your rights rather than letting them lapse for zero value.



Frequently Asked Questions

What is a rights issue in Singapore?
A rights issue is when a listed company or REIT offers existing shareholders the right to buy new shares at a discounted price, in proportion to their holdings. For example, a 1-for-5 rights issue at $1.00 means you can buy 1 new share for every 5 you hold at $1.00, even if the market price is $1.15.
Should I subscribe to a rights issue?
It depends on whether the acquisition or use of proceeds is value-accretive (DPU-accretive post-completion), the discount offered, and your confidence in the REIT’s management. If you don’t subscribe, your holdings are diluted. If you cannot afford to subscribe, consider selling the nil-paid rights on SGX rather than letting them lapse.
What are nil-paid rights?
Nil-paid rights are the subscription rights issued to shareholders that have not yet been exercised (subscribed). During the rights trading period on SGX, you can sell these rights to another investor who then has the right to subscribe at the discounted price. Nil-paid rights have a tradeable value roughly equal to the discount between market price and the subscription price.
How common are rights issues for S-REITs?
Rights issues are a common financing tool for S-REITs since they must distribute 90%+ of income and cannot retain much capital. Major REITs like Mapletree Logistics Trust, CapitaLand Ascendas REIT, and Keppel REIT have all conducted rights issues in the past decade, typically linked to significant property acquisitions.
What is the difference between a rights issue and a bonus issue?
In a rights issue, shareholders pay a subscription price to receive new shares. In a bonus issue (scrip dividend or capitalisation issue), shareholders receive free additional shares with no payment required — the company uses retained earnings or reserves to issue them. Rights issues raise new capital; bonus issues do not.