WALE in REITs
WALE (Weighted Average Lease Expiry) is a metric that measures the average duration remaining on a REIT’s lease portfolio, weighted by gross rental income or net lettable area. A longer WALE indicates more predictable rental income.
When evaluating S-REITs, WALE is one of the first metrics experienced investors check — right alongside gearing ratio and DPU trend. A REIT with a WALE of 7 years has its income locked in for much longer than one with a WALE of 2 years — reducing the risk of sudden occupancy drops or rental reversions. This guide explains how WALE works, how to interpret it by sector, and what WALE red flags to watch for. This is not financial advice.
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How WALE Is Calculated
WALE is calculated by weighting each lease’s remaining term by its contribution to gross rental income (GRI) or net lettable area (NLA). The formula is:
WALE (by GRI) = Σ (Lease remaining term × Annual rental income) / Total annual rental income
Example: REIT with two tenants — Tenant A (5 years remaining, $1M/yr rent) and Tenant B (2 years remaining, $500K/yr rent). WALE = (5×1M + 2×0.5M) / 1.5M = 6M/1.5M = 4.0 years. Most Singapore REITs report WALE by GRI as it better reflects income security — a large tenant on a long lease carries more weight than a small one.
WALE by Sector — What’s Normal?
WALE benchmarks vary significantly by REIT sector. In Singapore as at Q1 2026: Industrial REITs (e.g. CapitaLand Ascendas REIT) typically report WALE of 3–5 years — leases are shorter due to the nature of logistics and business park tenants. Commercial/Office REITs (e.g. Keppel REIT) average 4–6 years. Healthcare/Hospital REITs (e.g. Parkway Life REIT) have the longest WALE, often 10–20 years, because hospital operators sign very long master leases. Retail REITs (e.g. Frasers Centrepoint Trust) average 2–4 years for standard shop leases. A short WALE isn’t inherently bad — it also means earlier opportunities to reprice rents upward in a rising rental market.
Why WALE Matters for S-REIT Investors
WALE directly affects income predictability. A REIT with a 1.5-year WALE has up to 100% of its leases expiring within 2 years — if the economy softens, renewal rates might be significantly lower (negative reversion), compressing NPI and DPU. Conversely, a high-WALE REIT is more defensive in downturns. During the 2020 COVID-19 period, Singapore’s office and industrial REITs with long WALEs (e.g. Keppel REIT with WALE ~5–6 years) experienced more stable DPU than retail REITs with shorter WALEs. Track WALE alongside lease expiry profiles (% of GRI expiring each year) for a full picture — a REIT might have a WALE of 4 years but 40% of leases expiring in the next 12 months, which is a concentration risk.
WALE Red Flags to Watch
Watch for: Falling WALE trend — if WALE drops each quarter, the REIT is not renewing leases at pace; Tenant concentration + short WALE — if one tenant represents 20% of income and their lease expires in 6 months, that’s high risk; WALE by GRI vs NLA divergence — if WALE by GRI is 5 years but WALE by NLA is 2 years, it means large (high-rent) tenants have long leases but many small tenants are on short leases — the underlying occupancy could erode quickly; Anchor tenant dependency — retail malls with single anchor tenants on short leases face significant re-leasing risk. Cross-check WALE with the occupancy rate and rental reversion data in quarterly earnings reports.
WALE vs Other REIT Quality Metrics
WALE is one tool among several. Use it alongside: Aggregate leverage / gearing ratio — a high-WALE REIT with 45% gearing still has refinancing risk; Interest coverage ratio (ICR) — measures ability to service debt from NPI; Occupancy rate — WALE tells you duration, occupancy tells you how full the properties are now; DPU trend — the ultimate output variable. A REIT with a WALE of 7 years but declining DPU suggests rental reversions at renewal are negative. Always read the manager’s commentary in the quarterly results announcement for forward guidance on lease renewals.