Yield Spread Singapore REIT: How to Use It as a Valuation Tool

Yield Spread Singapore REIT: How to Use It as a Valuation Tool

Definition: The REIT yield spread is the difference between an S-REIT’s distribution yield and the yield on Singapore Government Securities (SGS bonds or T-bills). A wider spread indicates S-REITs offer more attractive income relative to risk-free rates, making them relatively better value.

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

Table of Contents — Yield Spread Singapore REIT: How to Use It as a Valuation Tool
  1. What Is the REIT Yield Spread?
  2. What Is a “Normal” or “Healthy” REIT Yield Spread?
  3. How to Calculate the S-REIT Yield Spread
  4. Why Interest Rates Matter So Much for S-REITs
  5. Yield Spread by REIT Sub-Sector (Q1 2026 Estimates)
  6. FAQ

What Is the REIT Yield Spread?

The REIT yield spread (also called the risk premium or spread-to-risk-free) measures how much extra yield investors earn by holding an S-REIT compared to a risk-free Singapore government bond. It is calculated as:

REIT Yield Spread = S-REIT Distribution Yield − SGS Bond Yield (10-year)

For example, if the iEdge S-REIT Index has an average distribution yield of 6.5% and the 10-year SGS bond yields 3.2%, the yield spread is 3.3 percentage points (330 basis points). This spread compensates investors for the additional risks of REIT investing: property market risk, leverage risk, manager quality risk, and liquidity risk.

What Is a “Normal” or “Healthy” REIT Yield Spread?

Historically, the S-REIT sector has traded at a yield spread of approximately 3.0–4.5 percentage points above the 10-year SGS bond yield in normal market conditions. This spread has compressed at market peaks and expanded during stress periods.

  • Spread below 2.0%: S-REITs are likely overvalued relative to bonds — the income premium is insufficient for the added risk
  • Spread 2.0–3.0%: Fair value territory for established, investment-grade REITs
  • Spread 3.0–4.5%: S-REITs offer reasonable compensation for risk — historically attractive entry
  • Spread above 4.5%: S-REITs may be significantly undervalued — strong yield premium (though check if this reflects credit stress)

In 2022–2023, rising interest rates pushed SGS yields sharply higher while REIT prices fell, compressing the spread and making S-REITs less attractive on a relative basis. By 2024–2025, as rate expectations moderated, the spread began to recover, improving S-REIT attractiveness.

How to Calculate the S-REIT Yield Spread

To calculate the yield spread for a specific REIT or the sector:

  1. Find the current distribution yield: Annual DPU ÷ Current Unit Price × 100
  2. Find the current 10-year SGS bond yield from the MAS website (mas.gov.sg) or Bloomberg
  3. Subtract: REIT Yield − SGS Yield = Spread

Use our S-REIT Yield vs SGS Bond Spread Calculator to compute this automatically for any S-REIT in your watchlist.

Why Interest Rates Matter So Much for S-REITs

When the Singapore Overnight Rate Average (SORA) and SGS bond yields rise, two things happen simultaneously: (1) the risk-free rate increases, which mechanically makes the REIT yield spread look less attractive, causing investors to demand higher REIT yields (i.e., lower unit prices); and (2) borrowing costs for REITs rise, putting upward pressure on finance costs and downward pressure on distributable income (DPU).

This is why S-REITs are often described as “bond proxies” — they are highly sensitive to interest rate movements. However, REITs with strong rental growth, inflation-linked leases, or low gearing are better insulated from rate rises than highly leveraged REITs with fixed-rate debt hedges expiring soon.

Yield Spread by REIT Sub-Sector (Q1 2026 Estimates)

Sub-Sector Typical Yield Range Yield Spread vs 10yr SGS (~3.0%) Notes
Industrial 5.5–7.0% 2.5–4.0% Data centre sub-sector at lower end
Healthcare 5.0–6.5% 2.0–3.5% Defensive, long leases
Retail 5.5–7.5% 2.5–4.5% Post-COVID recovery still mixed
Office 6.0–8.0% 3.0–5.0% Structural demand headwinds
Hospitality 5.0–7.0% 2.0–4.0% RevPAR-linked distributions
Logistics 5.0–6.5% 2.0–3.5% Tight vacancy in Singapore

Note: Yields are indicative estimates for Q1 2026. Always verify with current unit prices and latest DPU announcements.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good yield spread for Singapore REITs?
Historically, a spread of 3.0–4.5 percentage points above the 10-year Singapore Government Securities bond yield is considered attractive for S-REITs. A spread below 2.0% suggests overvaluation relative to risk-free alternatives.
How does the yield spread change with interest rates?
When interest rates rise, SGS bond yields increase, which reduces the REIT yield spread (making REITs less attractive on a relative basis) unless REIT unit prices also fall sufficiently to maintain the spread. Rising rates also increase REIT borrowing costs, potentially reducing DPU.
Which Singapore government bond yield should I use for the spread calculation?
Most analysts use the 10-year SGS bond yield as the benchmark, as it best represents long-term risk-free rates. Some use 5-year SGS for shorter-duration comparisons. Avoid using T-bill yields (3-month or 6-month) as these are too short-term for long-duration assets like REITs.
Where can I find Singapore Government Securities yields?
SGS bond yields are published daily on the MAS website (mas.gov.sg → Statistics → Bonds & T-bills) and on SGX. The iEdge S-REIT Index website also tracks sector-average distribution yields.
Is a high REIT yield spread always a buying signal?
Not always. A very wide spread (above 5–6%) may indicate genuine credit stress, poor fundamentals, or a sector facing structural decline rather than simply undervaluation. Always combine yield spread analysis with gearing ratios, DPU trends, and portfolio quality before making investment decisions.