CapitaLand Ascott Trust H2 DPS inches up 1% to S$0.0358
The rise in H2 FY2025 DPS follows a 4 per cent increase in revenue to S$439.1 million for the half year
[SINGAPORE] CapitaLand Ascott Trust (Clas) on Thursday (Jan 29) posted a marginal 1 per cent rise in distribution per stapled security (DPS) to S$0.0358 for the second half ended Dec 31, 2025, from S$0.0355 in the year-ago period.
Meanwhile, core DPS fell 4 per cent on the year to S$0.0295, from S$0.0308 in H2 FY2024. This was mainly due to the property tax adjustments in FY2024 and FY2025, said the managers of Clas in a bourse filing on Thursday evening. Excluding these adjustments, core DPS would have been “relatively stable”.
The distribution will be paid out on Feb 27, after the record date on Feb 6.
The rise in H2 FY2025 DPS follows a 4 per cent increase in revenue to S$439.1 million for the half year, from S$423.2 million in the year-ago period. Gross profit rose 2 per cent to S$202.8 million, from S$198 million a year prior.
The manager attributed the growth to stronger operating performance, portfolio reconstitution and asset enhancement initiatives (AEIs), which helped offset the impact of foreign-currency depreciation against the Singapore dollar and property tax adjustments.
These pushed distributable income in the three months to S$160.2 million, up 19 per cent from H2 FY2024’s S$134.8 million.
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For the full-year, distributable income jumped 11 per cent year on year to S$256.7 million, from S$231.2 million in FY2024. Revenue rose 3 per cent on the year to S$837.6 million, from S$809.5 million the previous year.
This brought DPS for FY2025 to S$0.061, holding steady from FY2024. After adjusting for non-periodic items, core DPS stood at S$0.0535, down 3 per cent from S$0.0549 recorded in the same period the year before.
Serena Teo, chief executive of the managers, said in a Thursday press release that it intends to strengthen the resilience of Clas’ portfolio by bolstering its presence in key markets and recycling capital from divestments. “We are progressing towards our medium-term portfolio allocation of 25 to 30 per cent in the living sector, while maintaining 70 to 75 per cent in hospitality assets,” she noted. More AEIs are also planned in cities such as London, Sydney and New York, which will improve asset performance and value, she added.
Stapled securities of Clas closed flat on Thursday at S$0.965, before the announcement.
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