Advertisement

Singapore Landlords Need a Post-Covid Remake

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Every third dollar changing hands on Singapore Exchange Ltd. is because of someone buying or selling units in a real estate investment trust. But has the city’s REIT mania gone a bit too far?

The coronavirus pandemic has raised hard questions that have only simmered under the surface until now.

As an asset class, REITs have blossomed in the Asian financial center, where land is in short supply but money is abundant. Singaporeans love property, and the idea of owning units in a trust that passes at least 90% of rental income to investors has always seemed like a better alternative to parking cash in a bank account, especially in an era of near-zero interest rates.

REITs also became popular because the tiny island, its Asian Tiger years well behind it, doesn’t have many opportunities at home for people to invest in growth. A budding love affair with all things digital and fintech could have infused some youthfulness into the kind of risks the mass affluent are comfortable owning. But before they could blossom, the virus came. It’s unclear if the economic destruction will destroy the fledgling startup culture by making Singaporeans “adverse to risk, and seeking the safety of ‘iron rice bowls,’” as former civil servant Devadas Krishnadas puts it.

But something doesn’t seem quite right even in the world of institutionalized rent collection. Here too, the pandemic is forcing a revaluation. If a store is unable to sell because people are scared to go out or the government doesn’t want them to, is a six-month moratorium on rents fair? Owners got up to 100% property tax rebates when the disease first threatened to decimate travel and tourism, but many didn’t pass them on fully. Struggling tenants became upset, so Singapore passed a law in April, ordering commercial owners, including REITs, to pass on tax remissions unconditionally and give a moratorium(2) on rent payment if any merchant requests it.

Landlords are worried. Such a deferment means a near-term cash-flow shock, future bad debts and a degrading of REIT finances that could, in their words, “destabilize the banking industry and Singapore's financial ecosystem.” Besides, doesn’t capitalism require those who can’t honor contractual obligations to make way for those who can?

The “creative destruction” argument rings hollow when advanced by landlords who have no problem enjoying state support themselves. Covid-19 will go away one day, but the friction between tenants and landlords will remain. About 10,000 small and midsize tenants have come together to demand a fair tenancy law. The conflict would be productive if it led to a search for new models of risk sharing.

Looking within the industry may be a good starting point. Singapore-listed Sasseur Real Estate Investment Trust owns retail outlet malls, where the likes of Burberry, Coach and Salvatore Ferragamo hawk new and out-of-season fashion. The properties are in China, and they solve a specific problem: Customers are compensated (and the retailers penalized) heavily if merchandise turns out to be fake. But as CEO Anthony Ang explains, where Sasseur truly differs from Singapore’s other institutional landlords is in its business practices. Instead of paying rent to the REIT, tenants share roughly 15% of their revenue with its Chinese parent. The so-called entrusted manager keeps some of it to run the properties, and shares a fixed sum and a sales-linked variable component with the Singapore trust to pay out to unit holders.

This risk-sharing formula, which is still fairly uncommon, passed its test in the first quarter, when China took the brunt of Covid-19 closures. The variable portion of the REIT’s revenue plummeted by 55%, in line with tenants’ sales, but the fixed rental went up almost 4%, and the overall take declined by much less. Nervous investors who sold off the stock heavily in February went back in after China reopened. Sales have yet to normalize fully, but confidence is back.

Can the template be copied? Large Singapore landlords like CapitaLand Mall Trust have come to the business from real estate, unlike Sasseur founder, Vito Xu, who drifted into property ownership after introducing high-end European fashion to Tier 2 Chinese cities, starting in his hometown of Chongqing. Also, Sasseur requires a natural churn: Leases accounting for 65% of revenue will expire this year, offering Xu a chance to bring in new brands to titillate the customer with constant novelty. Singapore landlords typically have three-year contracts, the time a supermarket anchor tenant needs to stabilize footfall.

Even if an art house model doesn’t fit a suburban Singapore mall, carefully curating the tenant mix, and taking an interest in their success, may be the way forward. The pathogen is reshaping habits: Mundane transactions will move online, but experiential sales, including luxury and mass-market fashion, may turn physical with a vengeance. People will use shopping excursions to signal wellness — not so much to others as to their own locked-down psyches. In the post-pandemic world, Singapore REITs could more deftly stretch their profits if they stop singing from the hymn book of cutthroat capitalism and embrace a more trusting relationship with tenants.

(1) The deferment is for a six-month period, which may be extended or shortened by the authorities.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com/opinion

Subscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.