CDL Hospitality Trusts H1 DPS falls 21.1% to S$0.0198
Revenue stands at S$125.1 million, down 1.8% from the same period the year before
[SINGAPORE] The distribution per stapled security (DPS) for CDL Hospitality Trusts (CDLHT) fell 21.1 per cent to S$0.0198 for the first half ended Jun 30, from S$0.0251 in the previous corresponding period.
This comes as the total distribution to stapled security holders fell 20.2 per cent to S$25.1 million from S$31.4 million in the H1 of last year.
Net property income (NPI) fell 11.9 per cent to S$58.6 million for H1 2025, from S$66.5 million in the previous corresponding period.
Its S$7.9 million net NPI decline was largely driven by ongoing room renovations at the W Singapore - Sentosa Cove, which accounted for a S$3.2 million drop. These renovations are set to be completed by early 2026.
Revenue declined 1.8 per cent to S$125.1 million after most portfolio markets outside the UK, Japan and Australia performed worse, the trust’s managers said on Wednesday (Jul 30).
Revenue per available room (RevPar) came in mixed across the stapled group’s portfolio. Its Singapore, New Zealand, Maldives, UK and Italy markets logged declines, while its Australia, Japan, and Germany markets experienced growth.
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The group’s core Singapore market NPI fell 20.9 per cent to S$30.2 million, from S$38.3 million in H1 of the 2024 financial year. This came alongside lower RevPar, which fell 14.2 per cent to S$165 from S$193. Occupancy for the Singapore hotels was down 5.2 percentage points at 73.2 per cent for the latest H1, from 78.4 per cent previously.
The RevPar for CDLHT’s Singapore hotels was weighed down by a strong base effect when compared with the previous year’s H1, when there was strong demand from large-scale events. It was also affected by subdued corporate demand, owing to global and economic uncertainties and exacerbated by tariff concerns, said the managers. They added that room renovations at W Singapore also played a part in the drop.
The declines for the Singapore portfolio came despite visitor arrivals to the city-state rising 1.9 per cent in H1 2025 from the year-ago period to 8.3 million.
As at Jun 30, CDLHT’s gearing stood at 42 per cent.
Poised to benefit from more favourable rates
CDLHT is poised to benefit from a potentially more favourable rate environment due to its “low fixed to floating debt profile” and “interest rate hedging strategy”, said Vincent Yeo, chief executive officer of CDLHT’s managers.
“Capital recycling remains an integral part of our strategy to unlock value and reinforce portfolio resilience,” he added.
Stapled securities of CDLHT closed on Wednesday 2.9 per cent or S$0.025 lower at S$0.825.
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