Keppel Reit unit secures three bridge loans totalling S$892 million
The facilities contain conditions relating to changes to the Reit’s manager
[SINGAPORE] The manager of Keppel Real Estate Investment Trust (Reit) said on Wednesday (Dec 24) that it has obtained three bridge loan facilities totalling about S$892 million through a wholly owned subsidiary.
The facilities, all of which are dated Wednesday and guaranteed by HSBC Institutional Trust Services (Singapore), contain conditions relating to changes to the Reit’s manager.
These include a facility for a S$300 million bridge loan, under which the borrower must “prepay all outstanding loans within 10 business days” if:
- The manager ceases to manage Keppel Reit or is no longer a wholly owned subsidiary of Keppel Capital; and
- A wholly owned subsidiary of Keppel Capital is not “appointed as a replacement or substitute manager of Keppel Reit”.
Under the second facility, for a S$297.3 million bridge loan, the borrower must make full prepayment in five business days of notice if:
- The manager ceases to manage Keppel Reit; or
- The manager is no longer fully directly and/or indirectly owned by Keppel, and a wholly owned subsidiary of Keppel is not appointed as a replacement or substitute manager.
For the third facility, which covers a S$294.7 million bridge loan, the borrower must prepay the loans in 10 business days of notice if:
- The manager is no longer wholly owned by Keppel; or
- The manager ceases to manage Keppel Reit, and a wholly owned subsidiary of Keppel is not appointed as the Reit’s manager.
Keppel Reit units closed Wednesday 0.5 per cent or S$0.005 higher at S$0.975.
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Copyright SPH Media. All rights reserved.
TRENDING NOW
On the board but frozen out: The Taib family feud tearing Sarawak construction giant apart
Thai and Vietnamese farmers may stop planting rice because of the Iran war. Here’s why
MAS convenes bank CEOs over AI cyberthreats; boards told to own risks, not leave to IT teams
Is it time to scrap COE categories for cars?