One Metric To Rule Them All: CapitaLand Commercial Trust (SGX:C61U)

CapitaLand Commercial Trust is a S$6.63b mid-cap, real estate investment trust (REIT) based in Singapore, Singapore. REITs are basically a portfolio of income-producing real estate investments, which are owned and operated by management of that trust company. They have to meet certain requirements in order to become a REIT, meaning they should be analyzed a different way. In this commentary, I’ll take you through some of the things I look at when assessing C61U.

View our latest analysis for CapitaLand Commercial Trust

A common financial term REIT investors should know is Funds from Operations, or FFO for short, which is a REIT’s main source of income from its portfolio of property, such as rent. FFO is a cleaner and more representative figure of how much C61U actually makes from its day-to-day operations, compared to net income, which can be affected by one-off activities or non-cash items such as depreciation. For C61U, its FFO of S$250.8m makes up 98.2% of its gross profit, which means the majority of its earnings are high-quality and recurring.

SGX:C61U Historical Debt September 17th 18
SGX:C61U Historical Debt September 17th 18

In order to understand whether C61U has a healthy balance sheet, we have to look at a metric called FFO-to-total debt. This tells us how long it will take C61U to pay off its debt using its income from its main business activities, and gives us an insight into C61U’s ability to service its borrowings. With a ratio of 9.0%, the credit rating agency Standard & Poor would consider this as aggressive risk. This would take C61U 11.06 years to pay off using just operating income, which is a long time, and risk increases with time. But realistically, companies have many levers to pull in order to pay back their debt, beyond operating income alone.

I also look at C61U’s interest coverage ratio, which demonstrates how many times its earnings can cover its yearly interest expense. This is similar to the concept above, but looks at the upcoming obligations. The ratio is typically calculated using EBIT, but for a REIT stock, it’s better to use FFO divided by net interest. With an interest coverage ratio of 3.64x, it’s safe to say C61U is generating an appropriate amount of cash from its borrowings.

I also use FFO to look at C61U’s valuation relative to other REITs in Singapore by using the price-to-FFO metric. This is conceptually the same as the price-to-earnings (PE) ratio, but as previously mentioned, FFO is more suitable. C61U’s price-to-FFO is 26.42x, compared to the long-term industry average of 16.5x, meaning that it is overvalued.

Next Steps:

CapitaLand Commercial Trust can bring diversification into your portfolio due to its unique REIT characteristics. Before you make a decision on the stock today, keep in mind I’ve only covered one metric in this article, the FFO, which is by no means comprehensive. I’d strongly recommend continuing your research on the following areas I believe are key fundamentals for C61U:

  1. Future Outlook: What are well-informed industry analysts predicting for C61U’s future growth? Take a look at our free research report of analyst consensus for C61U’s outlook.

  2. Valuation: What is C61U worth today? Is the stock undervalued, even when its growth outlook is factored into its intrinsic value? The intrinsic value infographic in our free research report helps visualize whether C61U is currently mispriced by the market.

  3. Other High-Performing Stocks: Are there other stocks that provide better prospects with proven track records? Explore our free list of these great stocks here.

To help readers see past the short term volatility of the financial market, we aim to bring you a long-term focused research analysis purely driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis does not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements.

The author is an independent contributor and at the time of publication had no position in the stocks mentioned. For errors that warrant correction please contact the editor at editorial-team@simplywallst.com.

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