logo
NTT DC Reit targets $937 million in SGX's biggest Reit IPO in a decade

NTT DC Reit targets $937 million in SGX's biggest Reit IPO in a decade

Straits Times07-07-2025
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
SINGAPORE – Japan telecoms giant Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) is set to raise US$773 million (S$937 million) from the initial public offering (IPO) of its data centre real estate investment trust (Reit), marking the largest Reit listing on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) mainboard in a decade.
NTT DC Reit will include six data centres across Singapore, Austria and the United States with a total appraised value of US$1.57 billion in its portfolio. The NTT Group is one of the largest data centre providers in the world with total assets of approximately US$201 billion.
NTT DC Reit's offering will comprise 599.89 million units, or just over 58 per cent, priced at US$1 per unit. This includes an international placement of 569.89 million units to institutional and overseas investors, and another 30 million publicly offered units in Singapore at $1.276 each.
In addition to the public offering, seven investors have committed to buying 172.77 million cornerstone units, representing 16.8 per cent of the offering. They include Pinpoint Asset Management, UBS Singapore, Viridian Asset Management and Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC.
GIC will purchase 100.88 million of the units available for the cornerstone investors, making it a substantial unit holder immediately upon listing with a 9.8 per cent stake.
Separate from the offering, sponsor NTT has also agreed to subscribe for an additional 257.55 million units or 25 per cent of the total offering.
In total, NTT DC Reit's offering will comprise around 1.03 billion units.
Units of the Reit are slated to commence trading on the mainboard at 2pm on July 14.
Mr Yutaka Torigoe, chief executive officer of NTT DC Reit Manager, said the company chose Singapore for its listing after also considering Japan and the US because it has an established Reit market that is welcoming to global asset portfolios.
He added that the company plans to use the capital raised to further develop new data centre assets in its portfolio.
NTT DC Reit is the third data centre Reit to list in Singapore, after Keppel DC Reit and Digital Core Reit.
Prior to its launch on July 7, Manulife US – the first pure-play US office Reit in Asia – was SGX's largest Reit listing at US$519 million when it launched in 2016. United Hampshire, a US portfolio focusing on grocery-anchored shopping centres and self-storage facilities, was valued at US$599 million when it launched its Reit IPO in 2020.
NTT DC's listing also comes at a time when SGX is beginning to see greater interest from investors and firms keen to list here after a sluggish first half in 2025.
Local software firm Info-Tech Systems saw a successful debut on the mainboard on July 4, closing its first day of trading at 91 cents before retreating to 88 cents, just 1 per cent above its IPO price, on July 7.
Other listings currently in the pipeline include Lum Chang Creations, Dezign Format and China Medical System.
The global data centre market is expected to double in size by 2032, hitting an estimated value of US$584.8 billion.
Despite its small geographical size, Singapore has ambitions to be a key player in this sector as part of its digital transformation plans.
Power and land availability constraints have led to demand outpacing supply, resulting in a decline in data centre vacancies. According to NTT DC Reit, its Singapore facility in Serangoon has an occupancy rate of 90 per cent as of last year.
Mr Masayuki Ozaki, chief financial officer of NTT DC Reit Manager, said: 'Singapore continues to be an attractive data centre market given its strong connectivity, central location, and huge relevance to the global and regional data traffic flow.'
It is estimated that the growth of new green data centres in Singapore could cost as much as $10 billion to $12 billion.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wild history of jailed ex-premier's US$3 million mansion keeps buyers wary
Wild history of jailed ex-premier's US$3 million mansion keeps buyers wary

Business Times

time10 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Wild history of jailed ex-premier's US$3 million mansion keeps buyers wary

[ASTANA] The bureaucrats at Kazakhstan's state asset management company are facing a task that's as unusual as it's near impossible: selling a villa of the highest luxury. The 2,878-square-metre house in the swankiest corner of the capital, Astana, flaunts over-the-top features that have become a hallmark of luxury properties around the world: A pool with a unique water feature, a dance club and a theatre in addition to 30 rooms that include sleeping quarters with a rare four-person bed. And it was once owned by Karim Massimov, the nation's longest-serving prime minister who is now doing jail time for an attempted coup. But even at US$3 million, a 40 per cent discount from its one-time valuation, the weight of recent Kazakh history is making it a very difficult sell. An auction was cancelled in May – the third attempt at a sale just this year – and the state asset company is now contemplating how to finally remove the property from its balance sheet. Attracting luxury buyers to a city that, despite Kazakhstan's vast resources wealth, hasn't yet developed a reputation as a playground for billionaires, was always going to be a challenge. The highest echelon of the wealth pyramid is small in the country of 20 million and the richest Kazakhs are reluctant to invest in a market that's stalled. The villa's lineage may be thinning the potential market even further. 'It will be very difficult to sell the house openly as everyone would know who bought it,' said Eldar Shamsutdinov, head of the Almaty-based think tank Kommentariy. It is also 'irrational to freeze so much money in property. The Astana residential property market is overheated, the investment attractiveness has dropped, the pace of prices growth has slowed. Demand for multimillion properties is almost fully satisfied.' A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Tuesday, 12 pm Property Insights Get an exclusive analysis of real estate and property news in Singapore and beyond. Sign Up Sign Up How the mansion's story is affecting the sales process is a reflection of Astana's evolution as the capital of a newly independent nation, erected to flaunt its energy wealth and as an ode to its ruler. The second-largest former Soviet republic after Russia quickly raced ahead of its neighbours to build central Asia's richest economy, thanks to its energy exports. Nursultan Nazarbayev, who ruled the nation for almost 30 years after independence, envisioned a glimmering city rising dramatically from the Great Dala – the Kazakh steppe – in the middle of the country. In almost every way, it would serve as a contrast to the old capital, Almaty, nestled in the southern mountains near the borders with China and Kyrgyzstan. The location was chosen strategically to expand the central government's footprint in the country's north, where many of the Russian minority live and ties with Moscow are the strongest. Nazarbayev was intricately involved in the planning and in the early stages of development was known to sketch his dream skyline on napkins. The city is peppered with buildings designed by international architects, following the leader's concepts. Around the wide, wind-swept boulevards, the eclectic highlights include an entertainment complex shaped like a tent (credited to Norman Foster), a circus that looks like flying saucer and high rises that seek to bring in folklore aesthetic. The city was renamed Nur-Sultan to honour the former leader by Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, who followed Nazarbayev as president in 2019. That tribute soured after the coup attempt and the city returned to its previous name. 'Astana is the realisation of Nazarbayev's personal ambition,' said Dosym Satpayev, the head of the consultancy Risk Assessment Group in Almaty. 'He wanted a larger place in history and considered it to be his brainchild.' A construction boom followed the 1997 move, as a metropolis of more than 1.5 million people sprang up in place of what was once a town of about 300,000. By 2008, when the villa was built, the bubble had burst as the global financial crisis clobbered local banks and brought lending growth to an abrupt halt. Kazakhstan eventually needed to restructure billions of dollars worth of debt and spent at least US$18 billion to bail out its financial industry. The country's prime minister during that turbulent time was Massimov, who was born in the future capital, then called Tselinograd. With an education that encompassed studies in Chinese, Arabic and economics, he taught at both Wuhan University and Columbia University in New York before a business career that included stints in Beijing and Hong Kong eventually took him to the highest levels of Kazakh banking. As prime minister, Massimov cut a larger-than-life figure. He was known as one of the first in Kazakhstan's political elite to embrace social media and cultivated a network of friendly bloggers. Like some other post-Soviet politicians, Massimov also liked to flaunt his athletic prowess, sometimes spotted swimming or riding a bike in town. And he was also a well-known fixture of the Astana nightlife: A 2008 diplomatic cable released by Wikileaks describes him entertaining a group and dancing on a stage at the upscale club Chocolat, after drinks at the Radisson Hotel's cigar bar. After two stints as prime minister, Massimov became the head of Kazakhstan's powerful national security apparatus. It was in that role that he got caught up in the 2022 unrest that became known as 'Bloody January.' The turmoil was the biggest threat to the country's stability since independence and was characterised as a coup attempt by the government. Massimov was arrested as an alleged instigator. In 2023, he was found guilty of high treason and sentenced to 18 years in prison and the confiscation of property. In the aftermath, the state seized Massimov's assets, including the mansion in Astana. According to official filings, ownership of the house was transferred in 2009. The national security committee described the property as a 'gift' from 'a business structure.' When authorities took control, they found US$17.2 million in cash, 'elite watches, gold bullions, antiques and much more,' according to a National Security Committee statement at the time. To potential buyers, all that signalled not just a wealthy owner, but someone well connected with powerful allies across different strata of Kazakh society. And as political fortunes ebb and flow, it might be difficult to puzzle out just how a multimillion-dollar wager on such a high-profile property might play out now or in the future. 'People with big money are quite cautious,' said Satpayev at Risk Assessment Group. Without a clear succession plan for the current leadership, they may be 'fearing that there might be revanchism.' For sure, it would be difficult to stay inconspicuous, even though the villa in the posh Karaotkel district remains hidden behind a wall more than two metres tall. The area, with its large park, swanky hotel and an upscale tennis centre that once hosted Rafael Nadal, is also a symbol of Kazakhstan's growing wealth gap where bureaucrats and business people mingle with the new city's elite. In the end, the state might decide to keep the property and convert it to a different use, like an administrative building or a kindergarten, according to Shamsutdinov at Kommentariy. Through all the political upheaval, Astana's property market bounced back from the lows of the financial crisis, thanks to a series of government measures from mortgage subsidies to a programme that redirected retirement savings to real estate. By 2021, the market was showing signs of force as country-wide purchases jumped 97 per cent, according to Halyk Finance research. Geopolitics intervened again as the ripple effects of the Russia sanctions over the invasion of Ukraine sparked a steep decline, only to be followed by a sharp bounce in rental prices as Russians fleeing mobilisation swelled the city's population. As of now, used-home prices are heading the other way again, dropping 1.9 per cent this year through May, with nearly 12 per cent inflation and a 16.5 per cent benchmark interest rate cooling demand. Housing has become a particularly sore spot for many Kazakhs. After all the shocks of the past decade, wages are stagnant and unemployment remains stubborn, sapping the property market from much-needed impetus. That dynamic makes selling a lavish and notorious villa an even more daunting proposition. BLOOMBERG

Australia's home prices climb further as rental growth refuels
Australia's home prices climb further as rental growth refuels

Business Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Australia's home prices climb further as rental growth refuels

[CANBERRA] Australian home prices climbed for a sixth straight month with every major city reporting gains, while signs of resurgent rents are set to stretch the budgets of households in this segment. The Home Value Index advanced 0.6 per cent in July, property consultancy Cotality said in a statement on Friday (Aug 1). Darwin was once again the top gainer, climbing 2.2 per cent, while the bellwether Sydney market rose by 0.6 per cent. 'The outlook for housing values remains positive,' Cotality said in its report. 'We expect values to continue posting a broad-based but modest rise through the rest of the year, supported by an outlook for lower interest rates, improving sentiment and short housing supply.' Money markets are pricing a rate cut at the Reserve Bank's meeting this month as almost certain after inflation data two days ago showed an across-the-board cooling of price pressures. Still, Cotality highlighted affordability constraints and lingering uncertainty as constraints to a more rapid uptick in property prices. On the flip side, a persistent lack of supply is supporting home prices alongside expectations of further rate cuts. In the past three months, national house values have risen by 1.9 per cent, adding approximately US$10,800 to the median value. Data to March show the national dwelling value to household income ratio, at 7.9, is just shy of record highs, according to the report. Rental vacancy rates are also holding close to historic lows, at 1.7 per cent nationally in July, Cotality said, adding there has been some evidence of quickening growth trends. 'The reacceleration in rental growth is clearly bad news for renters, where the median income household would already need around a third of their pre-tax income to pay rent,' said Tim Lawless, research director for Cotality, formerly CoreLogic. 'Renting households have historically skewed to younger, lower-income cohorts, so no doubt the sting of high rents is having an even more acute impact on household budgets.' BLOOMBERG

Chinese builder Fantasia to unveil new restructuring plan
Chinese builder Fantasia to unveil new restructuring plan

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

Chinese builder Fantasia to unveil new restructuring plan

[BEIJING] Chinese developer Fantasia Holdings Group plans to release a new restructuring plan in the coming weeks after previous attempts fizzled, people familiar with the matter said, underscoring the years-long struggle of builders to move past an unprecedented property crisis. The company has been working on the latest plan, which would enable it to deleverage further, with a key group of creditors, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. Details are still being finalised, they added. It would be the latest proposal in a string of restructuring attempts by the firm, whose default on dollar debt in 2021 was a harbinger of China's real estate crisis. The broader woes have led to record defaults among builders and are still weighing on housing demand. While Premier Li Qiang recently pledged to stabilise the property market, home prices in June dropped 0.27% from the prior month, the most in eight months. Fantasia issued its first debt restructuring proposal in January 2023, only to release a revised version in April 2024 that included longer extension periods and lower coupon rates on new notes and other terms that were less favorable to creditors. Calls and emails to Fantasia went unanswered. Fantasia's total liabilities stood at US$11.7 billion as of the end of 2024, according to its latest annual report. BLOOMBERG

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store