A falling number tends to grab attention.
The harder question is what sits behind it.
Three SGX-listed names report earnings or business updates in July 2026.
Each posted a lower headline figure last quarter.
In every case the reason for the drop tells you more than the drop itself.
Here is what to watch.
Elite UK REIT (SGX: MXNU)
Elite UK REIT owns 147 commercial assets across the UK.
Most are leased to the UK government on triple net terms.
It is a defensive portfolio, and the latest quarter showed why that matters.
The headline looked weak.
Net property income (NPI) fell 12.3% year on year (YoY) to £9.1 million, but that number carried prior-year one-offs, namely dilapidation settlements and a lease termination premium.
Strip those out and adjusted NPI rose 4.0%.
Distributable income tells the cleaner story: it rose 9.8% YoY to £5.3 million, helped by interest savings and lower vacancy costs.
The Manager also reworked the lease book.
New inflation-linked regears with the Department for Work and Pensions covered £24.3 million of rent.
They stretched the weighted average lease expiry (WALE) from 2.2 years to 6.9 years.
Net gearing fell to 37.4%, below 40% for the first time since 2023.
No distribution per unit (DPU) was declared this quarter as Elite UK REIT pays semi-annually.
For the next release, watch whether the inflation-linked regears lift distributable income further and the redevelopment pipeline too.
Peel Park in Blackpool won planning approval for a data centre, lifting its valuation 82% since end-2023, while Lindsay House in Dundee is being converted into student accommodation.
First REIT (SGX: AW9U)
First REIT is Singapore’s first healthcare REIT.
It holds 31 properties worth S$1.02 billion across Indonesia, Japan and Singapore.
Its latest quarter delivered the sharpest headline drop of the three – DPU fell 13.8% YoY to S$0.00500.
Currency was the cause, not the assets.
Both the Japanese Yen and the Indonesian Rupiah weakened against the Singapore Dollar.
Strip out the translation effect and the picture shifts: underlying rental income grew 4.7% in Indonesia and 2.0% in Singapore, while Japan held stable.
Occupancy stayed at 100%.
The strategic news matters more.
First REIT has agreed to sell eight Indonesian hospitals to Siloam for around S$471.5 million, a 2.1% premium to valuation, and three non-core assets going to PT Lippo Karawaci and an affiliate for a combined S$82.4 million.
Siloam holds a put option over the remaining six Indonesian hospitals, expiring 31 October 2026.
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