property sector confidence grows

SA REITs surge in October, the strongest monthly gain since 2021

SA REITs rocket 10.8% in October, the strongest monthly gain since 2021

South Africa’s real estate investment trusts surge as liquidity returns, dividends accelerate and funding costs ease

South Africa’s real estate investment trusts (REITs) staged a decisive rally in October. The SA REIT Index returned 10.8% for the month, outpacing equities at 1.6% and bonds at 2.6%. Year to date to 31 October 2025, the sector is up 26.4% as earnings momentum, firmer sentiment and lower funding costs converge.

“October marked a turning point. Investors rotated back into REITs at scale, pricing in faster dividend growth and a healthier cost of capital,” says Ian Anderson, Head of Listed Property and Portfolio Manager at Merchant West Investments and compiler of the monthly SA REIT Chart Book. He notes that trading activity was intense with just under R14 billion changing hands in the month, excluding Vukile’s R2.65 billion accelerated bookbuild placed at a small discount to its net asset value (NAV). “This is what renewed confidence looks like. Balance sheets are stronger, distributions are accelerating and selective external growth is back on the table.”

Published by the SA REIT Association and compiled by Anderson, the SA REIT Chart Book distils sector performance, valuation, yield and capital markets activity into clear visual intelligence along with informed commentary for investors and media. The latest October issue was released on 6 November 2025. (Benchmark and methodology: SA REIT Index total return, FTSE/JSE indices, end-October 2025.)

Highlights from the SA REIT Chart Book October 2025

  • Sector total return: +10.8% month-on-month
  • Equities: +1.6% month on month
  • Bonds: +2.6% month on month
  • SA REIT year to date: +26.4%
  • Broad participation led by counters such as Growthpoint, Hyprop, Redefine, Resilient, Spear and Vukile

Market leadership was underpinned by improving operating updates, resilient occupancy and measurable relief on interest expense. Several REITs reached or approached all-time highs, while bookbuild activity at pricing close to reported NAV signals a reopening of the equity window for quality portfolios.

What drove the surge

Anderson attributes October’s strong advance to a combination of softer long bond yields, visible distributable income growth and narrowing discounts to NAV. “On a forward view we see sector dividends compounding in the high single digits, with a current forward yield near 7.5%. If bond yields remain range bound, double digit total returns over the medium term are achievable,” he says.

Context and correlation

The sector’s risk / return profile continues to differentiate against local equities and bonds, with five-year correlation metrics and rolling return components reinforcing the diversification role of REITs in South African multi-asset portfolios. The SA REIT Chart Book details this across total return indices, yield differentials and rolling distribution growth.

With investor demand returning and the cost of both debt and equity improving, selectively accretive acquisitions, redevelopments and new developments are set to feature again. “After October’s rerating, the heavy lifting shifts back to earnings and cash flows. That is a constructive handover for a sector that has rebuilt its fundamentals,” Anderson says.

Company updates

Several noteworthy company developments during October reflect renewed market activity and investor confidence across South Africa’s real estate investment trusts.

Accelerate Property Fund led the pack after shareholders voted overwhelmingly against the re-election of founder Michael Georgiou to the board, with more than 97% opposing the motion. The stock surged almost 18% following the decision, making it the top-performing REIT for the month.

Emira Property Fund expanded its strategic position in SA Corporate Real Estate, acquiring an additional 130 million shares to take its holding to 229.6 million shares, equivalent to 8.7% of the total shares in issue. Controlled by the iGroup, which owns just over 64% of Emira, the move underscores continued consolidation and capital recycling activity in the sector.

Fairvest announced two earnings-accretive acquisitions, namely Jozini Mall and Tugela Ferry Mall in KwaZulu-Natal, for a combined R674 million at an attractive initial yield of 10.17%. SA Corporate added to this momentum by acquiring the Parks Lifestyle Apartments at Riversands, a 1 960-unit residential complex near Steyn City, for R1.67 billion, while simultaneously disposing of Bluff Towers Shopping Centre for R544.6 million.

Meanwhile, Safari Investments unveiled plans to delist following a firm intention by Heriot REIT to acquire all remaining shares at R8 per share. The proposed deal, once approved, will see Safari become a wholly owned subsidiary of Heriot REIT, enabling a shift toward a development-led growth strategy despite reduced near-term dividends.

Across the board, results from Equites Property Fund and Spear REIT were well received by investors, reflecting improving property fundamentals and the positive impact of lower borrowing costs on distributable earnings, key drivers behind October’s strong sector-wide performance.

The SA REIT Association Chart Books are available for download here.

SA REIT Conference 2026

The SA REIT Association’s biennial conference, proudly sponsored by Nedbank Corporate and Investment Banking’s Property Finance division, takes place on 12 February 2026 at The Houghton Hotel, Johannesburg. The keynote address, “Global REIT Dynamics: Innovation, Influence and Opportunity”, will be delivered by Peter Verwer, Executive Chairman of Futurefy. The agenda will examine capital access, innovation, local government risk, policy and the renewed relevance of REITs in the real economy.

Register here.

Strong momentum in Equites’ prime logistics portfolio

Highlights for the six months include:

  • DPS of 69.04 cents, on-track for full year guidance of 5% – 7% growth
  • Distribution pay-out ratio of 100%
  • NAV per share up by 2.7% in the six months to R16.93
  • R700 million of disposals completed
  • Loan-to-value of 37.2%
  • R3.4 billion of cash and undrawn facilities
  • Preferred bidder for JSE-listed FMCG Group for the development of a c.90 000m2 facility in Riverfields
  • 27.0 MW of solar capacity, with three additional PPAs signed

 

Specialist logistics REIT, Equites Property Fund Limited, today announced strong financial results for the half year to 31 August 2025, underpinned by robust property performance. The Group highlighted DPS of 69.04 cents, up 3.8% and reaffirmed distribution guidance of 140.62 – 143.29 cents per share for FY26. The Group’s portfolio value increased from R27.7 billion in February 2025 to R28.3 billion in August 2025. This is primarily due to further acquisitions of R146 million, ongoing development expenditure of R327 million, and a substantial 4.0% like-for-like fair value uplift on the income-producing portfolio. This growth was offset by further property disposals during the period, amounting to R668 million.

Operational momentum was maintained, with six leases concluded across c.107 000m². The like-for-like portfolio rental growth was 5.1% and is expected to revert to 5.5% to 6% per annum once the impact of rental reversions during the period is in the base. By maintaining tight control over administrative costs and optimising the cost of debt, Equites aims to deliver consistent distribution growth sustainably ahead of SA CPI over the long term.

Equites CEO, Andrea Taverna-Turisan, said: “We are pleased with the strong momentum generated in our portfolio during the period. The overall quality of the portfolio has improved through the disposal of older, non-core assets and the addition of new, ESG-compliant properties. Equites’ portfolio fundamentals are also exceedingly robust, with a WALE of 14.1 years, a weighted average escalation by GLA of 6.1%, and 99.1% of rental income derived from A-grade tenants. The portfolio had a low vacancy of 1.5% at period-end, which has subsequently largely been let. These fundamentals all support a high degree of income certainty over a sustained period.”

 The Group’s LTV ratio was 37.2% as of 31 August 2025, and its all-in cost of debt in SA decreased by more than half a percentage point since year-end to 8.3%. Equites was able to capitalise on its lower LTV to repurchase shares amounting to R130 million. The shares were repurchased at a weighted average price of R13.82 per share, representing a 16% discount to reported NAV per share at the time.

R668 million of disposals during the period

Equites has commenced a staged disposal of its UK assets, given the maturity of the UK portfolio and the compelling opportunity to redeploy capital within SA. Once the disposals are concluded, the proceeds will be deployed into state-of-the-art, ESG-compliant logistics developments in key locations in SA, secured by long-term leases.

The Group concluded the sale of three income-producing assets in the six months. SA disposals comprised a specialised asset not considered core, located in Bellville, and an asset in Philippi. Equites also disposed of a land parcel in Saxdowne for R20 million. In the UK, the Group sold its DPD asset in Burgess Hill for £17.65 million, reflecting a 5.0% yield. With the exception of Philippi, these assets were classified as held-for-sale at Feb-25. Remaining disposals relate to the subsequent sale of companies forming part of the ENGL disposal.

While there is strong interest across the portfolio of assets earmarked for sale, management remains disciplined and will only conclude transactions at levels that are both fair and financially optimal for the Group.

Strong growth in the South African market

Demand for prime logistics assets in SA continues to surpass supply, driven by retailers upgrading their supply chains to stay competitive, third-party logistics providers expanding their fulfilment networks to meet surging e-commerce volumes, and FMCG operators investing in modern facilities to boost delivery efficiency. On the supply side, development remains constrained by a shortage of bulk land plots and persistently low vacancy rates. The resulting supply-demand imbalance has led to an approximately 7.3% year-on-year increase in nominal gross rentals for new logistics developments, indicating ongoing upward pressure on rentals, especially for well-located, A-grade facilities.

Market appetite has strengthened considerably, with Equites receiving inquiries totalling approximately 268 000m² for new developments as well as existing facilities over the last 18 months. Equites has commenced two new speculative developments in Meadowview and Riverfields to capitalise on the rising demand. The Meadowview facility is currently under offer, and a lease has already been finalised at Riverfields, prior to practical completion.

Following a competitive RFP process, Equites was appointed as the preferred bidder to develop a state-of-the-art c.90 000m² logistics facility for a JSE-listed FMCG Group at Riverfields in Gauteng. This landmark project underscores Equites’ ability to secure and deliver large-scale developments for blue-chip clients. The project will be undertaken in a strategic partnership with Tridevco (Pty) Ltd, a prominent landowner in the area. It will provide the partners with the opportunity to jointly unlock further land parcels in the area. Development activity during the first half of 2026 totalled R0.5 billion and is expected to increase significantly with the completion of this facility by June 2027.

With access to prime land, extensive development expertise, and strong ties to major retailers, 3PLs, and FMCG operators, the Group is well-positioned to address the current supply gap while expanding its portfolio of high-quality assets.

Strong debt profile

The Group has R14.2 billion in debt facilities with a weighted average debt maturity profile of 3.2 years and R3.4 billion in cash and undrawn facilities. The Group consistently reviews its capital structure, ensuring that prudent funding and liquidity risk management are balanced with the ability to capitalise on new opportunities as they arise. Equites expects to sell five income-generating assets, with a sixth asset expected to follow in early 2026. The remaining land in the UK is expected to be sold within the next 18 months, generating significant cash. Proceeds will be used to pay down UK debt, with surplus capital reinvested into SA at accretive yields. These actions are projected to lower the Group’s LTV ratio to around 25%, creating significant headroom for the Group to pursue substantial development over the next three years.

The Group’s weighted average cost of debt in SA is 8.3% and 97% of debt maturing beyond one year is hedged. The Group has appreciably reduced the all-in cost of debt due to its continued strong performance in the debt capital market, enabling the replacement of maturing debt with significantly lower-cost new debt facilities.  The Group receives strong support from lending institutions, with roughly one-third of all debt sourced from more than 20 different non-bank financial institutions.

Equites’ sustainable development initiatives are now also growing alternative revenue streams

Sound environmental stewardship is a crucial aspect of the Group’s strategic positioning and remains at the core of its operations.

Equites’ strategy for solar PV systems aims to provide tenants with a comprehensive, maintenance-free solution through power purchase agreements (PPAs), which fulfil their energy needs while generating alternative revenue for the Group. The solar generation capacity of the portfolio increased to 27.0 MW, and the number of buildings with solar PV rose from 32 to 37. Six new solar PV systems with capacity of 1.2 MW will be completed during 2H26, and the Group is aiming to install an additional 5 MW over the next two to three years. Six PPAs concluded in the previous financial year contributed to revenue during 1H26, and a further three PPAs concluded during the current period will contribute to revenue during 2H26. The Group plans to increase wheeling capacity by engaging with municipalities, focusing on large-scale installations across entire roof spaces, and capitalising on rates of return well above typical property returns. This strategy will also help the Group meet its SBTi emissions targets and contribute to energy security in SA.

Green certified buildings comprise over 616 422m² of the portfolio, with an additional 243 640m² in the process of certification to meet the highest environmental standards. Equites has also launched several strategic initiatives to enhance water efficiency across its properties and has obtained municipal approval to install an integrated biological wastewater treatment plant, which will significantly decrease reliance on existing water infrastructure. As the first of its kind within the portfolio, this technology is expected to play a crucial role in strengthening water security and is projected to deliver both environmental and financial benefits over the medium to long term.

A robust outlook for the remainder of the financial year

The Board reaffirms its FY26 earnings guidance, targeting a range of 140.62 – 143.29 cents per share, which translates into an increase of between 5% – 7%, as compared to the previous year. This outlook is supported by the strong performance of the underlying portfolio, with SA delivering above-inflation like-for-like rental growth, positive rent reversions in the UK, and the continued tightening of debt costs during the period.

Taverna-Turisan, ended: “The Group remains confident in its ability to drive sustainable value creation for shareholders over time, underpinned by an impeccable property portfolio as well as structural tailwinds in the sector. The Group is well-capitalised and maintains a low exposure to prevailing market risks, positioning it favourably in the current economic landscape. Our track record of developing world-class facilities for our clients continues to unlock opportunities for the fund to grow.

SA REITs pause in September as sector readies for growth

SA REITs pause in September as sector readies for growth into 2026

Sector slips 0.3% despite stronger bonds and equities while dividend growth momentum continues

South African Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) recorded a marginal 0.3% decline in September, underperforming both equities (+6.6%) and bonds (+3.4%), according to the SA REIT Association’s September 2025 Chart Book. Despite this pause, the sector’s year-to-date return remains at 14%, broadly in line with the bond market, though well behind the equity market’s strong 31.7% advance.

“The subdued performance in September is notable given the sharp decline in long bond yields, a buoyant equity market and further signs that distributable earnings growth is accelerating into 2026,” says Ian Anderson, Head of Listed Property and Portfolio Manager at Merchant West Investments and compiler of the Chart Book.

He adds: “Dividends across the sector are growing by close to 10% year-on-year, yet investors remain cautious about whether this acceleration will be sustained. However, the evidence increasingly supports ongoing double-digit dividend growth into 2026.”

September by the numbers

  • SA REIT sector: -0.3% in September, +14% year-to-date
  • Equities: +6.6% in September, +31.7% year-to-date
  • Bonds: +3.4% in September, +14.0% year-to-date
  • Dividends: Sector-wide growth of close to 10% year-on-year
  • New equity raised in 2025: Just under R4 billion

Results momentum builds across the sector

September saw several key companies release results to end-June 2025.

Growthpoint surprised on the upside with distributable income up 3.1%. Despite disposing of 24 properties worth R2.3 billion and reducing its gross lettable area by over 5%, net property income in its core South African portfolio rose 5%. Management raised the dividend payout ratio to 85%, lifting the dividend 6.1%, well above market consensus. Guidance for FY26 remains conservative while dividends are still expected to grow 6% to 8%.

Fortress delivered a 7.1% dividend increase in FY25. Supported by improving property fundamentals, a robust development pipeline and lower interest rates, management forecasts further growth of 6% to 7.5% in FY26.

Hyprop reported strong operating performance in both South Africa and Eastern Europe. Its FY25 dividend rose 9.9%, with guidance for distributable income growth of 10% to 12% in FY26. The upbeat tone from management represents a shift from their cautious outlook of recent years.

Beyond the large caps, Attacq, Heriot, SA Corporate, Safari and Texton also released better-than-expected results, while Fairvest and Vukile issued positive trading updates. Dipula successfully raised R559 million through an accelerated bookbuild in early September, funding its acquisition of Protea Gardens Mall in Soweto alongside four additional smaller assets.

Investor sentiment shows signs of recovery

Investor confidence in the listed property sector continues to improve. Roughly R4 billion of new equity has already been raised in 2025. While this is still well below the R30 billion annual average raised between 2015 and 2017, it represents a significant rebound from the R8 billion of net new equity raised across the entire period between late 2019 and early 2025.

“This is increasingly a story of returning investor confidence,” indicates Anderson. “The ability to raise capital again at competitive levels, alongside sharply lower borrowing costs, provides the sector with the resources to return to external growth. Acquisitions, redevelopments and greenfield developments are once again feasible, with the potential to accelerate income and dividend growth.”

For example, Growthpoint Healthcare Property Holdings, managed by Growthpoint Investment Partners, the fund management business of Growthpoint, has recently announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire the properties and operations of Auria Senior Living, a developer, owner and operator of senior living communities in South Africa.

The sector’s transformation over the past five years has been marked by defensive measures: Balance sheet management, recycling capital and optimising portfolios. With these foundations now stronger, listed property is positioned to deliver earnings growth above inflation and renewed capital appreciation.

Outlook: Poised for a new growth phase

Anderson notes that while short-term prices can move on sentiment, interest rates and liquidity, long-term capital growth ultimately depends on sustainable earnings and cash flow.

“South Africa’s REIT sector is entering a period of inflation-beating earnings growth, which is not yet fully reflected in most share prices. This creates an opportunity for investors who recognise the sector’s improving fundamentals.”

The positive outlook for the sector was echoed at the SAPOA Convention 2025 at Sun City on 2 October during the panel Listed property – the real economy’s barometer. Anderson opened the discussion with an overview on resilience and growth prospects in the sector. He was joined by Kundayi Munzara, Executive Director and Portfolio Manager at Sesfikile Capital, Pranita Daya, Equity Analyst and Assistant Portfolio Manager at Truffle Asset Management and Andrew Wooler, Chief Executive Officer of Burstone. Moderated by Peter Clark, Founder of REdimension Capital, the discussion highlighted fundamentals, discipline and the role of direct property as a true barometer of the economy. The panel confirmed that listed property is regaining relevance as a clear indicator of South Africa’s real economy.

The full September 2025 Chart Book is available for download on the SA REIT Association website.

SA REIT Conference 2026

The SA REIT Association’s biennial conference, proudly sponsored by Nedbank Corporate and Investment Banking’s Property Finance division, will take place on 12 February 2026 at The Houghton Hotel, Johannesburg.

This flagship event will convene REIT executives, investors, asset managers, policymakers and market experts to engage on the most pressing forces shaping the future of listed real estate. Topics will include global market volatility, access to capital, innovation, local government risks and the policy environment. With a focus on sector credibility and long-term investor relevance, the agenda promises strategic insight and practical direction.

A highlight will be the keynote address by Peter Verwer, Executive Chairman of Futurefy, titled Global REIT Dynamics: Innovation, Influence and Opportunity. He will explore how REITs worldwide are adapting to investor demands, digital transformation, sustainability imperatives and links to infrastructure and nation building. His perspective comes at a pivotal moment, following the relaunch of the Global REIT Alliance in Stockholm in September 2025.

Originally established in 2006 under the banner of the Real Estate Equity Securitization Alliance (REESA), the alliance has been revitalised under its new name to strengthen international collaboration, knowledge-sharing and industry advocacy. The SA REIT Association is a member of the Alliance.

Vukile pre-close trading update for year ended 31 March 2025

Vukile Property Fund closes a transformative year and forecasts accelerating growth

Vukile Property Fund (JSE: VKE), the leading specialist retail real estate investment trust (REIT), delivered a strong pre-close trading update for its financial year ended 31 March 2025, underscoring its dealmaking dexterity, strategic expansion and robust operational delivery. Vukile confirmed it is on track to meet its full-year guidance of 2% to 4% growth in funds from operations (FFO) per share and 6% growth in dividends per share (DPS).

Reflecting strong business momentum and high-quality earnings, Vukile also provided preliminary guidance on FFO and dividend per share growth for FY26 of at least 6%, based on conservative assumptions and without anticipating any need for new equity capital.

The transformative year has been underpinned by strategic execution. Driven by disciplined dealmaking and decisive capital deployment, Vukile’s gross asset value now exceeds R50 billion.

Through its 99.5%-held Spanish subsidiary Castellana Properties, Vukile grew its asset base in Spain and Portugal by nearly 60%. It exited its investment in Lar España at an impressive profit of EUR82 million, swiftly redeploying capital to acquire the iconic Bonaire Shopping Centre in Spain’s Valencia province at a compelling cash-on-cash return of over 8%, avoiding cash drag and securing sustainable earnings from a top-quality asset.

Adding a new engine of growth to its strategy, Vukile entered Portugal with four high-quality retail acquisitions. A fifth deal is well advanced and already fully funded.

All-in-all, the Iberian portfolio grew around 60% over the 12 months, cementing Vukile’s dominant position across two of Europe’s strongest economies − Spain and Portugal. Approximately two-thirds of Vukile’s assets and 60% of earnings are now offshore.

In South Africa, Vukile acquired a 50% stake in Mall of Mthatha (formerly BT Ngebs) in May 2024, where early turnaround performance has exceeded expectations. The mall’s vacancy rate has decreased dramatically from 18% to just 1.8%.

These assets were acquired at a favourable point in the cycle, expanding Vukile’s footprint and growing its Iberian portfolio with strategically aligned, high-performing assets that are delivering strong cash flows with further upside through targeted asset management.

“We’ve come through a phase of explosive growth. Now, we’re focused on integration, optimisation and crystallising value from these assets. Vukile remains open to opportunities but will prioritise deepening value within its current footprint, and for the time being we don’t expect to raise capital,” confirms Laurence Rapp, CEO of Vukile Property Fund.

Operational strength has stood out across Vukile’s portfolio of high-performance, strategically located shopping centres, with limited exposure to new competition and strong pricing power.

In South Africa, like-for-like net property income (NPI) grew 6.4%, vacancies remain below 2%, and 84% of rental reversions were positive or flat.  The portfolio has recorded growth in both sales and footfall. The cost-to-income ratio reduced to 15%, with ongoing progress in solar and water initiatives enhancing sustainability metrics and efficiencies.

In the Iberian portfolio, like-for-like NPI increased by almost 2% and with various value-add projects now complete, significant upward momentum can be expected in the year ahead. Vacancies in both portfolios remain below 2%. Positive rental reversions were a standout 23.6% in Spain and 6.15% in Portugal. Sales grew 4.3% in Spain and 6.7% in Portugal.

“With a well-hedged balance sheet, minimal near-term debt expiries of just 2% maturing in FY26 and strong liquidity, Vukile is closing FY25 in an exceptionally positive position,” says Rapp.

Vukile Property Fund will report results for the full year to 31 March 2025 on 17 June 2025.

 

Growthpoint delivers half-year results ahead of expectations

Growthpoint delivers half-year results ahead of expectations and upgrades outlook to positive growth for full year

Growthpoint Properties Limited (JSE: GRT) delivered stronger-than-expected results for its six-month interim period ending 31 December 2024, reporting distributable income per share (DIPS) of 74.0cps, up 3.9% from HY24, while maintaining its distribution payout ratio at 82.5%.

In line with the first-half performance, Growthpoint upgraded its DIPS guidance for the financial year ending 30 June 2025 from -2% to -5% to positive growth of 1% to 3%, which will be driven mainly by the continued improvement in the operational performance of the South African (SA) portfolio, better finance cost expectations and continued outperformance from the V&A Waterfront. The stronger performance evident in the half-year results will moderate slightly for the full year.

Norbert Sasse, Group CEO of Growthpoint Properties, comments, “Growthpoint has done well to deliver strong results while effectively executing our strategic priorities, streamlining international investments through the disposal of Capital & Regional pls C&R) and further strengthening our SA portfolio. This progress was reflected in the improved performance of the SA portfolio. Additionally, disciplined treasury management kept finance costs below expectations, stringent cost control enhanced efficiency, and again, the V&A Waterfront outperformed.”

Financial Performance

Growthpoint delivered solid results despite ongoing macroeconomic pressures. The total dividend per share (DPS) for HY25 is 61.0cps, a 3.7% increase from HY24. Total property assets stand at R155.2bn, reflecting a decline of 11.2% during the six months, mainly due to the strategic disposal of C&R to optimise the international investment portfolio.

The Group SA REIT loan-to-value (LTV) ratio decreased to 40.8% from 42.3% at FY24, mainly due to the disposal of C&R. The interest cover ratio (ICR) was unchanged at 2.4x. Growthpoint retains strong liquidity, with R0.8bn in cash and R5.2bn in unutilised committed debt facilities and enjoys excellent access to funding at attractive margins. Increased finance costs in SA, stemming from higher average borrowings compared to HY24, were offset by a lower weighted average cost of debt in HY25 of 9.2% (HY24: 9.6%).

“Interest rate pressures have started to ease, although the pace of future reductions is still unclear. Growthpoint remains committed to balance sheet resilience for the long term, underpinning our ongoing access to competitive funding and maintaining financial flexibility,” notes Sasse.

Strategic Priorities

Growthpoint has a diversified portfolio and defensive income streams. It successfully advanced the company’s strategic initiatives during the period aimed at improving the quality of its SA portfolio, including enhancing sustainability initiatives across its core assets toward the goal of carbon neutrality by 2050, and optimising its international investments.

Improving the quality of its directly held SA portfolio of logistics and industrial, office and retail properties, Growthpoint is focused on disposals, developments and targeted investments. Over the past decade, it has trimmed asset numbers in the portfolio by 28%, from 471 to 341, reducing gross lettable area by 14.7%, thereby improving the quality of its portfolio and income streams. In HY25, Growthpoint disposed of a dozen properties for R589.4m at a R7.4m profit to book value and invested R945.4m in development and capital expenditure.

As a result of its portfolio enhancement since FY15, Growthpoint has strategically grown its logistics and industrial assets from 15% to 20% of the total SA portfolio value while increasing its exposure to modern logistics warehouses and better performing nodes. It also reduced its office exposure to 40% from 46% of portfolio value, enhancing quality by selling B- and C-grade assets. Retail property assets stayed stable at 39% of the total portfolio value, even while disposing of assets that are below Growthpoint’s optimum size or in deteriorating central business districts. Growthpoint has invested in extensive redevelopments and upgrades at all its long-hold shopping centres.

Optimising its international investments, Growthpoint’s group-wide strategic and capital allocation review to simplify its business and focus on core assets resulted in it disposing of its entire shareholding in C&R to NewRiver REIT (NRR), effective 10 December 2024. The transaction proceeds of 62.5pps, split between 31.25pps (R1.16bn) cash and 31.25pps equivalent in NRR shares, resulted in Growthpoint taking a R1.22bn or 14.2% investment in NRR. Growthpoint used the cash proceeds to settle debt.

Growthpoint continues to evaluate all options to maximise the value of its investment in NRR as well as for its 29.6% investment in Globalworth Real Estate Investments (GWI), where Growthpoint continues to support management at a shareholder level with value unlock initiatives.

Its 63.7% investment in Growthpoint Properties Australia (GOZ) remains a core investment for Growthpoint.

Growthpoint owns 37.5% of Lango Real Estate Management Limited valued at R341.0m. Lango has however internalised its asset management function at an expense of USD60.3m and Growthpoint will receive preference shares equivalent to the value of its investment. In addition, Lango has been redomiciled to the UK. Growthpoint’s 15.8% investment in Lango UK is now classified as an international investment, and it is no longer included in Growthpoint Investment Partners (GIP).

South African Portfolio

In SA, Growthpoint owns and manages a R67.3bn diversified core portfolio of retail, office, logistics and industrial, and trading and development properties, representing 50.8% of Growthpoint’s total asset book value. This portfolio contributed 50.1% of DIPS.

The SA business enjoyed an improved contribution from all three sectors, including like-for-like rental growth, lower negative rent reversions, occupancy gains in the logistics and industrial portfolio and improved expense efficiencies and recoveries.

For the three sectors, gross property income increased by R98.0m, while expenses declined by R68.0m, driving a R166.0m or 6.2% uplift in net property income (NPI). Reduced loadshedding lowered expenses, especially in the office portfolio, and together with stringent cost management, decreased the SA business’s total expense ratio to 35.4% (HY24: 37.8%).

Comparing HY25 to HY24, the SA portfolio saw further occupancy gains, reducing vacancy rates from 9.2% to 8.3%, while rental renewal growth continued an encouraging trend, moving from -7.1% to -1.8%. The combination of higher occupancy and improving rental renewal growth propelled like-for-like NPI growth from negative 0.1% to an impressive positive 6.8%.

The overall improvement in property metrics was positive for SA property values, which increased 1.4% in the six months, driven by Growthpoint’s portfolio improvements and more favourable market conditions. Growthpoint’s Cape Town and KwaZulu-Natal portfolios are outperforming across all three sectors.

The SA logistics and industrial portfolio is well let, with a low vacancy rate of 3.5% (FY24: 5.2%). Its latest speculative developments at Phase 1 of Arterial Industrial Estate and Centralpoint in Samrand, where 9,541sqm was leased post reporting date, are now both fully let. Portfolio improvements and better overall sector dynamics saw like-for-like NPI grow 3.5% during the six months. Property valuations increased 1.5%. Renewal rental growth entered positive territory, lifting from -3.3% at FY24 to 0.9% over the six months.

Modern logistics properties make up around half of this portfolio’s gross lettable area, and this is increasing with new speculative developments such as the 21,831sqm Phase 2 of Arterial Industrial Estate. Two of the six units in this phase, where construction is nearing completion, are already let.

The SA retail property portfolio like-for-like NPI increased by 6.1% over the six months, reflecting improved overall portfolio quality, constant letting, a higher renewal growth rate and more effective recoveries for on-site solar electricity. The portfolio value increased by 1.4% during the period. Its core vacancy is a low 4.4% (FY24: 4.0%). Growthpoint’s shopping centres achieved strong trading density growth of 3.8% (FY24: 4.1%) and increasing shopper footfalls.

The key redevelopment of Bayside Mall was completed as planned. Growthpoint installed solar photovoltaic panels at seven shopping centres in the six months. Additionally, the R113m redevelopment and upgrade of Beacon Bay is on track for completion in June 2025. At Watercrest Mall, the introduction of a new Shoprite and relocation of Checkers is in progress. Growthpoint is actively exploring and finding solutions for stubborn retail vacancies, and, during the period, it agreed to sell Golden Acre and pivoted the retail mix at Northgate by introducing Shoprite as a new anchor to open in April 2025 and identified a portion of the mall for subdivision and sale. It successfully reduced vacancies at Brooklyn Mall and is contemplating various solutions for the remaining 9,300sqm of vacancy, which is mainly in the offices and two deep stores.

The SA office property portfolio continued to benefit from the sector’s recovery. Like-for-like NPI increased 9.4%, driven by consistent letting and an improved renewal growth rate, which moved up from -14.8% to -6.9% during the half year. Less loadshedding, efficient management of expenses and good recoveries were also positive factors. Stabilised portfolio vacancy levels stayed within the 15% range at 15.9% (FY24: 15.1%). Gauteng represents 72.1% of office portfolio GLA, which showed marginally decreased vacancies at 19.1% (FY24: 19.3%). The office portfolio printed a 1.3% increase in value.

Growthpoint completed the 154-room Canopy by Hilton hotel in its Longkloof mixed-use precinct in Cape Town, where it is also progressing the net-zero carbon redevelopment at 36 Hans Strydom for Ninety One under a 15-year lease for completion in July 2025.

Sustainability highlights achievedduring the period include Growthpoint’s Meadowbrook Estate facility for Serra becoming SA’s first industrial property to earn a prestigious 6-Star Green Star Existing Building Performance (EBP) rating from the Green Building Council South Africa (GBCSA), setting a new benchmark for logistics and industrial properties. The company’s installed solar capacity reached 52.46MWp (HY24: 40.7MWp), already exceeding its FY25 target of 50MWp, and its milestone Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) for 195GWh of renewable, green electricity will begin powering its revolutionary e-co2 solution at 10 Sandton office buildings in FY26, after nearly two years of innovation and preparation. The e-co2 scheme provides Growthpoint tenants access to wheeled renewable hydro, wind and solar electricity at cost-saving fixed escalations while reducing carbon emissions and generating tradeable carbon credits.

SA Trading & Development earned R48.9m (HY24: R20.3m) of trading profits and R5.4m (HY24: R4.0m) of NPI, but no development fees (HY24: R8.0m). Growthpoint’s in-house Trading & Development division develops assets for its own balance sheet as well as for third parties and GIP.

The V&A Waterfront

Growthpoint’s 50% interest in the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town has a property value of R12.4bn, which makes up 9.3% of Growthpoint’s total asset book value and contributed 15.8% to DIPS. Once again, the V&A delivered stellar returns, benefiting from increased tourism and retail activity. Like-for-like NPI rose 16.6% for the six months, with the precinct being fully let. It successfully opened the repurposed Union Castle Building in December 2024. Major projects remain on track, including the Table Bay Hotel’s conversion to the Intercontinental Table Bay Cape Town and the fully let luxury retail wing at Victoria Warf.

The V&A’s hotel, residential and leisure NPI increased by 37%. With the addition of The Commodore Hotel and The Portswood Hotel, the V&A now has three hotels (587 keys) operating under management agreements. Income from hospitality businesses, where the V&A enjoys both the rewards and risks of the operating business as opposed to pure rental, increased to 17% of operating profit earned, up from 10% in HY24.

Growthpoint Investment Partners

Growthpoint’s alternative real estate co-investment platform, GIP, is 1.9% of Growthpoint’s total asset book value and contributed 3.6% to DIPS. It now includes two funds distinct from Growthpoint’s core assets. They are Growthpoint Student Accommodation Holdings, operating under the Thrive Student Living brand, and Growthpoint Healthcare Property Holdings. GIP closed the period with R8.4bn of assets under management, split equally between SA healthcare and student accommodation.

International Investments

Growthpoint continues to optimise its international investment. On 31 December 2024, 37.9% of property assets by book value were located offshore, and 30.5% of its DIPS was generated offshore. Foreign currency income of R769.0m remained at a similar level toHY24.

GOZ, which invests in high-quality industrial and office properties in Australia, accounts for 23.8% of Growthpoint’s total assets by book value and contributed 21.2% to its HY25 DIPS. Despite increasing its payout ratio from 79.8% (HY24) to 95.2%, GOZ’s distribution decreased from AUD9.65cps (HY24) to AUD9.1cps. An additional AUD2.1cps was distributed to compensate for the increased dividend withholding tax, which nearly doubled from 9.8% (HY24) to 18.3%. Growthpoint received a R533.2m net distribution from GOZ (HY24: R551.2m).

GOZ maintained its strong balance sheet and reduced its gearing from 40.7% to 39.7%. The directly owned GOZ portfolio performed well, with occupancy remaining high at 94% (FY24: 95%) and a 6.0-year weighted average lease expiry. The period marked numerous strategic capital highlights for GOZ, including divesting its non-core holding in Dexus Industria REIT for AUD131.7m and establishing the AUD198 million Growthpoint Australia Logistics Partnership (GALP) with TPG Angelo Gordon holding 80%. GOZ also launched the Growthpoint Canberra Office Trust (GCOT), which acquired a AUD90 million high-yielding, primarily government-leased, A-Grade office building in Canberra’s CBD. As a result, GOZ’s funds management business enjoyed strong momentum over the six months.

GWI, which invests in offices and mixed-use precincts in Poland and in Romania where it also develops logistics parks, represents 11.3% of Growthpoint’s total assets by book value and a 5.1% contribution to DIPS. GWI’s dividend of EUR7.5cps (R129.1m) for HY25 was 31.8% down from 11.0cps (HY24: R146.1m), negatively impacted by higher interest rates on its Eurobond refinance, which is also expected to soften Growthpoint’s dividend income from this investment for the full year. GWI maintained a strong balance sheet with gearing at 38.1%.

GWI achieved like-for-like NPI growth of 7.0%, with portfolio vacancies reducing to 13.3% (FY24: 13.8%). Disposing its 50% share in the joint venture industrial portfolio was the main factor contributing to the 5.4% portfolio value decrease to EUR2.6bn. GWI continues to invest in its portfolio, including its current refurbishment of the 48,000sqm Renoma mixed-use property in Poland. It completed and leased 5,900sqm of the Craiova Logistics Hub in the period.

NRR, which invests in retail properties in the UK and which Growthpoint acquired as part of its C&R disposal, accounts for 0.9% of Growthpoint’s total assets by book value and with C&R contributed 3.8% to its HY24 DIPS. NRR declared a dividend of 3.0pps, translating to R38.8m for Growthpoint for the six months ended September 2024. In addition, R57.0m funds from operations from C&R to 10 December 2024 are included in the distributable income.

Lango, which invests in prime commercial real estate assets in key gateway cities across the African continent (excl. SA), accounts for 1.9% of Growthpoint’s total assets by book value and made a 0.4% contribution to DIPS. In HY25, Lango finalised the acquisition of USD200m of assets from Hyprop Investments Limited and Attacq Limited, and Growthpoint received R11.0m dividend income from Lango.

Looking Ahead

Growthpoint’s SA portfolio has stabilised, with key metrics improving across all three sectors.

“We continue to see positive momentum across the portfolio, underpinned by operational resilience and strategic execution. This is supported by the improved sentiment in the country under the Government of National Unity, along with the improving interest rate environment,” says Sasse.

Growthpoint aims to execute R2.8bn in strategic non-core SA asset sales for the full financial year, further improving the quality and sustainability of its property income, albeit at a lower overall quantum. Despite temporary closures in some areas due to major projects underway, the V&A Waterfront is on track for mid-single-digit growth for the full year. The reduction in finance costs will continue to benefit the business going forward.

On the international front, elevated capital costs, both domestically and globally, continue to constrain investment growth.

“As interest rates ease and economic conditions improve, we remain well-positioned to drive long-term value for our stakeholders,” concludes Sasse.

Redefine navigates uncertainty with focus on organic growth

Redefine Properties (JSE: RDF) announced in its pre-close investor update for the half-year ending 28 February 2025 that its earnings outlook has stabilised despite a challenging operating context, driven by a focus on efficiency and strong demand for quality assets.

The company reported that its South African portfolio achieved a net operating profit margin of 77.8%, while EPP, its directly owned Polish retail property platform, improved its margin from 66.4% to 71.7%. This led to a consolidated group net operating profit margin of 75.9%.

Redefine CEO Andrew König highlighted that the global path to economic normalisation has been disrupted by changes in US policy under President Donald Trump, which introduced uncertainty around interest rates and inflation. “The stage is now set for a shallow easing cycle, and rates may not reach the levels we previously expected. While European interest rates continue to trend downward, escalating geoeconomic tensions cloud the 2025 outlook. To sustain growth in valuations, we cannot rely solely on interest rate movements. Our strategic focus remains on organic income growth, as this will drive value creation in the current market.”

Looking ahead, Redefine’s strategy is focused on disciplined capital allocation, the sale of non-core assets to reduce its loan-to-value ratio, restructuring joint ventures to enhance visibility of income streams, whilst delivering income growth. König noted that commercial real estate transactional activity is on the rise, which will support the company’s plans to offload non-core assets, with growing interest in the market.

Despite the disruption caused by the delayed national budget speech, König pointed to two promising initiatives from the National Treasury: efforts to remove South Africa from the greylist by October and the restoration of the country’s investment-grade credit rating. “This is critical for our business, as Redefine’s Moody’s rating was downgraded alongside South Africa’s. A reversal of this could improve access to international debt markets, and the delayed budget may even help with these efforts.”

 Green shoots in the SA portfolio

 Redefine’s South African portfolio has demonstrated solid performance, particularly in the industrial and retail sectors, which drove a 1% increase in overall occupancy since August 2024. Additionally, 80% of renewals were completed at stable or increased rental terms, a positive indicator of growth.

The industrial sector has proven especially resilient, with occupancy rising to 97.6%, alongside positive rental reversions in a competitive market. “The industrial sector continues to be one of our strongest performers, and we see potential for further growth if capital availability allows us to expand,” said Leon Kok, Redefine’s COO.

Conversely, the office sector remains challenged by excess supply and limited demand, except in select nodes. A significant lease renewal resulted in a -17% renewal reversion during the period. However, Redefine mitigated this impact through strong leasing activity in other locations, such as the Western Cape and Sandton, which benefit from proximity to the Gautrain. “Demand is focused on high-quality assets, and our active asset management ensures our portfolio remains well-positioned to attract this limited demand,” Kok added.

Sustainability commitments

 Redefine is making notable strides towards its sustainability goals, with an ambition to become the most sustainable property company by 2030. The company plans to expand its renewable energy capacity by 47%, with an anticipated 17% of energy consumption coming from renewable sources by year-end. Additionally, Redefine has achieved a 38% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions across its European portfolio, further solidifying its commitment to environmental sustainability.

The company also received recognition from Sustainalytics, earning three badges, including being ranked the 16th most sustainable global real estate company, the only South African REIT to place among the top 50 worldwide.

Growth in Poland

 While South Africa faces ongoing challenges, Poland’s economic growth has benefited from European interest rate cuts and social grants that have boosted household spending and retail conditions. EPP’s core properties have seen impressive occupancy levels of 99.3%, with rental reversions rising from 0.2% to 1.5%. The rent-to-sales ratio remains well below 9%, indicating healthy tenant affordability.

Redefine is pursuing a strategy of selling non-core assets and restructuring joint ventures in Poland to reduce complexity and lower the see-through LTV. “We are exploring options to simplify our joint ventures to either exit or fully own them,” König explained.

 Strong cash generation

 Redefine’s financial position remains strong, with a liquidity profile of R6.4 billion as of November 2024. The company has also proactively managed its debt profile, including the FY25 maturities that are progressing well on the back of improved liquidity levels in the capital markets. As of February 2025, Redefine’s weighted average cost of debt decreased to 7.2%, providing some relief amid global inflationary pressures.

Ntobeko Nyawo, Redefine’s CFO, emphasised, “Our focus continues to be on generating organic growth from our existing portfolio, maintaining a strong balance sheet, and weathering the current economic cycle. We are positioning the company to capture opportunities in high-quality assets, while ensuring strong cash generation to support our dividend payouts.”

Looking ahead: Living the upside

Redefine enters 2025 with a focus on “living the upside,” aiming for sustainable, long-term value creation. König concluded, “While some macroeconomic factors, including US policy shifts, remain unpredictable, we are confident in our ability to create our own upside and deliver on our strategic goals.”

Despite macroeconomic challenges, the company is maintaining its earnings guidance for FY25, with distributable income per share expected to be between 50 and 53 cents.