Keppel REIT set Acquire HK Land’s MBFC Tower 3 Stake in a S$1.45 Billion Deal

Keppel REIT set Acquire HK Land’s MBFC Tower 3 Stake in a S$1.45 Billion Deal

Keppel REIT set Acquire HK Land’s MBFC Tower 3 Stake in a S$1.45 Billion Deal

To finance the acquisition, Keppel REIT has announced an underwritten non-renounceable preferential offering-a rights issue-expecting to raise gross proceeds of about S$886.3 million.

Keppel REIT has agreed to buy an additional one-third interest in Marina Bay Financial Centre (MBFC) Tower 3 for S$1.45 billion in a deal set to cement its position in one of Singapore’s most coveted Grade-A office assets and shift the balance of ownership in the landmark tower. 

The vendor is Sageland, a fully owned unit of Hongkong Land, which will sell the stake as part of a deal that will raise Keppel REIT’s interest in the asset, when the deal is completed, to two-thirds. The remaining one-third is held by DBS. In a statement today, Keppel REIT said the transaction marks its continued strategy of deepening its presence in Singapore’s Marina Bay precinct, the heart of the city-state’s financial district. 

To finance the acquisition, Keppel REIT has announced an underwritten non-renounceable preferential offering, a rights issue, expecting to raise gross proceeds of about S$886.3 million. The main domestic banks have been mandated as joint bookrunners and underwriters for the entitlement issue. The manager indicated that the acquisition is expected to complete before year-end, subject to customary conditions. 

Market reaction was not slow in coming. Hongkong Land’s shares rose on the news, reflecting investor relief at the disposal of overseas office interest and the liquidity the sale generates for the group. The counter closed significantly firmer on the day the deal was announced. 

MBFC Tower 3 is situated at 12 Marina Boulevard and forms part of the three-tower Marina Bay Financial Centre complex-a development long associated with premium rents and blue-chip tenants. In moving to acquire a controlling stake, Keppel REIT not only captures a larger share of the tower’s rental revenue but also secures greater operational and strategic control over tenant mix and asset management decisions in a building that remains central to the Singapore office market narrative. 

From a portfolio perspective, the purchase is consistent with Keppel REIT’s stated aim of concentrating quality office assets within core business districts. Investors will be watching intently how the rights issue is taken up-trusts that embark on such equity raises may see short-term dilution, but the move reduces reliance on debt and opens up avenues for accretive acquisitions that enhance longer-term income visibility. 

Analysts will be parsing the deal for its implications on distribution per unit, gearing, and rental reversion potential. Historically, acquisitions of this nature have required careful calibration – balancing the near-term impact of equity issuance against the prospect of higher recurring income once assets are fully integrated. The rights issue – non-renounceable and underwritten – signals the manager’s intent to proceed decisively and to secure committed capital quickly. 

Published reporting converted the S$1.45bn figure into US dollar terms to provide an international frame of reference; the transaction therefore equates to roughly mid- to high hundreds of millions of US dollars depending on prevailing rates, underlining the scale of the investment. 

For unitholders, the immediate focus will fall on the terms of the entitlement-23 new units for every 100 held at the subscription price announced by the manager-and the projected accretion timeline. For tenants and the broader office market, consolidation under Keppel REIT could mean enhanced asset stewardship and a continued focus on maintaining the premium positioning of MBFC amidst evolving occupier demands. 

Keppel REIT’s purchase of Hongkong Land’s MBFC Tower 3 stake is a decisive play in Singapore’s central business district, both a vote of confidence in premium office stock and a financial manoeuvre with immediate funding implications. All will be on how the manager translates the larger ownership into strengthened income and tenant appeal, as to whether the bold S$1.45bn acquisition proves catalytic for unitholder value over the medium term. 

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