Our website is made possible by displaying non-intrusive online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling or pausing your ad blocker.
Let say I have 2 properties market price at RM150 each. I have only RM100 equity and remaining was financed with debt cost 4%.
Rental yield (Prop A: 6%, Prop B: 8%)
NPI yield (Prop A: 3%, Prop B: 5%)
Annual NPI would be 150×(3+5)%=RM12
Finance cost = 200 x 4% = RM8
Net dividend = 12 - 8= RM4
If without Prop A, I lose RM9 rental (NPI RM4.5). But net dividend = 150x5% - 50x4% = RM5.5
hope everyone can understand this simplified example. losing low NPI yield could mean better dividend
theedge Article was misleading. Menara Ambank is considered as negative NPI (Net Property Income) yield asset. You can refer to AmFIRST announcement.
in fact, occupancy rate for the building in past 6 years was hovering around 70-78%. With that NPI yield of about 2.9% FY2025, it is much lower than 4.x% finance cost.
Even with better occupancy rate FY2026, the NPI yield would just improve to ~3%.
While selling that building will directly increasing dividend yield and lowering gearing ratio