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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
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Triple Point Social Housing Reit Plc | SOHO | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
---|---|---|---|---|
59.20 | 59.20 | 60.80 | 60.30 | 59.20 |
Industry Sector |
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REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 30/10/2024 18:51 by mark5man Agreed, I think this will rise over the next week after the focus and attention to social housing in the budget are factored in by investors. Well done Rachel Reeves |
Posted at 06/9/2024 09:51 by aishah How confident are investors in the reported NAV after the DG19 debacle? |
Posted at 19/7/2024 17:15 by woodhawk As far as I'm concerned, almost all of my portfolio is trading at extremely low valuations! Great for dividend hunters - I'm still stashing away great yields at these sort of levels all across the market. I suspect that in due course this will - in retrospect (of course) - be seen as a great time for investors. |
Posted at 04/6/2024 06:11 by spectoacc Every REIT investor calling a read-across, from a possible bid (price/discount to NAV unknown) for a Euro warehouse co :)There was barely any read-across when UK REITs were getting picked off (LXI, CTPT, UKCM, nearly API..). |
Posted at 14/9/2023 07:27 by cwa1 Found it to save you posting:-Ticker: SONG Share price at close: 93p Update: Triple Point Social Housing This is another trust to have seen its most direct rival fall to a bid, in this case for Civitas Social Housing at 80p a share, a premium of 44pc to the previous share price. The takeover of Civitas has already been completed and the shares no longer trade on the stock market. The offer price represented a 26.7pc discount to the trust’s NAV at the time. If we apply the same discount to Triple Point Social Housing’s NAV of 111.31p we arrive at a share price of 81.6p. The current share price is only 55.7p and the gap between the two figures is doubtless due in part to the long-running series of interventions by regulators in the social housing arena and the consequent reputational damage done to the trusts. Meanwhile Triple Point continues to pay its generous dividend at a targeted level of 5.46p this year, which represents a yield of 9.8pc, so investors are being well rewarded while they wait for improvement in the share price, whether from a bid or otherwise. Questor says: hold Ticker: SOHO Share price at close: 55.7p |
Posted at 07/9/2023 13:24 by indalo I'm reassured by the update;- would be good to see them move some properties to alternative approved providers on like-for-like rental terms to demonstrate that there is demand and that it can be done. - I think the inflation linked rents more than offsets the current negative divi' cover and refinance risk (which is ten years away - and who knows, rates may be back to 3% by then anyway!) - Structural demand remains strong. - CSH buyout underlines investor appetite for social housing. - Share buyback would be odd if they plan to clip the divi. My best guess now is that the divi will be maintained next year, or potentially increased a little if the troublesome providers are resolved (one way or another). Oh, and I'm enjoying the 2.5% quarterly dividends! I feel that the income and prospects easily outweigh the risks here. |
Posted at 01/9/2023 07:17 by wskill Yes after the HOME debacle all providers were tarred with the same brush a great pity we lost CSH so cheaply. SOHO have now provided us investors with the proof that there is no chance of another HOME type fraud here. |
Posted at 23/6/2023 12:07 by moth1 What am I missing here. PLUSES -Over 50% discount to asset value-Low leverage level -Over 11% yield-Cheap debt with plus 10 year average term-Similar business model, Civitas, just sold to CK, one of HKs oldest,largest and cleverest property groups for a bargain price of 80p. CK have other investments in UK social housing so will understand the space.-Civitas institutional investors will be looking for a home for their social housing exposure. Soho is the only choice-Professional management with Triple Point.High Yield will enable an acquirer to easily part finance with long term debt.MINUSES -Credit worthiness of some of the operators -Political risk of business modelMitigated by the analysis that CK group must have undertaken before they committed hundreds of millions to the Civitas acquisition. |
Posted at 15/6/2023 19:58 by m_kerr this is one of the cases that IMV you can look through the tenant risk and recognise that the underlying residential real estate is valuable and saleable independent of the covenant. that is not the case of many other subsectors, like offices, for instance.alot of investors would no doubt have considered this government income, when the reality is a little different. there is risk to the income streams here, but the share price no longer ascribes any premium for government income. long term direct government leases are about 5% NIY, but this valuation ascribes a 8.2% NIY. so it's another case where the known risks are already in the share price (and more) IMV. |
Posted at 30/5/2022 15:47 by rik shaw See page 43 of the 2021 Annual Report'Rents under the leases are indexed against either CPI (92.6%) or RPI (7.4%), which provides investors with the comfort that the rental income will increase in line with inflation. Some leases have an index ‘premium’ which the standard rental increase is based upon CPI or RPI plus a further percentage point, reflecting top-ups by local authorities. These account for 7.9% of the Group’s leases. ' |
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