|
Friday 1st November 2002 |
Text too small? |
The stock took off as interest rates dropped and investors bought high-yielding instruments, and the climb has continued since rates bottomed. At $1.02 the shares are yielding 9.5% before tax.
"In the current climate risk-averse investors want yield and are prepared to forgo growth," UBS Warburg property analyst Stuart Graham says.
"It's the same for the whole property sector. The nature of the company's income stream is less volatile [than dividend-paying growth companies]."
Not that the company hasn't been growing. Over the past four years net profit has risen an annual average of 22%.
Early this year Colonial First State Property, a unit of Commonwealth Bank of Australia, took over the management contract and the connection with a major banking and funds management group is expected to benefit Kiwi over time.
The company's flagship, Royal & SunAlliance Centre in Auckland, is now fully tenanted and the $90 million redevelopment of Christchurch's Northlands shopping centre has begun.
No comments yet
CCC - ESQUIRES IRELAND RECOGNISED AS THE BEST IN IRISH AWARDS
FBU - Fletcher Building Quarterly Volume Report for Q3 FY26
April 16th Morning Report
SCT - 2026 Half Year Announcement
Devon Funds Morning Note - 14 April 2026
BNP Paribas accredited as Derivatives Market Maker
GXH - Response to media report
April 14th Morning Report
SML - Synlait responds to The a2 Milk Company announcement
KPG - Annual meeting date, closing date for director nominations