Keppel DC Reit acquires Tokyo data centre for 82.1 billion yen, launches preferential offering to raise S4.5 million

Keppel DC Reit acquires Tokyo data centre for 82.1 billion yen, launches preferential offering to raise S$404.5 million


The new, freehold facility is contracted to a leading global hyperscaler for 15 years

[SINGAPORE] The manager of Keppel DC Reit on Monday (Sep 22) announced that it had entered into an agreement to acquire a full interest in Tokyo Data Centre 3.

The newly built freehold facility, located in Inzai City, Japan, will be acquired for a consideration of 82.1 billion yen (S$707 million) – about a 1.1 per cent discount to its 83 billion valuation. It is built to a Tier III specification, which means that critical systems can be replaced without operational interruption.

Keppel DC Reit will hold a 98.5 per cent interest in the data centre, while Keppel will hold the remainder. The acquisition is expected to be completed by the end of 2025.

Loh Hwee Long, chief executive officer of Keppel DC Reit’s manager, said: “The accretive acquisition of Tokyo Data Centre 3 is aligned with our value creation strategy to pursue hyperscale opportunities in established data centre hubs.”

He added that “favourable demand-supply dynamics” for data centres in Japan and the country’s position as a link between Asia and the Americas make it a “compelling market for long-term growth”.

Keppel DC Reit also launched a pro rata non-renounceable preferential offering to raise gross proceeds of about S$404.5 million. Entitled unitholders of the real estate investment trust (Reit) will be offered 80 new units for every 1,000 existing units held, at an issue price of S$2.24 apiece.

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The proceeds from the preferential offering will be used to partially fund the acquisition of Tokyo Data Centre 3, finance an asset enhancement initiative at Keppel DC Singapore 8, cover associated costs for a 30-year land lease extension for Keppel DC Singapore 1, as well as for debt repayment purposes.

The number of units in issue will rise by 8 per cent, or about 180.6 million units.

The acquisition of Tokyo Data Centre 3 will mark the second Japan data centre in the Reit’s portfolio.

SEE ALSO

A server room in one of Keppel DC Reit’s data centre assets (above). The Reit had subscribed to S$88.7 million in bonds and 100% of the preference shares issued by NetCo, for S$1 million.

It is fully contracted to a global hyperscaler for 15 years with built-in annual rent escalation, offering greater cash-flow resilience compared to the usual fixed-rent contracts in the Japanese data centre market.

The acquisition is expected to immediately drive distribution per unit (DPU) growth. If it had been completed on Jan 1, 2024, financial year 2024 DPU would be 2.8 per cent higher at S$0.09712 from S$0.09451, said the manager.

Portfolio occupancy is also expected to inch up to 95.9 per cent from 95.8 per cent, with weighted average lease expiry by lettable area to increase from 6.9 to 7.2 years.

Gearing is expected to rise 4.5 percentage points to 34.5 per cent after the acquisition, said the manager, but Citi analyst Brandon Lee estimated it would be higher at 36.3 per cent.

Keppel DC Reit’s assets under management will further increase to S$5.7 billion with 25 data centres across 10 countries in Asia-Pacific and Europe.

Earlier this month, Keppel acquired the 51 per cent remaining interest in two artificial intelligence-ready hyperscale data centres in Singapore from sponsor Keppel for up to S$8.4 million.

It posted a 12.8 per cent increase in DPU to S$0.05133 for its first half of the financial year ended Jun 30, from S$0.04549 in the same year-ago period.

Units of Keppel DC Reit closed flat at S$2.36, before the announcement.



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Swedan Margen

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