🚨 If you bought 1,000 shares of CapitaLand Mall Trust (now $CapLand IntCom T(C38U.SI)$ ) in 2008 and forgot about it... here is exactly how much money you’d have today. 🚨
Most people think investing requires constantly injecting fresh cash. But what happens if you let a high-quality Singapore REIT fund its own growth using nothing but its dividends?
Here is the ultimate "Lazy Investor" math experiment from 2008 to 2026.
📈 The Strategy:
• Start with 1,000 units in 2008.
• Never invest another cent of your own money.
• Take up every single rights issue by borrowing, then let future dividends automatically pay off that debt.
⏱️ The Timeline of Free Growth:
The Start (2008):
Share Count = 1,000 units.
The 2009 GFC Lifeline:
CMT announced a massive 9-for-10 rights issue at S$0.82. You score 900 new units for a total cost of S$738. Instead of paying out of pocket, you add this to your "dividend tab."
👉 New Share Count = 1,900 units.
The Debt Clear Era (2009–2012):
Pulling in a conservative long-term average of S$0.10 per unit annually, your 1,900 units make S$190/year. By the end of 2012, your dividends completely wiped out your S$738 debt.
The 2024 Expansion:
Fast forward through the 2020 merger into CICT. In Sept 2024, they run a preferential offering (56-for-1000 at S$2.007). You pick up another 106 units, creating a minor debt of S$212.74, which your dividends quickly swallow up again.
🚀 The Final Exit: Selling Out on 3 Jul at S$2.40 🚀
If you decided to cash out your entire portfolio on 3 Jul at the market price of S$2.40 per share, here is what your final payday looks like:
💰 The Final Cash-Out Math:
• Initial Investment (2008): S$2,810 (1,000 units @ ~S$2.81)
• Final Share Balance (2026): 2,006 units (Doubled for FREE)
• Selling Price (3 Jul): S$2.40 per unit
📊 The Ultimate ROI Scorecard:
• Initial Capital Outlay: S$2,810.00
• Final Stock Liquidation Value: S$4,814.40 (2,006 units × S$2.40) • Net Cash Dividends Kept: *S$3,000.00* (Pure profit left over)
• Total Wealth Generated: S$7,814.40
• Total Net Profit: 🟢 S$5,004.40
🏆 Total Absolute Return: +178.1%
You nearly tripled your money on a defensive brick-and-mortar retail asset by doing absolutely nothing for 18 years.
💡 The Mic-Drop Realization:
Notice something insane? Your dividends alone (S$3,000) completely paid back your entire initial investment (S$2,810) and then some—leaving you with a pure cash surplus. Meanwhile, your share capital quietly doubled itself in the background.
That is what real, stress-free compounding looks like in the Singapore market. 🇸🇬✨
To see if the REIT strategy actually beat the ultimate risk-free benchmark in Singapore, let's look at the numbers if you put that exact same cash timeline into your CPF Special Account (SA) earning a guaranteed 4% p.a.
Here is what happens if you mirror the exact same injections (Initial Capital + 2009 Rights + 2024 Rights) into CPF SA from 2008 to July 2026.
🏦 The CPF SA 4% Timeline
Jan 2008 (Initial Deposit): S$2,810.00
Feb 2009 (Top-up matching 2009 Rights): +S$738.00
Sep 2024 (Top-up matching 2024 Rights): +S$212.74
Total Out-of-Pocket Cash Injected: S$3,760.74
🔍 Key Takeaways from the Matchup
1. The Out-of-Pocket Difference
With the REIT strategy, the S$950.74 needed for rights issues was *entirely funded by the asset itself* via dividends. For the CPF SA strategy, you had to manually inject that extra S$950.74 out of your own pocket to match the timing, bringing your total capital used to S$3,760.74.
2. Wealth Generation
Despite the market price of CICT dropping from S$2.81 (2008) to S$2.40 (2026), the sheer volume of dividends and the 100% expansion in share count allowed the REIT strategy to generate S$1,257.74 more in net profit than the CPF SA.
💡 The Verdict
While CPF SA gave a beautiful, stress-free +99.6% return (almost doubling your money with zero market volatility), the CICT REIT strategy won out by leveraging its own internal cash flow to fund growth, yielding a massive +178.1% on your actual out-of-pocket cash.
Comments