Healthcare S-REIT
ParkwayLife REIT (C2PU)
A Singapore-listed healthcare REIT (S-REIT) sponsored by Parkway/Pantai (IHH Healthcare). Every figure below comes from C2PU's own published results, each with its date — a factual data page, not a recommendation.
Distribution yield
3.71%
Based on the 13 Jul 2026 price of S$4.12.
C2PU's regular payouts over the last 12 months, divided by its latest unit price — one-off specials and future-period advances excluded. Full method at /reits/methodology/ .
Check the current live quote at Parkway/Pantai (IHH Healthcare)'s investor relations site ↗
Key metrics
- Unit price
- S$4.12
- Price vs book value (P/NAV)
- 1.63x
- How much it borrows (gearing)
- 34.2%
- How easily it covers its interest (ICR)
- 8.4x
- Market cap
- S$2.7B
- Distribution frequency
- semi-annual
as of 13 Jul 2026
Book value (NAV) S$2.53 as of 31 Mar 2026 · under 1.0 means trading below book value
as of 31 Mar 2026 · debt as a share of assets — MAS caps this at 50%
as of 31 Mar 2026
price × units outstanding
Payout history (DPU)
Every payout per unit (DPU) C2PU has disclosed in our record, most recent first, each linking back to its source document. The yield above counts each period's full regular payout over the last 12 months — a placement advance is folded into its own period, while one-off specials and advances for a future period (shown separately below) are left out.
What this yield doesn't tell you
- Yield is not total return. C2PU's total return also depends on the change in unit price, which this figure ignores.
- Distributions (DPU) are not guaranteed the way a bond coupon is — the REIT manager can cut the distribution per unit if income or capital conditions require it.
- Unit prices generally fall when interest rates rise, since REITs compete with bonds for income-seeking capital and are typically leveraged.
- An unusually high yield can signal distress — the market may be pricing in a distribution cut or refinancing risk (a "yield trap"), not a bargain.
- C2PU is not capital-guaranteed and is taxed differently from SGS/SSB: SGS and SSB interest paid to individuals is tax-exempt in Singapore, while REIT distributions run a separate regime that depends on the component (taxable, tax-exempt, or capital). See iras.gov.sg for the current rules.