Sharecafe

Mirvac Looking to Build on Decent Year

Securities in property manager and investment group Mirvac jumped nearly 4% on Thursday after it revealed a better-than-expected net result of $906m for the year to June 30.

Securities in property manager and investment group Mirvac jumped nearly 4% on Thursday after it revealed a better-than-expected net result for the year to June 30.

The company reported a statutory result of $906 million for the year to June – up just $5 million on a year ago while the operating result of $596 million was up 8% from 2020-21โ€™s $550 million.

Earnings before interest and tax rose 10% to $773 million.

Full year distribution to security holders is 10.33 cents a security, or a total of $404 million, a rise of 3%.

Both the earnings result and the distribution increase were well behind the 6% plus inflation rate for the year to June.

The big surprise from the result and perhaps a trendsetter for other big investors was the quite obvious move to lower its investment in CBD offices.

Mirvac is planning to offload $1.3 billion in office and retail properties this financial year as it rebalances its investments to reflect โ€˜tenant and capital demand for modern, sustainable real estateโ€™.

The selloff may reflect the general softening in those sectors, but Mirvac CEO Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz said the move is aimed at further improving the quality of the groupโ€™s portfolio as it ramps up investments in the industrial and build-to-rent sectors.

Despite the solid result, Lloyd-Hurwitz concedes FY22 presented greater challenges for Mirvac than previous years.

โ€œWe experienced the ongoing impacts of COVID-19, supply chain issues, labour shortages, rising inflation and interest rates, geopolitical tension, and extreme wet weather, particularly across the east coast of Australia,โ€ she says.

โ€œDespite this, we have delivered a strong financial and operational result ahead of guidance, demonstrating the continued resilience of our people and the value of our integrated and diversified business model.

A rebalancing was to be expected after Mirvac snatchedย management rights to the $7.7 billion AMP Wholesale Office Fund (AWOF) in July and after the June 30 balance date.

Ms Lloyd-Hurwitz said in Thursdayโ€™s statement that the coup would โ€œaccelerateย our Funds Management strategy, broadening our investor base, and introducing new accretive income streams. The fundโ€™s modern, sustainable, high-quality $7.7bn investment portfolio is aligned with our portfolio and investment approach, and we look forward to driving future returns for investors.โ€

The securities ended up 3.8% at $2.17.

Serving up fresh finance news, marker movers & expertise.
LinkedIn
Email
X

All Categories

Subscribe

get the latest