Kiwi Income Property Trust, the country's second-biggest listed property investor, posted a 7.8 per cent drop in annual profit as costs from exiting its management contract with Commonwealth Bank of Australia outweighed valuation gains and insurance payments.
Net income fell to $101.3 million in the year ended March 31, from $109.8 million a year earlier, Auckland-based Kiwi Income said in a statement. Revenue rose 5 per cent to $208.7 million.
Kiwi Income paid $74.5 million to exit its management contract with CBA, taking the management inhouse, and plans to put a proposal to investors later this year to move to a company structure which it says will reap savings and greater protections under the Takeovers Code and Companies Act.
In the past year, the trust increased its after-tax distributable income by 25 per cent to $76.3 million. Net rental income rose 9.7 per cent to $148.7 million as it benefited from new and refurbished properties. The trust will pay a final distribution of 3.2 cents per unit, taking the annual payment to 6.4 cents. It expects that to increase to about 6.5 cents in the coming year as it benefits from a strengthening economy.
Units in the trust last traded at 1.155 cents apiece and have gained 7 per cent this year.