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In a market where investors are becoming more selective, steady income has become a bigger part of the conversation again.
Paradigm REIT’s Q1 FYE2026 results give retail investors a useful update on that front. For the quarter ended 31 March 2026, the REIT recorded revenue of RM60.5 million and net property income of RM39.2 million. Distributable income (DI) remained healthy at RM28.9 million, supporting a distribution per unit of 1.80 sen. NAV per unit stood at RM1.03 before distribution and RM1.01 after the income distribution payable on 10 June 2026. The latest payout also reinforces management’s plan to distribute income on a quarterly basis, which adds to the visibility for income-focused investors.
Based on the closing unit price of RM0.955 as at 31 March 2026, this translates into an annualised distribution yield of about 7.7%. For investors who are still looking at income counters, that remains a notable level of yield, especially as it is backed by recurring rental income from established retail assets.
The quarter also gives a more normalised view of Paradigm REIT’s operating performance. Revenue remained stable quarter-on-quarter, while DI continued to be anchored by its retail assets, disciplined cost management and tenant demand across the portfolio.
One of the more reassuring points this quarter is that the operating base still looks steady. Occupancy remained high across the portfolio in Q1, with Paradigm Mall JB at 99.5%, Paradigm Mall PJ at 98.6%, and Bukit Tinggi Shopping Centre remained fully occupied at 100%. For a REIT, this matters because rental income is what supports cash flow and distributions.
The tenant mix also adds to that stability. The malls are supported by a broad spread of trades, including F&B, fashion, supermarket and departmental stores, entertainment, lifestyle and other everyday retail needs. This gives Paradigm REIT exposure to both regular spending and lifestyle drive footfall, rather than relying too heavily on any one segment.
Separately, Maybank’s latest coverage maintained a BUY call on Paradigm REIT with a target price of RM1.32, implying about 43% upside from its stated share price of RM0.98. It also highlighted Paradigm REIT’s 7.7% FY26E dividend yield, strong occupancy, leasing optimisation, rental reversion potential, experiential offerings to drive footfall, and possible yield-accretive acquisitions as some of the reasons the name still stands out within the sector.
The takeaway is simple: Paradigm REIT continues to show the characteristics income investors usually look for: stable assets, high occupancy, healthy DI and regular distributions.
Optical is clearly the Group’s main value creator for now, and the numbers already prove that through its record revenue and earnings in recent quarters.
As for F&B, the retail side is actually holding up reasonably well. The bigger drag has mainly come from the B2B side, which is a different model and naturally takes longer to scale.
Accumulated losses in F&B are also not unusual when a business is still expanding. That is quite normal for this type of segment, where upfront investment comes first and earnings only improve once scale kicks in.
So to label it as outright value destruction is too simplistic. A fairer assessment is that optical is carrying the Group today, while F&B adds diversification and longer-term upside. Once the B2B side improves, the earnings contribution from F&B should look very different.
ya but LSH had already won multiple times with the judge dismissing the claims against LSH, i think the most the most the previous operator can claim is from the govt instead of LSH