Monday, 27 April 2026

April 2026 Update: Strengthening My Portfolio’s Dividend Power

Over the past week, I have trimmed my position in Nanofilm to take partial profits following its recent share price strength. While I remain constructive on its longer-term prospects, the sharp rebound presented an opportunity to lock in gains and rebalance exposure. As per my previous update, I had sold Alibaba shares amid regulatory uncertainty and a muted consumer recovery in China.

Proceeds from these adjustments have been channelled into NTT DC REIT, primarily for its attractive dividend yield of approximately 7–8%. In the current environment, the ability to generate stable and recurring income is a key priority, and the REIT offers a compelling yield spread relative to other income instruments. This provides a strong foundation for portfolio cash flow while reducing overall volatility.

Beyond yield, NTT DC REIT offers direct exposure to the data centre sector, which is underpinned by powerful structural tailwinds such as cloud adoption, artificial intelligence workloads, and ongoing digitalisation. The quality of its assets, coupled with long-term leases signed with large software companies, supports visibility and resilience of its DPU.

As the year progresses, the portfolio is steadily evolving into a more robust income generator. Dividend contributions are increasing meaningfully, and the $60,000 annual dividend target now appears well within reach.

Dividend

There is no change in the total dividend income received.

Current Portfolio Value is $1,220,400

Dividend

USD:$13,060

HKD:$9,068.61

SGD:$6,507.80


Monday, 20 April 2026

I Took a Loss After 4.5 Years Investing in Alibaba

Today, I sold a partial stake of 1,800 Alibaba HK shares. It marks the end of a position I held for approximately four and a half years — and not in the way I had originally envisioned.

At an average cost of around HKD 142, it’s ironic that after such a long holding period, I still have a realised -1% loss.

What Made Me Decide to Sell

First, Alibaba’s earnings trajectory has largely gone sideways.

Revenue growth has slowed significantly from its earlier high-growth phase, transitioning from rapid expansion into a more mature, slower-growing profile. At the same time, earnings growth has not matched the revenue growth. Despite this, the stock continues to trade at around ~20x price-to-earnings, which is not particularly compelling given the lack of strong growth momentum.

Second, the opprotunity cost of holding Alibaba has been substantial. In Singapore, listed REITs have consistently delivered 5%–7% yields annually, with additional upside from capital appreciation over the past few years. Alibaba has not made much progress. On top of that, capital allocation has been conservative. Buybacks have slowed as the company prioritises AI investments inquiries with Alibaba IR the idea of leveraging low-cost debt to fund more aggressive buybacks while using capital for CAPEX has returned with no interest by the management. It is a signal that Alibaba Management does not feel its shares are too udervalued at current prices. 

Hence, I will be deploying capital to purchase REITs

Sunday, 12 April 2026

April 2026 Portfolio Update: Dividend Growing

Since the last update, I have made 03 additional stock acquisitions:

  1. Lendlease Global Commercial REIT
    The share price fell below its issue price, presenting an attractive entry point. I accumulated shares at an average price of 0.55, which translates to an approximate dividend yield of 6.4%. This represents a reasonable yield for a REIT of its profile.
  2. NTT DC REIT
    I increased my holdings when the share price declined to 0.925. At this level, the stock offers an estimated yield of around 8%, which I consider a strong value proposition.
  3. Yangzijiang Financial

I look forward to achieving higher dividend contributions going forward. From a dividend investment perspective, generating annual returns of 6–8% in Singapore is relatively attainable. By looking beyond the large-cap REITs and selectively investing in mid-cap names such as Lendlease Global Commercial REIT and NTT DC REIT, these levels of yield can be achieved.

In my view, such returns compare favourably against many other asset classes in Singapore, while remaining accessible to the average retail investor.

Dividend

There is no change in the total dividend income received.

Current Portfolio Value is $1,163,500

Dividend

USD:$13,060

HKD:$9,068.61

SGD:$6,507.80