LDR Capital Sells Brisbane Office Asset to Kick Off Portfolio Overhaul
LED takes first step in portfolio repositioning with $24.8 million Cannon Hill sale
LDR Capital Property Fund (ASX: LED) has exchanged contracts for the sale of 34 Corporate Drive, Cannon Hill, for $24.8 million, with settlement expected on 15 June 2026. The buyer is Aequitas Group, and the sale price reflects a 4.6% discount to book value, consistent with current market conditions for comparable secondary office assets.
This transaction is not a standalone disposal. Management has framed it explicitly as the first step in a broader portfolio recycling strategy, targeting modern, in-demand buildings capable of supporting sustainable and growing distributions. Importantly, the transaction will not impact FY26 distribution guidance.
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Understanding asset recycling in a listed property trust
Asset recycling is a portfolio management strategy commonly used by Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). In straightforward terms, it involves selling assets that are lower-performing or no longer considered core holdings, then redeploying the proceeds into properties better aligned with the trust’s long-term objectives.
For a listed property trust like LED, this matters because not all commercial office buildings carry the same risk and return profile. Secondary-grade assets, generally older buildings or those in less sought-after locations, tend to attract a narrower tenant base and can face greater leasing volatility over time. Modern, in-demand buildings typically offer more resilient occupancy, stronger rental growth prospects, and more predictable income streams.
LDR Capital’s stated goal is to reshape its portfolio toward assets that generate “strong defensive cashflows.” In REIT investing, defensive cashflows are rental income streams that remain relatively stable across different market conditions. These underpin two outcomes that matter most to unitholders: a sustainable distribution (regular income payments) and growth in net tangible assets (NTA), which reflects the underlying value of the fund’s property portfolio. The Cannon Hill sale is the opening move in that direction.
Five strategic priorities driving the repositioning
The Cannon Hill disposal fits within a structured plan LDR Capital outlined during its 1H26 financial results. At that time, management identified five priority areas for the fund:
- Immediate reduction in fund level expenses
- Detailed review of each asset with acute focus on leasing and property management
- Review of all service contractors (both property and fund level) to improve quality and/or reduce costs
- Explore asset recycling and re-investment opportunities
- Review debt, hedging profile and terms of finance
The Cannon Hill transaction directly addresses two of these priorities. By divesting a secondary-grade asset, the fund advances its asset recycling objective. Proceeds will initially be applied to debt repayment, which aligns with the priority to review debt, hedging profile, and terms of finance. A stronger balance sheet positions the fund for future reinvestment as suitable opportunities are identified.
Chairman Paul Lederer provided the following commentary on the strategy:
Paul Lederer, Chairman
“Asset recycling is an important first step to repositioning LDR Capital Property Fund. Our goal is simple. Reshape the portfolio to focus on strong defensive cashflows that will underpin a sustainable distribution and NTA growth into the future.”
Cannon Hill asset at a glance
34 Corporate Drive is a secondary grade office asset located approximately 10 kilometres south-east of the Brisbane CBD. The property was fully occupied at the time of sale, with the following key metrics:
| Asset | Net Leasable Area | Cap Rate | Occupancy |
|---|---|---|---|
| 34 Corporate Drive, Cannon Hill | 5,339 sqm | 7.50% | 100% |
While the asset was fully leased, its secondary grade classification reflects the building’s age and positioning relative to newer, institutional-grade office stock. Selling a 100% occupied asset in current conditions demonstrates the fund’s willingness to prioritise long-term portfolio quality over near-term income preservation.
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What this means for LED investors
The most immediate reassurance for unitholders is that FY26 distribution guidance remains unchanged. The Cannon Hill sale does not alter the income investors are expected to receive this financial year.
Beyond the near term, the transaction strengthens the fund’s financial position. Applying sale proceeds to debt repayment reduces the fund’s leverage and creates capacity for future capital allocation. LDR Capital manages approximately $1.6 billion in real estate assets, providing a meaningful scale base from which the repositioning strategy can be executed.
Management’s own language frames this as a first step rather than a completed outcome. The broader strategy points toward a portfolio increasingly concentrated in modern, in-demand buildings with more resilient income profiles. For investors focused on distribution sustainability and NTA growth over time, the direction of travel outlined by LDR Capital is worth monitoring as subsequent portfolio decisions unfold.
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