Singapore, Feb 10, 2026, 15:42 SGT — Regular session.
- CapitaLand Investment shares were up 0.3% in afternoon trade, after a 1.3% jump on Monday.
- Lodging unit Ascott reported record 19,000 units signed in 2025 and said it has “embedded income” to beat a S$500 million fee target.
- Investors are looking to Wednesday’s results for guidance on fee growth and fundraising momentum.
CapitaLand Investment shares in Singapore ticked up 0.3% to S$3.17 by 3:38 p.m. on Tuesday, after climbing 1.3% in the previous session to S$3.16. 1
The move keeps attention on the group’s push to grow fee income — money it earns for managing and operating assets — at a time when investors are waiting for the company’s next set of numbers and outlook.
CapitaLand Investment is scheduled to host its Q4 2025 earnings call on Feb. 11 at 9 a.m. GMT+8, according to an event listing on Yahoo Finance. 2
Ascott, its wholly owned lodging unit, signed a record 19,000 units across 102 properties in 2025, up 27% year-on-year, and entered more than 10 new cities across Asia Pacific and Europe, a Media OutReach release said. Kevin Goh, Ascott’s CEO, said new signings left it with “embedded income to exceed our S$500 million fee target” as projects in the pipeline open and start generating fees. 3
“Embedded income” refers to contracted fees tied to signed management and franchise deals, though those fees can still depend on timing — properties need to open, and owners need to keep them in the system.
For investors, the question is how quickly that pipeline turns into recurring fee income, and whether it offsets the lumpiness that can come with property investment gains and valuation swings.
CapitaLand Investment is a Singapore-based real estate investment manager with a fee-income business spanning listed funds, private funds and lodging and commercial management, alongside a real estate investment portfolio that generates rental income, according to LSEG data on Reuters. 4
Ascott’s “asset-light” focus — expanding by managing or franchising properties rather than owning them — tends to require less capital upfront, but it can still stumble if openings slip, owners renegotiate terms, or travel demand cools in key markets.
Goh also pointed to growth in higher-fee segments including resorts, branded residences, MICE — meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions — and wellness, according to the same release. That is where fee rates can be higher, but it is also where demand can turn quickly when corporate and leisure budgets tighten.
The downside scenario is simple: signings stay strong on paper, but fee revenue arrives slower than hoped, or comes under pressure if new supply weighs on room rates and occupancy in major cities.
Traders will focus next on Wednesday’s results and briefing for updates on fee income growth, fund-raising for new vehicles and any refreshed targets for Ascott and the broader platform.