Brookfield India Real Estate Trust on Tuesday reported a 16 per cent increase in net operating income to ₹488.5 crore and announced a distribution of ₹319 crore to unitholde ₹ for the latest quarter ended March.
Its Net Operating Income (NOI) stood at ₹422 crore in the year-ago period.
The company announced the distribution of ₹319.1 crore ( ₹5.25 per unit) to its unitholde ₹ for the March quarter, 10.5 per cent higher than the fourth quarter of the 2023-24 fiscal, according to a regulatory filing.
During the full 2024-25 fiscal, the NOI grew by 37 per cent to ₹ 1854 crore from ₹1,350 crore in the preceding year.
The company declared total distributions of ₹1,053.7 crore ( ₹19.25 per unit) in the last fiscal, an increase of 8.5 per cent than 2023-24 financial year.
Also Read
"Our fiscal 2025 has been a remarkable all-round performance, delivering strong leasing, double-digit same-store growth, higher distributions, and a marquee acquisition," said Alok Aggarwal, CEO and Managing Director, Brookfield India Real Estate Trust.
"Our ₹47 billion of capital issuance reflects investor confidence in our long-term strategic vision. With 2 million square feet of ongoing conversions in our SEZ properties and a robust leasing pipeline, we are well-positioned for sustained growth over the next year," he added.
Brookfield India Real Estate Trust achieved gross leasing of around 3 million square feet, including 2.2 million square feet of new leasing and 0.8 million square feet of renewals.
More than 50 per cent of the leasing was in SEZ properties, indicating steady demand recovery, the company said.
Brookfield India REIT is managing 10 Grade A assets located in Delhi, Mumbai, Gurugram, Noida, and Kolkata.
The Brookfield India REIT portfolio consists of 29 million square feet of total leasable area, comprising 24.5 million square feet of operating area, 0.6 million square feet of under-construction area, and 3.9 million square feet of future development potential.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

)