Country Market Context

A negative index move of just -0.04 sits beside a real-yield ranking of 3. That contrast frames Thailand well. As of 2026-04-20, the SET Index (^SET.BK) stood at 1481.85, showing little day-to-day movement while the country’s dividend and REIT screens still produced comparatively strong inflation-adjusted income metrics.

Thailand’s market context in this dataset centers on 28 dividend-paying stocks in the real-yield universe and 10 listed REIT or property-fund style vehicles in the Finance Pulse REIT module. The market currency is THB, and the article focuses on Thailand as tracked through the SET Index rather than through a broader ASEAN composite. That matters because country-level inflation and local yield conditions directly shape real-yield outcomes.

The headline macro link is simple: with inflation at 1.366, nominal income translates into more meaningful real yield than in higher-inflation markets. Data shows Thailand’s average nominal yield at 5.294 and average real yield at 3.875, placing the country near the upper end of the regional ranking set covered by Finance Pulse Research.

Beyond the headline numbers, this deep dive narrows to the parts of the Thai market where payout analysis is most informative: REITs, property funds, sector-level yield concentration, and the interaction between stated distributions and NAV pricing. It also references core country pages for Thailand REITs, Thailand foreign flows, and Thailand real yield. The scope here is analytical rather than directional: the article examines how Thailand’s REIT market screens on distribution safety, valuation versus NAV, and inflation-adjusted yield.

Real Yield Landscape

Thailand’s average real yield is 3.875, derived from an average nominal yield of 5.294 against inflation of 1.366. Real yield here means nominal dividend yield adjusted for inflation, so it approximates how much income remains after the local inflation rate is accounted for. In the Finance Pulse country ranking set, Thailand stands at rank 3. The distribution profile is wide rather than tightly clustered: the median real yield is 4.542, the 25th percentile is 0.823, and the 75th percentile is 6.328. The minimum sits at -1.347 while the maximum reaches 10.067, with a standard deviation of 3.381 across 28 stocks.

That spread matters. It suggests that Thailand’s dividend market does not offer a uniform payout backdrop; instead, it combines a strong upper tier with a much weaker lower tail. The median being above the mean also indicates that some lower-yielding names pull the average down even as the higher-yield cohort remains sizable.

A different pattern emerges when the top individual stocks are grouped by sector instead of read line by line. Finance dominates the very top, REITs occupy much of the upper-middle, and Energy and Utilities appear further down the table despite still clearing inflation by a noticeable margin.

Ticker Company Sector Nominal Yield Inflation Real Yield
KTB.BK Krung Thai Bank Finance 11.57 1.366 10.067
GVREIT.BK Golden Ventures REIT REIT 10.89 1.366 9.396
BBL.BK Bangkok Bank Finance 10.03 1.366 8.547
ALLY.BK Ally Global Property Fund REIT 10.0 1.366 8.518
LHHOTEL.BK LH Hotel REIT REIT 9.61 1.366 8.133
CPNREIT.BK CPN Retail Growth REIT REIT 9.16 1.366 7.689
SCB.BK Siam Commercial Bank Finance 7.78 1.366 6.328
WHART.BK WHA Premium Growth REIT REIT 7.3 1.366 5.854
AIMIRT.BK AIM Industrial Growth REIT REIT 7.26 1.366 5.815
IMPACT.BK Impact Growth REIT REIT 6.73 1.366 5.292
FTREIT.BK Frasers Property Thailand REIT REIT 6.71 1.366 5.272
KBANK.BK Kasikornbank Finance 6.35 1.366 4.917
PTT.BK PTT Public Company Energy 6.04 1.366 4.611
PTTEP.BK PTT Exploration Energy 6.03 1.366 4.601
EGCO.BK Electricity Generating Utilities 5.91 1.366 4.483

Finance sets the ceiling in this list. Krung Thai Bank posts the highest real yield at 10.067, and Bangkok Bank follows at 8.547, while Siam Commercial Bank and Kasikornbank keep the sector represented deeper into the ranking. That cluster lines up with the country-level sector table, where Finance carries the highest average real yield at 7.465 among sectors with multiple stocks.

REITs, however, provide the broadest presence near the top. Seven of the 15 listed names in the top-stock table belong to the REIT sector, and their real yields range from 5.272 to 9.396. That breadth is significant because it shows the Thailand REIT market is not relying on one isolated outlier; instead, several vehicles clear the inflation hurdle by a substantial margin.

The data shifts when viewed through inflation-adjusted resilience. The inflation input stays fixed at 1.366 across the list, so differences in real yield come almost entirely from nominal distributions. In a low-inflation environment, the gap between nominal and real yield remains relatively narrow. A stock yielding 10.89 still screens at 9.396 after inflation, while a 6.71 nominal yield still translates to 5.272 in real terms.

Energy and Utilities remain positive but form a lower-yield tier in this top-stock set. PTT Public Company, PTT Exploration, and Electricity Generating each produce real yields above 4, yet none challenge the best Finance or REIT entries. That gap helps explain why Thailand’s aggregate market ranking can remain strong even if some sectors are merely moderate rather than exceptional.

For readers comparing country-level income conditions, the more complete country screens sit on Thailand real yield and the REIT-specific lens on Thailand REITs. Within this article’s narrower topic, the main takeaway is structural: Thailand combines low inflation with a top-heavy group of Finance and REIT names, and that combination lifts the country’s real-yield profile above what the nominal averages alone might imply.

REIT Market Analysis

Thailand’s REIT universe in this dataset contains 10 names, with an average current yield of 6.766 and an average NAV premium/discount of -11.624. NAV premium/discount measures how far a REIT’s market price sits above or below its latest reported net asset value; negative figures indicate a discount, while positive figures indicate a premium. Distribution Safety Score also requires an inline definition: it is a 0-100 measure in the Finance Pulse framework where higher indicates stronger payout coverage and distribution sustainability signals.

The first striking feature is the valuation skew. While several Thai REITs trade close to NAV or at modest premiums, the country average is pulled sharply downward by very deep discounts. That split creates two clear groups: one group priced near reported asset value, and another group trading at much larger gaps.

Ticker Name Sub-Sector Yield NAV Discount Safety Score Aristocrat?
GVREIT.BK Golden Ventures REIT Office 10.89 -35.64 0 No
ALLY.BK Ally Global Property Fund Diversified 10.0 -54.98 25 No
LHHOTEL.BK LH Hotel REIT Hospitality 9.61 -0.14 25 No
CPNREIT.BK CPN Retail Growth REIT Retail 9.16 1.98 0 No
WHART.BK WHA Premium Growth REIT Industrial 7.3 0.48 0 No
AIMIRT.BK AIM Industrial Growth REIT Industrial 7.26 -8.61 0 No
IMPACT.BK Impact Growth REIT Diversified 6.73 0.41 25 Yes
FTREIT.BK Frasers Property Thailand REIT Industrial 6.71 3.51 25 Yes
BTSGIF.BK BTS Rail Mass Transit Growth Transport data not available data not available 0 No
DIF.BK Digital Telecommunications Infra Fund Infrastructure data not available data not available 0 No

Start with the discount outliers. Ally Global Property Fund shows a NAV discount of -54.98, and the dataset explicitly flags an anomaly: extreme NAV discount of -55.0% may reflect stale NAV data, illiquid market, or structural factors. That note is essential because reading the discount at face value without context would overstate valuation certainty. Golden Ventures REIT also stands out at -35.64, making Office the most deeply discounted sub-sector entry in this table.

Near the center of the distribution, the market looks very different. LH Hotel REIT sits almost at par with a NAV reading of -0.14, WHA Premium Growth REIT shows 0.48, and Impact Growth REIT stands at 0.41. Frasers Property Thailand REIT goes further, trading at a 3.51 premium, while CPN Retail Growth REIT also screens above NAV at 1.98. Those figures imply that Thailand’s average discount is not representative of every listed vehicle; rather, a few deep-discount names coexist with a cluster close to asset value.

A different pattern emerges when yield is compared with Safety Score. The two highest-yield names, Golden Ventures REIT at 10.89 and Ally Global Property Fund at 10.0, do not produce the strongest safety profile in the table. Golden Ventures REIT carries a Safety Score of 0, and Ally Global Property Fund posts 25. By contrast, lower-yielding Impact Growth REIT and Frasers Property Thailand REIT both show Safety Scores of 25 and are also the only aristocrats in the country dataset.

Aristocrat status needs definition as well: in the Finance Pulse REIT module, it identifies REITs with sustained continuous distributions that meet the platform’s distribution consistency criteria. Thailand has 2 aristocrats: Impact Growth REIT and Frasers Property Thailand REIT. Both have 12 years of continuous distributions, but the paths differ. Impact Growth REIT records 5-year distribution growth of 36.287, and that too is flagged by an anomaly note stating that the extreme 5-year distribution growth may reflect one-time events or base effects. Frasers Property Thailand REIT is more moderate, with 5-year distribution growth of 3.218.

The data shifts when viewed through historical yield anchors. Golden Ventures REIT’s current yield of 10.89 sits below its 5-year average yield of 12.134, and Ally Global Property Fund’s 10.0 compares with a 5-year average of 12.014. In contrast, LH Hotel REIT’s current 9.61 is well above its 5-year average of 6.901, while Impact Growth REIT’s 6.73 exceeds its 5-year average of 4.461. Those gaps show that a high current yield can arise from very different setups: some reflect names that remain below their own long-run payout/yield patterns, while others sit materially above prior averages.

Incomplete coverage also matters. BTS Rail Mass Transit Growth and Digital Telecommunications Infra Fund are included in the REIT module, yet current yield and NAV discount are data not available. Their presence still contributes to market structure analysis because they broaden the sub-sector map into Transport and Infrastructure, but their missing current metrics limit direct comparability with the rest of the table.

For a broader country list and ticker-level screens, readers can use Thailand REITs. Within this article’s narrower frame, the Thai REIT market appears bifurcated: headline yields are high, average valuation screens at a discount, but the safety and pricing picture becomes far more selective once anomaly flags, missing fields, and asset-value dispersion are incorporated.

Sector Distribution

Thailand’s sector mix is concentrated at the top and fragmented below it. REITs account for 10 stocks in the sector table, more than any other segment, while Finance contributes 4. Energy and Utilities each provide 3, Telecom 2, and the remaining sectors appear as single-stock representations.

Sector Stock Count Avg Nominal Yield Avg Real Yield
REIT 10 6.766 5.327
Finance 4 8.933 7.465
Energy 3 4.227 2.822
Utilities 3 3.703 2.306
Telecom 2 3.48 2.085
Retail 1 3.47 2.076
Hospitality 1 3.11 1.721
Consumer 1 2.49 1.109
Materials 1 2.17 0.793
Transport 1 1.48 0.113
Chemicals 1 1.36 -0.006

Finance leads on yield intensity rather than breadth. Its average nominal yield of 8.933 and average real yield of 7.465 both exceed REITs, even though REITs dominate in stock count. That contrast helps explain the country’s upper-tier real-yield ranking: Thailand gets support from both a large REIT base and an especially strong Finance cohort.

Beyond the top two sectors, yields step down quickly. Energy averages 2.822 in real terms, Utilities 2.306, and Telecom 2.085. The single-stock sectors then move lower still, with Transport at 0.113 and Chemicals at -0.006. That last figure matters because it shows inflation fully erases the average nominal payout advantage in one corner of the market.

The data shifts when viewed through breadth versus efficiency. REITs provide the widest pool for screening, but Finance provides the strongest average inflation-adjusted result. In practical analytical terms, Thailand’s income market is not broad-based across every sector. It is led by two engines, one large and one high-powered.

For sector-linked country pages, see Thailand real yield and Thailand REITs. Those pages place the sector stack in a larger Thailand screen.

Foreign Flows

Foreign institutional flow data for thailand is not currently covered.

Even so, the topic remains relevant for market context because cross-border positioning can shape REIT pricing, discount persistence, and turnover conditions, especially when individual vehicles show unusually deep NAV gaps or incomplete yield fields. Finance Pulse Research currently points readers to the country flow hub at Thailand foreign flows, where coverage status can be checked as the dataset expands.

A different pattern emerges when the absence of flow data is interpreted as a methodological constraint rather than a market signal. Without a current flow series, this article does not attribute Thailand REIT discounts, premiums, or payout patterns to foreign buying or selling pressure. The analysis therefore stays anchored to observable fields in the REIT and real-yield datasets only.

Data Sources and Methodology

Finance Pulse Research tracks Thailand across several linked modules: country real-yield screens, sector yield summaries, and a dedicated REIT dataset that includes current yield, 5-year average yield, NAV premium/discount, years of continuous distributions, distribution growth, aristocrat status, and Distribution Safety Score. Safety Score is a 0-100 indicator where higher values represent stronger payout coverage and sustainability characteristics within the platform’s rules-based framework.

For Thailand, the real-yield snapshot date is 2026-04-20, the REIT snapshot date is 2026-04-20, and the general fetch timestamp is 2026-04-20. Current country coverage includes 28 stocks in the real-yield universe and 10 REIT entries. Foreign flow coverage is not yet covered in the current country deep-dive dataset, and some REIT fields are also data not available, notably current yield and NAV discount for BTS Rail Mass Transit Growth and Digital Telecommunications Infra Fund.

Anomaly annotations are surfaced directly in the dataset and acknowledged in this article. That includes the extreme NAV discount flag for Ally Global Property Fund and the extreme 5-year distribution growth flag for Impact Growth REIT. Such notes indicate that apparent outliers may reflect stale NAV data, illiquid trading, one-time events, or base effects rather than clean, continuously comparable fundamentals.

For related country pages and framework context, readers can navigate through Thailand REITs, Thailand real yield, and Thailand foreign flows. Methodology page data is not available in the supplied dataset.

This analysis is based on publicly available market data and derived metrics calculated by Finance Pulse Research. Finance Pulse Research is a data analytics publisher. Content is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing herein constitutes investment advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any security, or an offer of any kind. Data as of 2026-04-20.

Related Analyses

Readers tracking the thailand reit market can continue with the country-level REIT screen at Thailand REITs, compare inflation-adjusted income on Thailand real yield, and monitor coverage status for cross-border positioning on Thailand foreign flows. Used together, those pages separate payout level, valuation versus NAV, and broader country income conditions into distinct analytical views.