
Singapore-listed Hongkong Land retires cancelled shares as part of ongoing capital management strategy and investor support measures
Hongkong Land Holdings Limited has cancelled 180,000 of its own shares that it repurchased on the open market, signalling continued focus on returning capital to shareholders and enhancing financial metrics.
The company executed the share buybacks on January 16, acquiring the ordinary shares at an average price of approximately US$8.24 before formally cancelling them, thereby reducing the total number of shares in issue.
This cancellation follows earlier repurchases and is part of a broader, authorised buyback programme that the board has extended through the end of this year.
The move is designed to improve earnings per share and demonstrate confidence in the company’s valuation amid ongoing volatility in Asian property markets.
Hongkong Land’s buyback and cancellation activity comes against a backdrop of strategic capital management, including divestments and balance-sheet optimisation aimed at supporting long-term shareholder value.
Recent filings indicate that additional market purchases will continue under the expanded buyback mandate, reflecting the board’s commitment to deploying excess capital judiciously while bolstering investor confidence.
The cancellation of repurchased stock permanently removes these shares from circulation, reducing overall share count and potentially enhancing per-share metrics for remaining investors.
The company executed the share buybacks on January 16, acquiring the ordinary shares at an average price of approximately US$8.24 before formally cancelling them, thereby reducing the total number of shares in issue.
This cancellation follows earlier repurchases and is part of a broader, authorised buyback programme that the board has extended through the end of this year.
The move is designed to improve earnings per share and demonstrate confidence in the company’s valuation amid ongoing volatility in Asian property markets.
Hongkong Land’s buyback and cancellation activity comes against a backdrop of strategic capital management, including divestments and balance-sheet optimisation aimed at supporting long-term shareholder value.
Recent filings indicate that additional market purchases will continue under the expanded buyback mandate, reflecting the board’s commitment to deploying excess capital judiciously while bolstering investor confidence.
The cancellation of repurchased stock permanently removes these shares from circulation, reducing overall share count and potentially enhancing per-share metrics for remaining investors.












































