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Disciplined FY26 execution strengthens balance sheet

Full Year Results17 May 2026KPGReal Estate

2026 Annual Report
Creating places

where people

connect & thrive

Contents
Portfolio overview 2

Business highlights4

Chair’s report6

Chief Executive Officer’s report10

Spotlight on strategy14

Overview14

Assets16

Capital18

Customer20

Capability22

Our Board24

Our Executive Team26

Financials28

Other information83

Corporate governance84

Remuneration report86

Other investor information97

Directory104

The intersection of

places and people

Kiwi Property creates places where
people connect and thrive. Across our

portfolio, we focus on owning, developing

and managing high-quality retail-led

destinations that serve customers,

support tenants and deliver long-term

value for shareholders.

During the year, we have refined our

strategy to better express this. While our

direction remains consistent, we have

updated our language and framework to

be simpler, clearer and more grounded in

the physical assets we create and manage.

In a year of solid performance and

strategic progress, we continued to refine

the portfolio, recycle capital from mature

assets and invest in opportunities that

strengthen our position for the future.

This report highlights the strong FY26

business performance and outlines

the refreshed strategy to support long-

term growth.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report1

Portfolio overview
Total portfolio

Kiwi Property owns and manages a high-quality

real estate portfolio, including some of the

country’s leading commercial properties.

Our retail-led mixed-use assets feature large

landholdings and are strategically positioned

in areas marked for significant densification,

close to transport nodes.

Geographic diversification

BY PORTFOLIO VALUE

Auckland86%

Hamilton9%

Wellington5%

Sector diversification

BY PORTFOLIO VALUE

Retail-led mixed-use74%

Office20%

Development land5%

Other1%

Sylvia Park, LynnMall, The Base and Drury are located in

New Zealand’s ‘golden triangle’ which spans Auckland,

Hamilton and Tauranga. This region is the country’s

economic powerhouse and home to over 40% of the

population, putting our centres at the heart of major

catchment areas.

Over recent years we have divested non-strategic

assets, with the aim of creating a portfolio that is higher

performing, more sustainable and we believe will deliver

superior returns over time. While we’re not done yet,

we’re moving ever closer to our ambition of becoming

New Zealand's leading creator of retail-led destinations,

delivering superior experiences and returns.

$2.60b

Auckland – 3 retail-led mixed-use assets,

1 office asset, 1 development landholding

$263m

Hamilton – 1 retail-led mixed-use asset, 1 other asset

$147m

Wellington – 1 office asset

AUCKLAND

WELLINGTON

HAMILTON

Note: ASB North Wharf excluded as held for sale.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report2

A future-focused property portfolio
DRURY

THE BASE

LYNNMALL

SYLVIA PARK

Kiwi Property's retail-led

mixed-use assets have

significant development

potential and the ability

to accommodate a range

of uses such as retail,

office, residential, medical,

entertainment and dining.

Our intention is to evolve

and enhance these

properties over time.

KEY

CurrentPotential

Live

Work

Play

Shop

The power of our retail-led mixed-use strategy

36.7m

CUSTOMER VISITS FY26

2

1. All sales include GST.

2. Pedestrian count information is not collected for Sylvia Park Lifestyle. For The Base large format retail stores, pedestrian count information is

calculated using vehicle movement data and applying multipliers to estimate visitation.

$1.9b

ANNUAL SALES FY26¹

1.6%3.0%

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report3

$202.4m
4.3%

NET RENTAL INCOME

$126.2m

8.6%

OPERATING PROFIT BEFORE TAX

$3.0b

0.9% FAIR VALUE MOVEMENT

PORTFOLIO VALUE

1

$100.2m

8.0%

ADJUSTED FUNDS FROM OPERATIONS

Business highlights

1. Excluding the gross-up of lease liabilities required by NZ IFRS

16 Leases. Portfolio value excludes held for sale assets and

includes Drury Stage 1 land which is held in inventories.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report4

3.6 years
WEIGHTED AVERAGE LEASE EXPIRY

+4.5%

FY25 4.3%

TOTAL RENTAL GROWTH

99.0%

PORTFOLIO OCCUPANCY

$50.4m

NET PROFIT AFTER TAX

FY25 $57.0m

Note: Refer to the Annual Results Presentation FY26 for the

definition and determination of sales, pedestrian count and the

non-GAAP performance measures net rental income, adjusted

funds from operations, portfolio value and operating profit before

tax. Comparative figures relate to the FY25 period.

FY25 3.8 yearsFY25 96.9%

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report5

Introduction
Reflecting on the year to 31 March 2026, Kiwi Property

made strong progress in advancing its retail-led

strategy. The Board’s focus throughout the year was

on strengthening balance sheet flexibility, improving

portfolio quality and ensuring capital was directed to

opportunities best aligned to protect resilience and

position the business for long-term value creation.

As transaction conditions stabilised, we were able

to accelerate our capital recycling programme and

release capital from mature, non-strategic assets,

consistent with our strategy of focusing on the best

assets in the best locations.

Our core assets continued to perform well during the

year, supported by improved occupancy and resilient

customer demand. Together with a disciplined

approach to costs and capital allocation, this gives

the Board confidence that Kiwi Property remains well

placed despite economic uncertainty.

Progress against FY26 strategic priorities

At the beginning of the year, Kiwi Property identified

four strategic priorities for FY26: managing the

balance sheet and freeing up additional capacity,

driving rent growth, preserving cost discipline, and

progressing the sell-down of Drury’s large-format

retail sites. These priorities reflected the areas

the Board considered most important to protect

resilience and support future growth. I am pleased

with how the business responded and the progress

made across each of these areas.

Chair's

report

Simon Shakesheff

Chair

“Our core assets

continued to perform

well during the

year, supported by

improved occupancy

and resilient

customer demand.”

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report6

Balance sheet capacity
A strong and flexible balance sheet is fundamental to

our strategy. It gives us the capacity to invest through

the cycle, respond to market opportunities and support

long-term growth while maintaining appropriate

financial resilience.

During the year, we made significant progress with our

capital recycling programme. The Plaza in Palmerston

North sold for $118.9m, with settlement occurring on 12

December 2025. Following the successful nine-year

lease extension at ASB North Wharf in July last year, we

also progressed a conditional sale of that asset, which

was announced in January. Since year end, Overseas

Investment Office approval has been received for the

transaction, with settlement of the $205 million sale

expected in May 2026.

Reflecting the additional balance sheet capacity

generated by these sales, we also suspended the

dividend reinvestment plan during the year to avoid

unnecessary dilution for shareholders.

Capital allocation remains one of the Board’s most

important responsibilities. We will continue to apply

a disciplined approach – recycling capital where

appropriate, investing selectively in opportunities that

enhance returns and pursuing acquisitions only where

they strengthen our portfolio and meet our risk and

return criteria.

Rent growth

Driving sustainable rental growth remains an important

measure of portfolio quality and management

performance. During FY26, Kiwi Property delivered

positive leasing momentum across the portfolio,

with rent growth of 4.5% over the year and a total

leasing spread on new leases of 6.3%. Occupancy has

improved, with the portfolio up to 99.0%, from 96.9% at

the start of the financial year.

This reflects the quality of our core assets and the

benefits of targeted asset management initiatives. It

also reinforces our confidence in the long-term appeal

of well-located high-quality destinations.

Cost discipline

The Board is pleased with the disciplined approach

to cost management maintained throughout the year.

Underlying employment and administration expenses

reduced by $0.9 million (-3.6%) compared with the

prior year, after normalising for costs associated with

the ASB North Wharf lease extension and other one-off

transaction items.

We also took steps to reduce funding costs. During the

year, the bond that matured (KPG040) was refinanced

with attractively priced bank debt. Combined with an

easing in interest rates, this contributed to a reduction

in Kiwi Property’s weighted average interest rate from

5.30% at the start of FY26 to 4.81% at year end.

These actions support earnings resilience and reflect

the importance of prudent financial management in

delivering shareholder returns.

We continue to

transition the portfolio,

with two sales agreed during

the year of mature, non-

strategic assets, The Plaza and

ASB North Wharf.

WHAT YOU

NEED TO KNOW

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report7

Chair's report continued
Drury large format retail (LFR) site sales

Drury remains a significant long-term growth

opportunity for Kiwi Property, and the strategic

objectives related to this development advanced

significantly during FY26.

During the year, conditional agreements were

negotiated with Costco, Harvey Norman and Briscoe

Group, as well as an unconditional agreement with

Foodstuffs. These transactions take the proportion of

the Drury LFR precinct now under contract to around

77% of the land intended for sale. Proceeds from land

sales agreed to date total $115 million and are expected

to be received over FY27 to FY29.

With these sales now secured, the focus turns to

execution. Stage 1 civil works are underway, including

the construction of key roads, installation of drainage

and provision of utility services. Stage 2 Fast-track

consent was received in November. Together, these

milestones provide a clearer pathway for the long-

term development of the wider metropolitan centre,

while allowing Kiwi Property to maintain a staged and

disciplined approach to delivery.

Financial performance

Kiwi Property’s total portfolio was valued at $3.0

1

billion

as at 31 March 2026, reflecting a fair value decline

of 0.9% for the full year. Although the fair value of

our retail-led mixed-use assets increased, this was

more than offset by softer valuations in the office

sector, which factored in the impact of the ASB North

Wharf transaction, and by a reduction in the value of

our Drury land, due to construction costs outpacing

valuation gains.

Net tangible assets were $1.12 per share, down from

$1.14 as at 31 March 2025.

Despite the fair value decline, operating performance

remained sound. Cost discipline and resilient portfolio

earnings supported net profit after tax of $50.4 million

for the year, compared with $57.0 million in FY25.

Looking ahead, while macroeconomic and geopolitical

uncertainty remains, the Board believes the quality of

Kiwi Property’s portfolio, together with the progress

made on capital management and strategic execution,

positions the business well for the future.

Strategy refresh

During the year, the Board and management

refreshed Kiwi Property’s strategy to ensure it remains

clear, focused and aligned with the Company’s long-

term ambition.

Our conviction in retail-led mixed-use destinations

remains unchanged, with our focus on best-in-class

retail assets in prime locations. What the strategy

refresh does is sharpen how we prioritise effort and

capital and provides a clearer framework for assessing

progress against drivers of long-term value creation. It

reinforces our focus on high-quality retail-led places

Sarah Theodore has been

appointed Kiwi Property's

new Chief Financial Officer,

expected to begin in July

this year.

WHAT YOU

NEED TO KNOW

1. Total portfolio value excludes held for sale assets

and includes Drury land classified as inventories.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report8

Well-positioned despite increased
uncertainty

At the start of the 2026 financial year, there

were encouraging signs that operating conditions

were becoming more supportive: inflationary

pressures were easing, interest rates were expected

to decline, and trading conditions across our

portfolio were improving.

More recently, geopolitical and macroeconomic

volatility, together with emerging cost pressures,

including those linked to fuel supply and logistics,

have introduced a greater degree of uncertainty for

the year ahead.

Even so, our strategy remains sound. The Board’s

focus remains on protecting balance sheet flexibility,

allocating capital with discipline and continuing to

strengthen the quality of the portfolio over time.

Importantly, the capacity created through recent

capital recycling activity places the Company in a

stronger position to pursue selective acquisitions

and partnerships which align with our strategy.

In relation to dividends, we are pleased to guide the

market to a full-year FY27 dividend of 5.75 cents

per share, representing 2.7% growth on the FY26

dividend and which is expected to be at the higher

end of our 90% to 100% target payout range. This

guidance is in line with our long-term 3% annual

dividend growth target (with average dividend

growth of 3.2% per annum over the last two years),

and remains subject to the absence of material

changes in operating conditions.

On behalf of the Board, I would like to thank our

shareholders for their ongoing support, our tenants

and partners for their collaboration, and the Kiwi

Property team for their commitment to delivering

for our customers and communities.

Simon Shakesheff

Chair

that deliver value for all stakeholders, whether they be

customers, tenants, communities, or shareholders.

The refreshed strategy is built around four connected

pillars: Assets, Capital, Customer and Capability.

Together, these pillars focus our attention on owning

and actively managing high-quality assets in the right

locations, allocating capital with discipline to support

growth and balance sheet strength, delivering

compelling experiences for customers and tenants,

and building the organisational capability required

to perform consistently over time.

The strategic pillars provide a clear framework for

operational and strategic decision making and help

to ensure that the organisation remains aligned on

the drivers of long-term value creation.

Governance and leadership

The Board remains committed to strong governance,

disciplined oversight and maintaining the depth of

capability required to oversee Kiwi Property’s next

phase of strategy execution.

During the year, particular emphasis was placed on

strengthening leadership capability in areas central

to capital management, transactions and long-

term portfolio strategy. Shaun Reed was appointed

to the executive team as General Manager Capital

Transactions, reflecting the importance of capital

management, transactions and partnerships in

supporting growth.

Following the resignation of Steve Penney, we look

forward to welcoming Sarah Theodore as Chief

Financial Officer in July. Sarah brings deep experience

in listed company finance, global capital markets and

investment advisory, as well as strong relationships

across the institutional investor, banking and

analyst communities. She is well placed to lead Kiwi

Property’s financial strategy and capital management

into the future.

“The Board’s focus

remains on protecting

balance sheet flexibility,

allocating capital with

discipline and continuing

to strengthen the quality

of the portfolio over time.”

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report9

Introduction
FY26 was a year of disciplined execution for Kiwi

Property. We advanced the repositioning of our

portfolio, maintained tight control over costs and

capital, and continued to improve performance across

our core assets. In doing so, we saw further evidence

of the strength of our retail-led strategy and the value

of focusing on integrated destinations with long-term

growth potential.

Portfolio performance

Performance across the portfolio reflected three

key themes during the year: continued strength in

our leading retail assets, disciplined investment in

asset quality, and steady progress on longer-term

development opportunities.

At our centres, retail sales increased by 1.6% over the

year to $1.9 billion, with foot traffic up by 3.0% to 36.7

million visits over the same period.

Reflecting the continued strength of our key retail

assets, Sylvia Park continues to lead the portfolio,

with a leasing spread of 7.0%. The precinct welcomes

more than 16 million visits each year and supports

close to $860 million in annual retail sales. Resido is

now effectively fully leased, adding a stable, recurring

residential income stream to the broader mixed-

use offer. The opening of IKEA in early December

has further strengthened the precinct’s position,

increasing customer traffic and reinforcing Sylvia Park

as a destination of regional significance.

Consistent with our focus on asset quality, we

continued to invest in key office assets, with the

office market remaining competitive and with tenant

requirements continuing to evolve. In response, we

commenced a comprehensive refresh of shared

spaces at Vero Centre. This programme is intended

to improve amenity, enhance tenant experience and

support the building’s long-term market position. We

have started to see the impact of this investment,

with Vero Centre’s occupancy lifting to 99.1%, up from

92.4% at the start of the financial year.

Chief Executive

Officer’s report

Clive Mackenzie

Chief Executive Officer

$858m

Sylvia Park annual retail sales

16m+

Visits to Sylvia Park over

the last year

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report10

Our longer-term development opportunity, Drury,
significantly progressed during the year. Recent

planning and consenting outcomes have helped to

strengthen the project’s longer-term pathway and

support a staged approach to development. This

approach remains important, allowing us to balance

value realisation with flexibility as market conditions

evolve and the wider metropolitan centre takes shape.

Sylvia Park continues to evolve

One of the most visible milestones during the year

was the opening in December of the new pedestrian

link between IKEA and Level One at Sylvia Park. The

walkway both physically and strategically strengthens

the integration of the wider precinct, broadening

customer flow between the two destinations and

encouraging increased foot traffic through the centre,

particularly to Sylvia Park’s upper-level retail on

Level One.

Early indicators have been encouraging, with

pedestrian counts at Sylvia Park increasing by nearly

8% in the four months following opening and sales

rising by 2.1% over the same period.

This momentum is complemented by the

commencement of Sylvia Park’s southern

enhancement project, which expands the existing

retail footprint for Kmart and will introduce additional

hospitality options. We expect it to enhance the

aesthetic appeal of a key entrance to the centre,

increasing customer dwell time with a new outdoor

rest area. At the northern end of Sylvia Park, Asian

grocer STACKS will begin trading mid year, further

diversifying the tenant mix and reflecting a growing

Asian catchment, broader food and beverage

preferences, and overseas best practice. These

investments reflect our continued focus on enhancing

the centre’s offer, deepening customer engagement

and supporting long-term resilience and growth.

Financial and balance sheet strength

Kiwi Property’s financial performance for the year

reflected the strength of the portfolio and the

benefits of active cost and capital management. Net

rental income increased to $202.4 million (+4.3%),

supported by rental growth across the portfolio and

the full lease-up of key assets. Operating profit before

tax rose to $126.2 million (+8.6%).

Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) was

$100.2 million (+8.0%), reflecting improved

operating performance and a lower interest cost

environment, partly offset by lost income following

the sale of The Plaza during the year. Employment

and administration expenses, after allowing for

one-off costs, reduced by $0.9 million (-3.6%),

demonstrating the ongoing benefit of our focus on

efficiency and cost discipline.

The new walkway

between Sylvia Park and

IKEA has contributed to a

significant increase in foot

traffic at the centre - up by

nearly 8% over the first four

months since opening.

WHAT YOU

NEED TO KNOW

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report11

Chief Executive Officer’s report continued
Alongside these operating outcomes, we continued

to manage the balance sheet proactively. During the

year, maturing bond KPG040 was refinanced through

the expansion of bank facilities, improving funding

flexibility and contributing to a lower weighted

average cost of debt. Selective asset disposals also

strengthened balance sheet capacity, with pro forma

March gearing reducing to 33.3% following settlement

of ASB North Wharf.

Reflecting this progress, S&P removed the ‘Negative’

outlook from Kiwi Property’s credit rating at the end

of 2025, with the issuer rating now BBB/Stable.

Mackersy investment

During the year, Kiwi Property’s original $6.5 million

investment in Mackersy, made via a convertible loan,

was converted into equity as planned. This resulted in

Kiwi Property now holding a 50% ownership interest

in Mackersy Property. A recent independent valuation

supports the cost of the investment (including future

earn-out payments).

While the previously announced sale of Sylvia Park

Lifestyle into a Mackersy-managed large-format

retail fund did not proceed, we continue to see

strategic value in this investment through its

alignment with our focus on capital partnerships and

capital-efficient growth opportunities.

Sustainability and capability

Positioning the business for long-term success

remained an important focus during the year. We

continued to simplify and strengthen how the

organisation operates, investing in initiatives that

improve asset quality and resilience while supporting

future growth.

Sustainability is a core part of this work. During the

year, Geneva House at Sylvia Park achieved a 5.5-Star

NABERSNZ Energy rating, demonstrating the benefits

of targeted investment in building performance. At

Vero Centre, we progressed initiatives to reduce

reliance on gas, with actions now underway that

are tracking toward an estimated 29% reduction

in gas consumption. Across the wider portfolio,

performance continued to improve across our key

sustainability certification measures, reinforcing the

long-term resilience and competitiveness of our

assets as expectations from tenants and capital

providers continue to rise.

We also continued to invest in leadership capability,

talent development, and AI adoption, while

maintaining a strong focus on culture. Sustaining a

skilled, efficient, and engaged team remains critical

to execution, and a recent employee engagement

score of 80% is encouraging evidence that these

efforts are making a positive difference.

WHAT YOU

NEED TO KNOW

While geopolitical and

macroeconomic conditions

are likely to remain volatile, we

believe that Kiwi Property is well

placed for the future.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report12

Looking ahead
For the year ahead, our focus remains on

disciplined execution.

In the near term, this means progressing selective

initiatives to further improve the quality of the

portfolio, including completion of Sylvia Park’s

southern enhancement project and the Vero Centre

upgrade, alongside ongoing progress at Drury as we

work through the staged completion of land sales.

We will continue to carefully manage operating costs

and capital expenditure, while continuing to recycle

capital from non-strategic assets where appropriate.

This will help to ensure Kiwi Property retains the

flexibility to invest in opportunities that align with our

strategy and capital allocation framework.

While geopolitical and macroeconomic conditions are

likely to remain volatile, we believe that Kiwi Property

is well placed for the future. In a period marked by

elevated interest rates, cautious capital markets

and shifting customer behaviour, our high-quality

and resilient portfolio, clear strategy, and disciplined

approach to execution provide a strong foundation for

long-term performance.

As always, thank you to our shareholders, our partners,

our customers, and the wider Kiwi Property team for

your continued support over the year.

Clive Mackenzie

Chief Executive Officer

“Our high-quality and

resilient portfolio, clear

strategy, and disciplined

approach to execution

provide a strong

foundation for long-term

performance.”

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report13

Spotlight
on strategy

Connection remains central

to what we do. We are place

makers, creating both physical

destinations and the experiences

that support them. We create

environments where people,

businesses, and communities can

succeed and thrive over time.

This purpose provides a clear lens

for how we make decisions.

Our ambition

To be New Zealand’s

leading creator of retail-led

destinations, delivering superior

experiences and returns.

Our ambition signals what we

strive for as a business and how

we measure success.

Retail remains at the heart

of what we do, with our retail

properties complemented

by other uses that enhance

performance and strengthen the

destination's appeal. Our centres

are economic and social anchors

in their locations, offering more

than retail alone. The shift from

communities to destinations

reflects the scale, quality, appeal,

and reach of our assets.

At the same time, our ambition

explicitly balances experiences

and returns. We believe that

compelling customer and tenant

experiences supported by

disciplined capital management

are what will drive long-term

value for shareholders.

Evolution of strategy

Over recent years, we have

delivered against our strategic

priorities, strengthened our

balance sheet, sharpened our

portfolio, and demonstrated the

resilience of our asset portfolio

through a challenging economic

environment. As the business has

matured, we saw an opportunity

to refine how we articulate our

strategy – bringing greater clarity,

consistency and focus to what

already drives our performance.

Kiwi Property’s strategy has not

changed direction; what has

changed is how it is expressed.

The refreshed strategy better

reflects how we operate today

and provides a clearer link

between strategy, execution

and outcomes.

Our purpose

We create places where people

connect and thrive.

Our purpose reflects the role

our company and our assets

play in people’s lives – whether

that is customers who find

what they need at our centres,

tenants who benefit from our

high-quality environments, the

wider community stakeholders

who benefit from well-planned

growth, our own team who are

proud to work for Kiwi Property,

or our shareholders who can have

confidence in their investment in

Kiwi Property.

From priorities to pillars

Our strategy was previously

expressed through a series of

shorter-term priorities, which

guided execution during a period

of significant activity, including

capital recycling, balance sheet

management and portfolio

repositioning.

As we complete this phase, having

delivered strongly against those

priorities, we have moved to a

structure of four strategic pillars.

These pillars are enduring and

describe the core drivers of value

for Kiwi Property, providing a clear

framework for decision-making.

This subtle but important

refinement sharpens the way

we articulate our strategy and

makes the link between strategy,

execution and outcomes clearer.

The four pillars of

Kiwi Property

Our evolved strategy is built on

four connected pillars – Assets,

Capital, Customer and Capability

– which together guide how we

operate, invest and grow. By

maintaining focus in these four

key areas, we believe we will drive

value over time.

Purpose

– We create places where people connect and thrive.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report14

Assets
We own and operate a

portfolio of the best retail-

led mixed-use assets in the

best locations.

P. 16

Capital

We actively manage the

balance sheet and allocate

capital with discipline to

fund growth and deliver

superior returns.

P. 18

Customer

We deliver compelling

experiences that meet

the evolving needs of

customers and tenants.

P. 20

Capability

We operate a high-performing

organisation with the people

and systems to deliver

consistently and adapt with

confidence.

P. 22

Purpose

– We create places where people connect and thrive.

Ambition

– To be New Zealand’s leading creator of retail-led destinations, delivering superior experiences and returns.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report15

Assets
We own and operate a

portfolio of the best retail-

led mixed-use assets in the

best locations.

What we mean by

“best assets”

The best assets are not defined

by size or value alone. They are

those that are easy to access

and well-connected, appealing

to customers and tenants,

adaptable to changing needs,

and resilient to economic and

environmental conditions.

Our assets are designed to be

relevant today and capable of

evolving over decades. This

includes thoughtful design,

strong amenity, investment in

maintenance and refurbishment,

and a focus on long-term

sustainability.

Sylvia Park demonstrates

how scale, quality and ongoing

investment combine to create

a high-performing destination,

attracting leading international

brands and supporting strong

customer activity.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report16

High-quality assets in the right
locations are the foundation of Kiwi

Property’s performance and long-term

resilience. This pillar defines what we

own, where we invest, and how our

assets create enduring value.

Spotlight on strategy continued

Retail-led, by design

Retail sits at the heart of Kiwi

Property’s property portfolio,

complemented by uses such as

hospitality, entertainment, office,

accommodation, and services.

This integrated model draws

more people in and extends dwell

time, creating places that are

active across the day and week.

Our retail-led mixed-use

approach allows us to respond

to changing customer behaviour

and diversify our risk while

preserving the core retail strength

of our centres.

Why location matters

By concentrating on the best

locations, we improve resilience,

support tenant demand and

protect long-term value.

We focus on assets in key

metropolitan centres, with

good transport links and in

high-growth corridors, where

population growth, infrastructure

investment, and economic activity

support long-term demand.

These locations provide natural

advantages that cannot be

replicated elsewhere.

Drury, located within a major

growth corridor, has been

identified as Auckland’s next

metropolitan town centre,

supported by infrastructure

investment from central and

local government, with our

development granted Fast-

track Approval in November

2025. Connected via Auckland’s

roading network, as well as

public transport networks,

with the Drury train station set

to open adjacent to our town

centre development later this

year, Drury will draw visitors from

Auckland in the north as well as

Waikato to the south.

Sustainability makes sense

Our focus on asset quality

ensures the portfolio can continue

to perform through changing

conditions, supporting stable

income and growth for shareholders.

This includes consideration of

climate risk, seismic performance,

energy efficiency and long-term

adaptability as part of our ongoing

asset management.

Sustainability is ingrained in the

construction and operation of

our assets. Not only does our

sustainability strategy benefit

the people and environment,

but it is also directly tied to

tenant demands, operating cost

savings, financing advantages, and

risk mitigation.

36m+

Retail drives the foot traffic

at our shopping centres, with

consistently high visitation

(up 3.0% over the last financial

year, to more than 36 million

visits) showing the benefits of

retail-led design.

Resido’s 9-star Homestar Built

rating from the New Zealand

Green Building Council denotes

best practice. Not only does

Resido’s sustainable design mean

the property is healthy, energy-

efficient, and appealing to tenants,

but it also protects the enduring

value of an asset that Kiwi Property

intends to own long-term.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report17

Capital
We actively manage the balance

sheet and allocate capital with

discipline to fund growth and

deliver superior returns.

Capital recycling to

sharpen the portfolio

Capital recycling is a deliberate

part of our strategy, where

we have sought to actively

divest mature or non-core

assets and reinvest that capital

into opportunities that will

enhance portfolio quality and

returns. This has enabled us to

progressively strengthen the

portfolio quality while maintaining

balance sheet resilience.

Recent examples include

the sell-down of non-core

assets The Plaza in Palmerston

North and Auckland CBD

office asset ASB North Wharf,

freeing up capital to reinvest

in core assets and growth

opportunities.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report18

Spotlight on strategy continued
Active balance sheet

management

We manage our balance sheet

with a clear focus on resilience

and capacity.

We seek to maintain appropriate

gearing, access to diverse

funding sources, and strong

liquidity. This will allow us to

invest through economic cycles

and respond to opportunities

as they arise, while protecting

downside risk.

Development as a

value lever

Our development capability

allows us to unlock value within

our portfolio and create new

growth pathways.

We may expand and intensify

existing assets and develop

new destinations where the

fundamentals support long-term

demand. Development decisions

are assessed against clear return

thresholds and disciplined capital

and risk management.

Informed, long-term

decision making

Capital allocation decisions are

supported by data, analytics and

scenario modelling. This enables

us to assess trade-offs, test

assumptions and plan for a range

of outcomes.

Rather than responding to short-

term fluctuations, we take a long-

term view, allocating capital where

it can deliver sustainable returns

for shareholders.

Disciplined capital management

underpins Kiwi Property’s ability

to grow while protecting

shareholder value. This pillar

defines how we manage

risk, maintain flexibility,

and allocate capital to its

highest and best use.

3%

We have a long-term dividend

growth target of 3% per year.

Through data-led analysis and

scenario modelling, we take

a considered view of risk and

returns, and seek to allocate

capital where it can deliver

resilient earnings growth and

support a stable, growing

dividend over time.

33.3%

Following settlement of the

sale of ASB North Wharf, pro

forma March 2026 gearing is

33.3%, providing scope for

future growth.


Drury demonstrates how

staged development, capital

recycling, and long-term

planning combine and which

we expect to create value over

time. Recent conditional land

sales to Costco, Harvey Norman

and Briscoe Group, as well as an

unconditional sale to Foodstuffs,

are examples of how we are

recycling capital to further

progress the development, with

proceeds expected to transfer

upon settlement across FY27

to FY29.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report19

Customer
We deliver compelling

experiences that meet the

evolving needs of customers

and tenants.

Understanding how

customers use our places

We invest in better understanding

how customers interact with

our centres today and how

those behaviours are evolving.

By planning for future needs,

we ensure our centres remain

relevant and appealing over time.

This includes analysing foot

traffic, dwell time, visit frequency,

and customer preferences – and

using these insights to inform

decisions about asset design,

tenant mix, layout, accessibility,

and amenities.

Insights from customer

research showing a desire for

an increased grocery offering

and demographic trends

showing an uptick in both Asian

customers and nearby Resido

residents led to investment in

the development of an Asian

grocer at Sylvia Park.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report20

Spotlight on strategy continued
Creating destinations, not

just buildings

Our focus is on creating attractive

destinations that offer more than

a transactional experience.

At our centres, we curate a

compelling mix of retail, dining and

services, optimising easy access

and intuitive movement to create

spaces that feel welcoming, safe

and enjoyable. By enhancing the

overall experience, we encourage

longer visits, repeat visitation and

stronger tenant performance.

Partnering with strong

tenants

Attracting and retaining high-

quality tenants is central to

this pillar. We work closely with

tenants to create appealing

environments where they can

thrive. This includes providing

the right space, the right

mix, and the right customer

environment to support sales

and brand presence.

Tenant success drives portfolio

performance. By delivering

strong customer experiences,

maintaining high-quality assets

and actively managing tenant

relationships, we support

sustainable rental growth and

occupancy over time.

The opening of IKEA

adjacent to Sylvia Park is a

clear example. The addition of

a globally recognised brand,

combined with deliberate

investment in customer

access via a new pedestrian

link, materially increased foot

traffic and strengthened the

overall destination.

Offering flexible solutions

for tenants and brands

Our in-house Activate leasing

team provides tenants and

brands with greater flexibility

in how they engage with Kiwi

Property destinations.

Activate was established to

meet the growing demand for

adaptable leasing and activation

options – allowing partners to test

concepts, build brand presence,

and scale at a pace that suits

their business. From short-term

leases and pop-up stores to kiosks,

brand activations and integrated

advertising opportunities, Activate

enables established tenants,

new entrants and non-retail

brands to engage with our

destinations in ways that align

with their objectives.

YOUKNOW Clothing has

continued to build momentum

since opening its first physical

store at Sylvia Park in 2024. In

December, the brand partnered

with our Activate team to extend

its presence beyond the store,

delivering a fish and chip shop-

style activation in a high-foot-

traffic outdoor location to launch

its summer range. The activation

illustrates how established

tenants can use flexible activation

formats to increase visibility and

engage customers in new ways.

Customer experience is a key

differentiator in a highly competitive

market. This pillar reflects our focus

on creating destinations that people

choose to visit and tenants choose to

be part of.

At the Vero Centre, we’ve

invested in upgrades to the

common areas and amenities,

such as an expansive new digital

art display in the Shortland

Street lobby, upgrades to the

Fort Street entrance, a refresh

of the Shortland Street café, and

additional end-of-trip facilities

all underway to improve the

tenant experience in the places

they spend a significant amount

of time.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report21

Capability
We operate a high-performing

organisation with the people

and systems to deliver

consistently and adapt

with confidence.

Our people and culture

We focus on attracting,

developing, and retaining a

talented team that is aligned with

our strategy and values.

Our workplace culture values

connection, collaboration,

high-performance, innovation,

growth, wellbeing, and fun. Strong

leadership, clear accountability,

and an engaged workforce enable

consistent execution.

Employee engagement

continues to rise, reaching a

six-year high of 80% in 2026,

with key feedback reflecting

pride in the assets we create,

the care we show for people,

and the clarity of our direction.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report22

Spotlight on strategy continued
Systems, data and

enablement

We invest in systems and

digital platforms to support

decision-making, productivity,

and scalability. We continue

to explore how emerging

technologies, including AI, can

support better outcomes across

the business. These tools enable

better ways of managing assets,

allocating capital and responding

to changing conditions.

Tools such as Yardi, alongside

broader data and analytics

capability, allow us to manage

assets more effectively,

forecast performance and

allocate resources efficiently.

Power BI dashboards keep us

closer to the data on a day-to-

day basis.

We have launched Microsoft

Copilot across the business,

fully integrated with our

Microsoft 365 systems. We’re

laying the foundations for

an AI-emergent business,

including investment in

training, identifying use

cases to drive efficiency, and

fostering a culture that embeds

appropriate AI use in the

workplace to get better results.

Maintaining cost

discipline and improving

productivity

Driving productivity and

maintaining cost discipline are

ongoing priorities. This ensures

that we protect margins, reinvest

where it matters most and deliver

sustainable returns over time.

Building a resilient,

sustainable business

Our focus on risk management,

governance, systems and people

ensures Kiwi Property is well

positioned to manage change,

comply with evolving expectations

and operate sustainably over the

long term.

Capability

underpins the

execution of our

strategy. It is the

foundational pillar that

enables every other pillar

to succeed. This includes our

people and culture, systems

and processes and efficiency

of our operations. This is more

than capability in name; it reflects a

business that is skilled, efficient and

disciplined, with the systems and talent

required to perform consistently, adapt

as conditions change, and execute our

strategy with confidence.

3.6%

Through disciplined cost

management, underlying

employment and administration

expenses were down by 3.6%

when compared to the same

period last year and adjusted

for one-off costs.

Physical risk assessments

undertaken across our assets

have identified that extreme

weather events, such as

significant rainfall associated

with climate change, pose a risk

to some assets. As a result, we

are in the process of upgrading

our guttering systems at The

Base, an ongoing multi-year

project, designed to improve

the resilience of this asset to

extreme rainfall events.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report23

Our Board
Chris Aiken

Independent Director

Chris is a professional director

with extensive experience

across the Australasian property

and technology sectors. He is

currently a director of Adair

Limited and an advisor to, as well

as a director and shareholder of,

a number of construction and

development entities.

Previous directorships include

Metlifecare, Piritahi and Telecom

Retail. He has also served as Chief

Executive of several large IT and

property organisations, including

the Crown entity that developed

Hobsonville Point and the

Auckland Housing Programme.

Board membership

Non-executive member

Other committees

Member of the People &

Culture Committee and

Investment Committee

Date appointed

June 2021

Date last re-elected

June 2024

Peter Alexander

Independent Director

Peter has extensive experience

in New Zealand’s property sector,

having held a range of executive

roles over more than 30 years.

He was previously CEO of Stride

Property Group where he led

the growth of its investment

management business and was

head of property at Auckland

International Airport. He has also

held senior executive roles at

Property for Industry, Goodman

and Sky City Entertainment. Peter

is a former trustee and Deputy

Chair of the Dilworth Trust Board

and is the Chair of Smith &

Caughey Holdings Limited.

Board membership

Non-executive member

Other committees

Member of the People &

Culture Committee and Chair

of the Investment Committee

Date appointed

May 2023

Date last re-elected

June 2023

Simon Shakesheff

Chair

Simon is an Australian-based

professional director, with

significant property and finance

experience covering strategy,

mergers and acquisitions, and

debt and equity finance. He is

a director of Cbus Property,

Assembly Funds Management,

SGCH (formerly St George

Community Housing), Ingenia

Communities and Chair of

the Daily Needs Real Estate

Investment Trust. Simon

previously held a number of

executive roles at Stockland, Bank

of America Merrill Lynch, UBS,

J.P. Morgan and Macquarie Bank.

Board membership

Non-executive member

Other committees

Member of the Audit, Risk &

Sustainability Committee

Date appointed

November 2019

Date last re-elected

June 2023

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report24

Carlie Eve
Independent Director

Carlie has over 30 years’ finance

and governance experience,

including executive roles at

Goldman Sachs JBWere and Mint

Asset Management, where she

led the Australasian Property

Fund. Carlie is a former director

of the Hobsonville Land Company

and currently sits on the board

of the Fonterra Shareholders

Fund, as well as being the

Chair of the Diocesan School

Heritage Foundation.

Board membership

Non-executive member

Other committees

Member of the Audit, Risk &

Sustainability Committee and

Investment Committee

Date appointed

May 2023

Date last re-elected

June 2023

Kevin Kenrick

Independent Director

Kevin is an Auckland-based

professional director with

significant experience in leading

the strategic transformation of

retail focused businesses across

the telecommunications, travel,

and media industry sectors. He is

currently a director of BNZ. Kevin

previously held the role of CEO

at TVNZ and House of Travel, and

executive leadership roles at

Telecom NZ and Lion.

Board membership

Non-executive member

Other committees

Chair of the People &

Culture Committee

Date appointed

May 2024

Date last re-elected

June 2024

Michele Embling

Independent Director

Michele is an experienced

Auckland-based director with a

background in insurance, energy,

and financial industries. She is

Chair of Transpower, and Director

of IAG Insurance and AIA New

Zealand, and also sits on the

board of Toitū Tahua: Centre for

Sustainable Finance. Michele

is a former Chair of PwC

New Zealand, former Deputy

Chair of New Zealand Global

Women, and former Co-Chair

of Champions for Change.

Board membership

Non-executive member

Other committees

Chair of the Audit, Risk &

Sustainability Committee

Date appointed

May 2025

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report25

Our Executive Team
Aubrey Cheng

GM Income and Leasing

Aubrey leads our income and

leasing team and is responsible

for all property-related income,

and new revenue initiatives at

both our existing assets and

development projects. He is

charged with developing and

maintaining our key client

relationships, and driving leasing

activity across our retail, office,

residential, and industrial

properties. Aubrey has over

25 years’ property experience

and prior to joining Kiwi Property

was a founding Director of

Match Realty.

Jo Harris

GM People

Jo leads Kiwi Property’s

people and culture function.

Since joining in 2022, she has

focused on building an engaged,

inclusive and high-performing

organisation and strengthening

leadership capability to support

Kiwi Property’s strategy and

long-term performance. She

brings broad people leadership

experience across New Zealand

and Australia, with experience

leading transformation and

organisation-wide change

initiatives across both the public

and private sectors.

Clive Mackenzie

Chief Executive Officer

Clive is responsible for the

leadership, strategic direction and

management of the company. He

has been involved with property

and finance for over 20 years and

commenced as Kiwi Property’s

Chief Executive Officer in July

2018. Clive was previously Senior

Vice President – Development,

East Coast for Westfield USA,

where he was involved in the

creation and implementation

of transformational strategies

to evolve, strengthen and

develop the company’s real

estate portfolio.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report26

Linda Trainer
GM Asset Management

Linda has overall responsibility

for the strategic and operational

performance of Kiwi Property's

retail-led mixed-use and office

assets, and also oversees the

company's comprehensive

sustainability programme.

She has more than 20 years’

experience in property, retail,

management and marketing.

Prior to joining Kiwi Property in

April 2018, Linda was the New

Zealand Regional Manager at

Scentre Group.

Shaun Reed

GM Capital Transactions

Shaun leads Kiwi Property’s

capital transactions function,

driving strategic capital initiatives,

including portfolio transactions,

joint ventures, and partnerships

that support our strategy. He has

more than 20 years of experience

in real estate investment and

funds management and, prior

to joining Kiwi Property, held

senior leadership roles at LaSalle

Investment Management, as

well as investment and valuation

positions at AMP Capital

and CBRE.

Louise Hill

GM Corporate Services

Louise leads the Corporate

Services team at Kiwi Property,

where she oversees legal, digital,

governance and other business

support functions. She also serves

as the company’s General Counsel

and Company Secretary. Louise

brings extensive experience

in senior leadership across

governance, legal, and health and

safety, having held key roles at

Stride Property Group, Fletcher

Building, and Bell Gully.

We look forward to welcoming

our new CFO Sarah, who will

be joining us in July 2026.

Sarah Theodore

Chief Financial Officer

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report27

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report28

Financials
Contents

Five-year summary30

Consolidated financial statements35

Notes to the consolidated financial statements41

Independent auditor's report80

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report29

Five-year summary
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report30

Financial performance

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH

2026202520242023

2022

Restated

1

Property revenue and property management revenue ($m)271.4263.7244.7259.1255.9

Operating profit before income tax ($m)

2

126.2116.2108.2129.6116.5

Adjusted funds from operations ($m)100.292.899.8116.5100.4

Dividend (cps)5.605.405.705.705.60

Gearing (%)37.4%38.4%37.0%35.0%31.6%

Occupancy (%)99.0%96.9%99.3%99.2%99.6%

1Restated to comply with guidance issued by the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee (IFRIC) on rental abatements. Refer to Note 1.5 of the 2023

consolidated financial statements for further information.

2Operating profit before income tax is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property to assist investors in assessing the Company’s performance for

the year by adjusting for a number of non-operating items. Operating profit before income tax does not have a standard meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not

be comparable to information presented by other entities. The reported operating profit before income tax has been extracted from the relevant annual consolidated financial

statements which have been the subject of an audit pursuant to New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board.

The following information provides a summary of the Group’s financial performance, financial position and key operating metrics over

the past five years. This information is intended to assist users in understanding trends in the Group’s performance and is derived from

the audited consolidated financial statements.

2022

2026202520242023Restated

1

$m$m$m$m$m

Property revenue and property management revenue271.4263.7244.7259.1255.9

Direct property expenses(64.9)(65.4)(55.6)(52.8)(75.4)

Employment and administration expenses(26.3)(25.2)(32.7)(32.7)(25.8)

Total property and operating expenses(91.2)(90.6)(88.4)(85.5)(101.2)

Profit before net finance costs, valuation movements

and other items180.2173.1156.3173.6154.7

Interest income0.50.70.70.20.2

Interest and finance charges(54.5)(57.6)(48.8)(44.2)(38.4)

Net finance costs(54.0)(56.9)(48.1)(44.0)(38.2)

Profit before valuation movements and other items126.2116.2108.2129.6116.5

Fair value (loss)/gain on investment properties(37.8)(11.6)(77.8)(352.6)128.8

Impairment loss on inventories(13.1)----

Other income0.3--6.0-

Fair value gain/(loss) on interest rate derivatives4.0(10.1)(4.1)5.718.5

Loss on disposal of investment properties(1.2)-(1.7)(3.5)(3.1)

Valuation movements and other items(47.8)(21.7)(83.6)(344.4)144.2

Profit/(loss) before income tax78.494.524.7(214.8)260.7

Income tax expense(28.0)(37.5)(26.8)(12.9)(36.4)

Profit/(loss) after income tax

2

50.457.0(2.1)(227.7)224.3

1Restated to comply with guidance issued by the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee (IFRIC) on rental abatements. Refer to Note 1.5 of the 2023

consolidated financial statements for further information.

2The reported profit/(loss) after income tax has been prepared in accordance with New Zealand Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (GAAP) and complies with New Zealand

Equivalents to IFRS Accounting Standards. The reported profit/(loss) information has been extracted from the relevant annual consolidated financial statements which have

been the subject of an audit pursuant to New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board. Profit after income tax is impacted by non-cash fair value

movements on investment properties and other items, which can introduce volatility between periods. Operating profit before valuation movements and other items provides

a more consistent view of underlying operating performance.

Five-year summary (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report31

Adjusted funds from operations

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH

Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) is a non-GAAP performance measure used by the Group to assist investors in assessing

underlying operating performance and recurring cash flows. AFFO is calculated in accordance with the Voluntary Best Practice

Guidelines issued by the Property Council of Australia. AFFO excludes non-cash valuation movements and adjusts for leasing costs,

maintenance capital expenditure and other items to reflect recurring cash earnings.

2022

2026202520242023Restated

1

$m$m$m$m$m

Profit/(loss) after income tax50.457.0(2.1)(227.7)224.3

Adjusted for:

Net fair value loss/(gain) on investment properties37.811.677.8352.6(128.8)

Net fair value (gain)/loss on interest rate derivatives(4.0)10.14.1(5.7)(18.5)

Impairment loss on inventories13.1----

Loss on disposal of investment properties1.2-1.73.53.1

Other income(0.3)--(6.0)-

Reversal of lease liability movement in investment properties---(0.1)(0.1)

Straight-lining of fixed rental increases(4.1)(2.4)(1.5)(1.2)(3.0)

Amortisation of tenant incentives and leasing fees6.16.66.57.78.3

Rent deferrals received (COVID-19)---0.21.5

Depreciation recovered on disposal of investment properties--2.80.53.6

Share-based payment expense0.51.01.91.41.2

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment0.60.70.81.11.3

Deferred tax expense/(benefit)6.016.910.6(4.8)13.9

Funds from operations

2

107.3101.5102.6121.5106.8

Maintenance capital expenditure(4.8)(5.1)(5.3)(6.6)(3.0)

Capitalised tenant incentives and leasing fees(4.8)(4.1)(3.3)(2.2)(3.4)

One-off costs

Software implementation projects--3.12.0-

Bondholder consent fee--1.8--

Other one-off costs2.50.50.91.8-

Adjusted funds from operations

3

100.292.899.8116.5100.4

AFFO (cents per share)6.115.826.307.426.39

1Restated to comply with guidance issued by the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee (IFRIC) on rental abatements. Refer to Note 1.5 of the 2023

consolidated financial statements for further information.

2Funds from operations (FFO) is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property to assist investors in assessing the Company’s underlying operating

performance. FFO is a measure commonly used by real estate entities to describe their underlying and recurring earnings from operations. FFO does not have a standard

meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be comparable to information presented by other entities. FFO is calculated by Kiwi Property in accordance with the

Voluntary Best Practice Guidelines issued by the Property Council of Australia. The reported FFO information has been extracted from the Company’s annual consolidated

financial statements which have been the subject of an audit pursuant to New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board.

3Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property. AFFO is a measure commonly used by real estate entities

to describe their underlying and recurring cash flows from operations. Broadly, AFFO adjusts FFO by deducting the cost of lease incentives, leasing fees, annual maintenance

capital expenditure for sustaining and maintaining existing space and one-off costs. AFFO does not have a standard meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be

comparable to information presented by other entities. AFFO is calculated by Kiwi Property in accordance with the Voluntary Best Practice Guidelines issued by the Property

Council of Australia. The reported AFFO information has been extracted from the relevant annual consolidated financial statements which have been the subject of an audit

pursuant to New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board.

Five-year summary (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report32

Dividends

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH

Dividends are primarily determined with reference to Adjusted Funds from Operations, which represents the Group’s underlying cash

flows available for distribution.

Dividends below are presented based on the financial years to which they relate, rather than the date the cash was distributed.

2022

2026202520242023Restated

1

$m$m$m$m$m

Funds from operations107.3101.5102.6121.5106.8

Adjusted funds from operations100.292.899.8116.5100.4

Less amount retained(8.0)(5.9)(9.3)(27.0)(12.5)

Dividend92.286.990.589.587.9

Payout ratio92%93%90%77%88%

cpscpscpscpscps

Dividend5.605.405.705.705.60

Imputation credits1.341.301.011.131.43

Gross dividend6.946.706.716.837.03

1Restated to comply with guidance issued by the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee (IFRIC) on rental abatements. Refer to Note 1.5 of the 2023

consolidated financial statements for further information.

Five-year summary (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report33

Financial position

AS AT 31 MARCH

2026

$m

2025

$m

2024

$m

2023

$m

2022

$m

Assets

Investment properties

1,2

3,116.03,209.23,121.83,194.03,567.6

Inventories98.589.273.5--

Cash and cash equivalents10.414.418.217.911.6

Other assets24.926.521.626.515.3

Total assets3,249.83,339.33,235.13,238.43,594.5

Liabilities

Interest bearing liabilities1,216.71,284.61,195.21,131.11,135.9

Deferred tax liabilities137.8132.9114.2103.6108.5

Other liabilities54.461.965.770.278.5

Total liabilities1,408.91,479.41,375.11,304.91,322.9

Equity

Share capital1,735.71,713.51,682.81,664.81,663.5

Share-based payments reserve2.12.62.92.12.0

Retained earnings103.2143.8174.3266.6606.1

Total equity1,840.91,859.91,860.01,933.52,271.6

Total equity and liabilities3,249.83,339.33,235.13,238.43,594.5

Gearing ratio (finance debt / total tangible assets)37.4%38.4%37.0%35.0%31.6%

Net tangible assets per share$1.12$1.14$1.17$1.23$1.45

1Includes investment properties classified as held for sale.

2Changes in investment property values reflect capital expenditure, asset sales and movements in valuation assumptions over time.

Property metrics

AS AT 31 MARCH

The following metrics provide an overview of the scale, utilisation and stability of the Group’s property portfolio. Occupancy and

weighted average lease expiry are key indicators of the resilience and predictability of rental income, while capitalisation rates reflect

prevailing market conditions and valuation settings applied to the portfolio.

20262025202420232022

Number of properties799910

Net lettable area (sqm)392,820445,630427,261414,277453,981

Occupancy (%)99.0%96.9%99.3%99.2%99.6%

Weighted average lease expiry (years)3.63.84.04.24.6

Weighted average capitalisation rate6.3%6.4%6.4%6.0%5.4%

The property metrics above exclude assets held for sale and development land. Both lettable area and occupancy metrics above from

2025 include Resido. Vero Centre did not have a capitalisation rate in 2024, as it was being held at contract price. Prior year figures

have been restated to exclude assets held for sale that were subsequently sold.

Five-year summary (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report34

Interpretation

The following commentary is provided to assist with the

interpretation of the five-year summary and highlights key

transactions and developments affecting the Group’s financial

performance and position in each year.

2026

During the year, the Group continued to focus on capital

recycling, balance sheet discipline and optimisation of

the portfolio.


In November 2025, the Group refinanced the KPG040 green

bond maturity through its bank debt facilities. During the year,

committed bank debt facilities were increased to support

this refinancing and, following completion of the process, total

committed facilities were reduced to $1.1 billion.


The Dividend Reinvestment Plan applied to the 2025 Q4

final dividend and the 2026 Q1 interim dividend. A total of

$21.1 million of dividends were reinvested during the year.


In December 2025, The Plaza was sold and, in January 2026,

ASB North Wharf was reclassified from the office portfolio

to investment properties held for sale following entry into a

conditional sale agreement.


During the year, the Group transferred an additional two

hectares of land at Drury from investment properties to

inventories following a change in intended recovery from

rental income and capital appreciation to development with

a view to sell. An impairment loss was also recognised

against inventories, primarily reflecting updated development

cost assumptions.


In December 2025, following satisfaction of the relevant

conversion conditions, the Group’s $6.5 million convertible

loan to Mackersy Property Limited was converted into a

50% equity interest and is now accounted for as an equity-

accounted investment.  

2025

During the year, the Group continued to execute its capital

management and portfolio optimisation strategy.


A $125 million bond issue (KPG070) was completed (2030

expiry) to replace the $125 million bond (KPG030) which

matured in December 2024.


The Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP) applied to the Q1 to

Q3 interim dividends. A total of $28.8 million of dividends

were reinvested.


Resido, Auckland, a build-to-rent development commenced

operations from June 2024.


Vero Centre, Auckland was reclassified from investment

properties held for sale to the office portfolio.


In November 2024, the Group entered into a $6.5 million

convertible loan agreement with Mackersy Property Limited

(MPL). Subject to certain conditions being met, the loan

will convert into a 50% shareholding in MPL. The loan

is recognised as 'Loan Receivable' in the Consolidated

Statement of Financial Position.

2024


Acquired additional properties adjacent to Sylvia Park,

Auckland, for $26.6 million.


Westgate Lifestyle, Auckland, was sold.


Land adjacent to Sylvia Park, Auckland was sold.


Stage 1 of Drury, South Auckland, was transferred from

investment properties to inventories.


Increased the gearing ratio for the KPG030, KPG040, and

KPG050 fixed-rate bonds from 45% to 50% to align with

the gearing ratio of the KPG060 fixed-rate bond and bank

debt facilities.


Vero Centre, Auckland was reclassified from the office

portfolio to investment properties held for sale.


The Plaza, Palmerston North, and Centre Place North,

Hamilton, were reclassified from other properties to the

retail portfolio.

2023


Acquired additional properties adjacent to Sylvia Park,

Auckland for $13.8 million.


Northlands Shopping Centre, Christchurch, was sold.


44 The Terrace, Wellington, was sold.


A $125 million bond issue was completed (2029 expiry) to

replace the $125 million bond maturing in September 2023.


Concluded development of 3 Te Kehu Way at Sylvia

Park, Auckland.


Westgate Lifestyle, Auckland, was reclassified from other

properties to investment properties held for sale.

2022


Commenced development of build-to-rent scheme and 3 Te

Kehu Way at Sylvia Park, Auckland.


Acquired additional properties adjacent to Sylvia Park,

Auckland and Drury, South Auckland, for $38.8 million.


Entered into a 50:50 joint venture with Tainui Group Holdings

in respect of Centre Place North and adjoining properties.


Provided rental abatements of $17.4 million as a result of the

COVID-19 pandemic.


A $150 million bond issue was completed (2028 expiry)

following the maturity of the $125 million bond in August 2021.


The Plaza, Palmerston North, was reclassified from 'investment

properties held for sale' to 'other properties'.

Consolidated financial statements
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report35

Consolidated statement of comprehensive incomePg 36

Consolidated statement of changes in equityPg 37

Consolidated statement of financial positionPg 38

Consolidated statement of cash flowsPg 39

Notes to the consolidated financial statementsPg 41

Independent auditor's reportPg 80

Consolidated statement
of comprehensive income

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report36

Note

2026

$000

2025

$000

Revenue

Property revenue3.1267,347259,503

Property management revenue4,0694,216

Total revenue271,416263,719

Expenses

Direct property expenses(64,928)(65,364)

Employment and administration expenses3.2(26,251)(25,225)

Total property and operating expenses(91,179)(90,589)

Profit before net finance costs, valuation movements and other items180,237173,130

Interest income526686

Interest and finance charges3.2(54,540)(57,557)

Net finance costs(54,014)(56,871)

Profit before valuation movements and other items126,223116,259

Fair value loss on investment properties4.2(37,778)(11,622)

Impairment loss on inventories4.3(13,143)-

Other income349-

Share of loss in equity-accounted investee4.4(40)-

Fair value gain/(loss) on interest rate derivatives4.6.24,004(10,114)

Loss on disposal of investment properties(1,176)(16)

Valuation movements and other items(47,784)(21,752)

Profit before income tax78,43994,507

Income tax expense3.3(27,991)(37,515)

Profit and total comprehensive income after income tax attributable

to shareholders50,44856,992

Basic profit per share (cents)4.8.33.073.57

Diluted profit per share (cents)4.8.33.063.56

The consolidated statement of comprehensive income should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.

Consolidated statement
of changes in equity

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report37

Note

Share

capital

$000

Share-based

payments

reserve

$000

Retained

earnings

$000

Total

equity

$000

Balance at 1 April 20241,682,7952,854174,3131,859,962

Profit and total comprehensive income after

income tax--56,99256,992

Dividends paid4.8.2--(87,649)(87,649)

Dividends reinvested4.8.128,845--28,845

Long-term incentive plan4.8.4994(173)128949

Employee share ownership plan96(51)-45

Disposal of treasury shares787--787

Balance at 31 March 20251,713,5172,630143,7841,859,931

Balance at 1 April 20251,713,5172,630143,7841,859,931

Profit and total comprehensive income after

income tax--50,44850,448

Dividends paid4.8.2--(91,048)(91,048)

Dividends reinvested4.8.121,053--21,053

Long-term incentive plan4.8.41,000(573)-427

Employee share ownership plan804-84

Balance at 31 March 20261,735,6502,061103,1841,840,895

The consolidated statement of changes in equity should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.

Consolidated statement
of financial position

AS AT 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report38

Note

2026

$000

2025

$000

Current assets

Cash and cash equivalents10,40214,391

Trade and other receivables4.112,79716,259

Interest rate derivatives4.6.2-51

Inventories4.398,50089,171

Investment properties held for sale4.2205,000-

326,699119,872

Non-current assets

Investment properties4.22,911,0483,209,187

Equity-accounted investment / Loan receivable4.47,8416,500

Property, plant and equipment1,1131,319

Interest rate derivatives4.6.22,475706

Deferred tax assets4.56131,734

2,923,0903,219,446

Total assets3,249,7893,339,318

Current liabilities

Trade and other payables4.745,41450,475

Interest bearing liabilities4.6.1-101,457

Income tax payable3,9914,007

Lease liabilities6154

Interest rate derivatives4.6.26753

50,141155,996

Non-current liabilities

Interest bearing liabilities4.6.11,216,7361,183,180

Interest rate derivatives4.6.23,9876,945

Deferred tax liabilities4.5137,756132,905

Lease liabilities274361

1,358,7531,323,391

Total liabilities1,408,8941,479,387

Equity

Share capital4.8.11,735,6501,713,517

Share-based payments reserve2,0612,630

Retained earnings103,184143,784

Total equity1,840,8951,859,931

Total equity and liabilities3,249,7893,339,318

The consolidated statement of financial position should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.

For and on behalf of the Board, who authorised these consolidated financial statements for issue on 18 May 2026.

Simon Shakesheff

 Chair

Michele Embling

Chair of the Audit, Risk and Sustainability Committee

Consolidated statement
of cash flows

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report39

2026

$000

2025

$000

Cash flows from operating activities

Property revenue268,709261,177

Property management revenue4,4064,140

Interest income526686

Other income349-

Direct property expenses(73,053)(65,634)

Interest and finance charges(55,159)(57,533)

Interest costs paid on lease liabilities(21)(24)

Employment and administration expenses(25,255)(27,492)

Expenditure on inventories, including capitalised interest(16,642)(15,671)

Income tax paid(22,034)(19,158)

Net cash flows from operating activities81,82680,491

Cash flows from investing activities

Net proceeds from disposal of investment properties117,744-

Acquisition of investment properties(5,640)-

Capital expenditure on investment properties(56,363)(102,462)

Interest and finance charges capitalised to investment properties(3,738)(6,055)

Acquisition cost of equity-accounted investment(334)-

Acquisition of property, plant and equipment(436)(221)

Net cash flows from/(used in) investing activities51,233(108,738)

Cash flows from financing activities

Payment of lease liabilities(54)(48)

Proceeds from disposal of treasury shares-787

Proceeds from bank loans816,000783,000

Repayment of bank loans(783,000)(694,000)

Proceeds from fixed-rate green bonds-125,000

Repayment of fixed-rate green bonds(100,000)(125,000)

Loan issued to third party-(6,500)

Dividends paid(69,994)(58,804)

Net cash flows (used in)/from financing activities(137,048)24,435

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents(3,989)(3,812)

Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year14,39118,203

Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year10,40214,391

The consolidated statement of cash flows should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.

Consolidated statement
of cash flows (continued)

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report40

Reconciliation of profit after income tax to net cash flows from operating activities

2026

$000

2025

$000

Profit after income tax50,44856,992

Items classified as investing or financing activities:

Movement in working capital items relating to investing and financing activities(12,719)7,573

Non-cash items:

Fair value loss on investment properties37,77811,622

Impairment loss on inventories13,143-

Fair value (gain)/loss on interest rate derivatives(4,004)10,114

Share of loss in equity-accounted investment40-

Increase in net deferred tax liabilities5,97216,939

Amortisation of lease incentives and fees6,2116,525

Straight-lining of fixed rental increases(4,099)(2,441)

Movements in working capital items:

Decrease/(increase) in trade and other receivables3,462(2,558)

(Decrease)/increase in income tax payable(16)1,422

Decrease in trade and other payables(5,061)(10,026)

Increase in inventories(9,329)(15,671)

Net cash flows from operating activities81,82680,491

The consolidated statement of cash flows should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.

Notes to the consolidated
financial statements

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report41

1.General information

1.1Reporting entityPg 42

1.2Basis of preparationPg 42

1.3Significant changes during the yearPg 42

1.4Group structurePg 43

1.5New standards, amendments and interpretationsPg 43

1.6Key estimates and judgementsPg 44

1.7Material accounting policiesPg 45

2.Segment information

2.1Segment informationPg 46

3.Profit and loss information

3.1Property revenuePg 48

3.2ExpensesPg 49

3.3Tax expensePg 51

4.Financial position

4.1Trade and other receivablesPg 53

4.2Investment propertiesPg 54

4.3InventoriesPg 63

4.4Equity-accounted investmentsPg 64

4.5Deferred taxPg 66

4.6FundingPg 67

4.7Trade and other payablesPg 71

4.8EquityPg 71

5.Financial risk management

5.1Interest rate riskPg 75

5.2Credit riskPg 76

5.3Liquidity riskPg 77

6.Other disclosures

6.1Related party transactionsPg 78

6.2Key management personnelPg 79

6.3CommitmentsPg 79

6.4Subsequent eventsPg 79

1. General information
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report42

1.1 Reporting entity

The consolidated financial statements are for Kiwi Property Group Limited (Kiwi Property or the Company) and its controlled entities

(the Group). The Company is incorporated and domiciled in New Zealand, is registered under the Companies Act 1993 and is an FMC

reporting entity for the purposes of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013. The Company is listed with NZX Limited with its ordinary

shares quoted on the NZX Main Board and fixed-rate green bonds quoted on the NZX Debt Market.

The principal activity of the Group is to invest in New Zealand real estate.

1.2 Basis of preparation

The consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (GAAP)

and the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013. They comply with New Zealand Equivalents to IFRS Accounting Standards (NZ IFRS)

as issued by the External Reporting Board, and with IFRS Accounting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting

Standards Board.

The consolidated financial statements have been prepared on the basis that the Group is a going concern.

The consolidated financial statements have been prepared on a historical cost basis, except for investment properties and

interest rate derivatives, which are measured at fair value. The functional and presentation currency used in the preparation of

the consolidated financial statements is New Zealand dollars. All financial information has been presented in thousands, unless

otherwise stated.

1.3

 Significant changes during the year

The Group’s financial performance and financial position for the year ended 31 March 2026 were materially affected by the following

transactions and events:

Investment properties

In July 2025, the Group transferred an additional two hectares of land at the Drury development from investment properties to

inventories following a change in intended recovery from rental and capital appreciation to development with a view to sell. The

transfer value was calculated on a per square metre basis using the March 2025 valuation.

The Group completed the following key transactions this year:

In December 2025, the Group disposed of The Plaza for $118.9 million. Transaction costs of $1.2 million were incurred as part of the

disposal. In the same month, the Group acquired a property adjoining Sylvia Park for $5.6 million.

In January 2026, the Group entered into a conditional agreement to sell ASB North Wharf for $205.0 million. As at 31 March 2026,

completion of the transaction remained conditional on Overseas Investment Office (OIO) approval. Management assessed the

requirements of NZ IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations and concluded that, at 31 March 2026,

the asset met the criteria to be classified as held for sale. The asset is therefore presented separately in the statement of financial

position as an investment property held for sale. OIO approval was received and the sale became unconditional on 30 April 2026, with

settlement expected on 29 May 2026. The revenue and expenses from ASB North Wharf are recognised within the Other segment

(2025: Office segment) in note 2.1.

Funding

In September 2025, the Group increased its committed bank debt facilities from $1,000 million to $1,035 million. A further $100 million

of conditional facilities were established to support the refinancing of the KPG040 green bond that matured on 12 November 2025.

Following completion of the refinancing process, total committed facilities were reduced to $1,100 million.

Mackersy Property Limited (MPL)

In November 2024, the Group entered into a $6.5 million convertible loan agreement with MPL. In December 2025, following

satisfaction of the relevant conversion conditions, the loan was converted into a 50% equity interest in MPL. Transaction costs of

$1.4 million were incurred in relation to the investment, including $1.0 million incurred in the prior financial year, and have been included

in the carrying amount of the investment.

Management assessed the rights and obligations arising from the investment and concluded that MPL is a joint venture. Accordingly,

the investment is accounted for using the equity method from the date of conversion.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report43
1.4 Group structure

Controlled entities

The Company has the following wholly owned subsidiaries:


Kiwi Property Centre Place Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 2 Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 3 Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 4 Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 5 Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 6 Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 7 Limited


Kiwi Property Holdings No. 8 Limited


Kiwi Property Te Awa Limited


Sylvia Park Business Centre Limited

Interests in joint arrangements

The Group holds a 50% interest in both The Base and The Centre Place unincorporated joint ventures. The Group has determined

that its interests constitute a joint arrangement as the relevant decisions about the properties require the unanimous consent of both

parties. The joint arrangements have been classified as joint operations on the basis that the parties have direct rights to the assets

and obligations for the liabilities relating to their share of the properties in the normal course of business. The Group recognises its

share of assets, liabilities, revenue and expenses of the joint ventures.

Interests in joint venture

The Group holds a 50% equity interest in Mackersy Property Limited (MPL). The Group has determined that its interests constitute a

joint venture as the investment does not provide the investing parties with direct rights to the assets and obligations for the liabilities

relating to their share of the business in the normal course of business. The Group equity-accounts for its investment in MPL by

recognising its share of net assets in MPL.

Principles of consolidation

The consolidated financial statements include the Company and the entities it controls up until the date control ceases. The balances

and effects of transactions between controlled entities and the Company are eliminated in full.

1.5

 New standards, amendments and interpretations

There have been no new accounting standards or amendments that have had a material impact on the consolidated

financial statements.

Standards issued but not yet effective

In May 2024, the External Reporting Board issued NZ IFRS 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements that is effective for

the accounting period that begins on or after 1 January 2027. NZ IFRS 18 will introduce changes to the structure and presentation of the

statement of profit or loss. The Group is currently assessing the impact, including the presentation of operating profit and subtotals.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report44
1.6 Key estimates and judgements

In preparing the consolidated financial statements, management has made judgements in applying the Group’s accounting policies

and has used estimates and assumptions about the future.

Estimates involve assumptions used in measuring assets and liabilities where there is uncertainty in the outcome. Judgements

involve decisions about the application of accounting policies that can significantly affect the classification of assets and liabilities.

Both estimates and judgements may result in material adjustments to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities within the next

financial year.

Key sources of estimation uncertainty

The following are the key assumptions concerning the future, and other key sources of estimation uncertainty at balance date, that

have a significant risk of resulting in a material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities within the next financial year.

AreaDescriptionNote

Investment

properties

Investment properties are carried at fair value based on independent valuations.

These valuations are determined using a range of assumptions, including capitalisation rates, discount

rates and market rental growth rates. The valuation of the Stage 2 development land at Drury also

involves development-related assumptions, including future development and infrastructure costs.

Changes in these assumptions may have a significant impact on the carrying value of investment

properties and the fair value movements recognised in profit or loss.

4.2

InventoriesInventories relate to Stage 1 development land at Drury and are measured at the lower of cost and net

realisable value. Determining net realisable value requires estimation of expected selling prices, selling

costs and future development costs. The most significant estimate relates to future development

costs, including infrastructure, construction and other development expenditure required to bring

the land to a saleable condition. Changes in these assumptions may impact the carrying value

of inventories.

4.3

Significant judgements in applying accounting policies

The following are the key judgements that involve decisions about the application of accounting policies. They can significantly affect

the classification of assets and liabilities and have a significant risk of resulting in a material adjustment to the carrying amounts of

assets and liabilities within the next financial year.

AreaDescriptionNote

InventoriesThe Group holds certain properties for development and sale, which are classified as inventories.

Judgement is required in determining whether a property should be classified as inventories or

investment property. This is based on the intended use of the asset, including whether it is held for

sale in the ordinary course of business.

4.3

Equity-accounted

investment

The Group holds an interest in a joint venture that is accounted for using the equity method.

Judgement is required in determining whether the Group has joint control or significant influence,

based on the contractual arrangements and decision-making rights.

Judgement has also been applied in determining the accounting treatment for contingent

consideration arising in connection with the acquisition of the investment. The Group has

determined that the earn-out arrangement forms part of the cost of the investment and has

elected to apply a cost accumulation approach. Under this approach, the contingent consideration

is recognised as a liability, with corresponding changes recognised as adjustments to the carrying

amount of the equity-accounted investment.

4.4

Income taxThe deferred tax liability relating to depreciation expected to be recovered on sale of investment

properties is sensitive to the estimated allocation of fair value between land, building and fixtures and

fittings. Changes in these allocations may materially affect the deferred tax balance.

4.5

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report45
1.7 Material accounting policies

Material accounting policies that summarise the measurement bases used and are relevant to an understanding of the consolidated

financial statements are provided throughout the notes to the consolidated financial statements. Other relevant material policies are

provided as follows:

Measurement of fair values

The Group classifies its fair value measurement using a fair value hierarchy that reflects the significance of the inputs used in making

the measurements. The fair value hierarchy has the following levels:


Level 1: Quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.


Level 2: Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly (i.e. as

prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices).


Level 3: Inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs).

The carrying amount of all financial assets and liabilities is equivalent to their fair values apart from the fixed-rate green bonds (refer

to note 4.6.1 for further details on the fair value of the fixed-rate green bonds).

Goods and Services Tax

The consolidated financial statements have been prepared on a Goods and Services Tax exclusive basis, with the exception of

receivables and payables which are inclusive of Goods and Services Tax where relevant.

2. Segment information
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report46

2.1 Segment information

Operating segments are reported in a manner consistent with the internal reporting provided to the chief operating decision maker,

who is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO). The CEO is responsible for assessing the performance of the operating segments and

allocating resources across the Group.

The Group’s operating segments are based on the nature and use of its property portfolio and reflect how performance is assessed

internally. The Group operates in New Zealand only. The Group’s reportable segments are described below:


Retail-led mixed-use assets comprise large-scale properties anchored by retail tenancies, which may have complementary uses

such as office, residential, or other non-retail components that support the asset’s overall performance. These assets typically

have significant development potential and the flexibility to accommodate a range of uses.


Office comprises properties primarily leased to commercial office tenants, generating rental income from office accommodation.


Other comprises non-core assets and activities, including standalone retail assets, properties held for sale, and other investments

that do not form part of the Group’s core retail-led mixed-use or office portfolios.


Development land comprises land holdings where value is primarily realised through development activity. The land may be

developed and sold, or held for future capital appreciation and rental income.

During the year, The Plaza was disposed of and ASB North Wharf was reclassified from the Office segment to investment properties

held for sale. Accordingly, the current year performance of these properties is included in the Other segment.

Following a review of the Group’s strategy, the terminology used to describe operating segments was refined during the 2026

financial year to better reflect the nature of the portfolio. Comparative information has been restated to present the segments on a

consistent basis.

The following table analyses the Group’s profit by reportable segment for the year. Segment profit represents property revenue less

straight-lining of fixed rental increases and direct property expenses, and is the primary measure reviewed by the CEO.

Retail-led mixed-use

$000

Development land

$000

Office

$000

Other

$000

Total

$000

2026

Property revenue176,757-48,42242,168267,347

Less: straight-lining of fixed rental increases(552)-(1,764)(1,783)(4,099)

Less: direct property expenses(42,363)-(12,779)(9,786)(64,928)

Segment profit133,842-33,87930,599198,320

2025

Property revenue166,193-64,93728,373259,503

Less: straight-lining of fixed rental increases(898)-(2,904)1,361(2,441)

Less: direct property expenses(40,385)-(16,183)(8,796)(65,364)

Segment profit124,910-45,85020,938191,698

2026

67%

Retail-led

mixed-use

17%

Office

16%

Other

Segment profit

2025

65%

Retail-led

mixed-use

24%

Office

11%

Other

Segment profit

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report47
2.1 Segment information (continued)

A reconciliation of the segment profit to the profit before income tax reported in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive

Income is provided as follows:

2026

$000

2025

$000

Segment profit198,320191,698

Property management fees4,0694,216

Increase in rental income resulting from straight-lining of fixed rental increases4,0992,441

Employment and administration expenses(26,251)(25,225)

Interest income526686

Interest and finance charges(54,540)(57,557)

Fair value loss on investment properties(37,778)(11,622)

Impairment loss on inventories(13,143)-

Other income349-

Share of loss in equity-accounted investee(40)-

Fair value gain/(loss) on interest rate derivatives4,004(10,114)

Loss on disposal of investment properties(1,176)(16)

Profit before income tax78,43994,507

The following table is an analysis of the Group's assets and liabilities by reportable segments used during the year:

Retail-led

mixed-use

$000

Development

land

$000

Office

$000

Other

$000

All other

segments

$000

Total

$000

2026

Segment assets2,249,404146,510598,312237,81617,7473,249,789

Segment liabilities28,1902,8426,05611,2051,360,6011,408,894

Retail-led

mixed-use

$000

Development

land

$000

Office

$000

Other

$000

All other

segments

$000

Total

$000

2025

Segment assets2,178,032159,181817,732163,80920,5643,339,318

Segment liabilities30,7191,3056,12513,8581,427,3801,479,387

All assets are allocated to reportable segments other than cash and cash equivalents, equity-accounted investment, loan receivable,

deferred tax assets, interest rate derivatives and property, plant and equipment.

All liabilities are allocated to reportable segments other than interest bearing liabilities, deferred tax liabilities, income tax payable and

interest rate derivatives.

3. Profit and loss information
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report48

3.1 Property revenue

2026

$000

2025

$000

Gross rental income

1

268,485262,807

Straight-lining of fixed rental increases4,0992,441

Amortisation of capitalised lease incentives(5,237)(5,745)

Property revenue267,347259,503

1Includes $42.9 million of property operating expenses recovered from tenants (2025: $44.3 million).

The following table sets out the contracted future minimum lease payments receivable under non-cancellable operating leases at

31 March 2026. These amounts are based on lease terms in force at balance date and exclude turnover rent, recoveries and future

rent reviews.

2026

$000

2025

$000

Within one year250,763256,380

Between one and two years199,372202,267

Between two and three years159,971169,286

Between three and four years131,940133,750

Between four and five years103,025107,538

Later than five years376,376252,127

Property operating lease income1,221,4471,121,348

Recognition and measurement

Revenue is primarily derived from long-term operating leases with tenants across retail and office properties and is diversified

across a broad tenant base.

The Group enters into property leases with tenants on its investment properties. The Group has determined that it retains all

significant risks and rewards of ownership of these properties and has therefore classified the leases as operating leases.

Rental income from those leases, including fixed rental increases, is recognised on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease.

Lease incentives offered to tenants as an inducement to enter into leases are capitalised to investment properties and then

amortised over the term of the lease as a reduction of rental income.

The share of property operating expenses which are recoverable from tenants is recognised as gross rental income from

expense recoveries. This is associated with the provision of services relating to the operations of the Group's properties (for

example, council and water rates, insurance, utilities, repairs and maintenance, security costs). The Group recognises revenue

in the accounting period the underlying expenses are incurred in accordance with the contractual terms.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report49
3.2 Expenses

Finance costs

2026

$000

2025

$000

Interest and finance charges on bank loans40,20644,705

Interest on fixed-rate green bonds21,92122,617

Interest on lease liabilities2124

Interest capitalised to investment properties and inventories being developed(7,608)(9,789)

Interest and finance charges54,54057,557

Employee-related expenses and directors' fees

Employee entitlements26,42026,553

Less: recognised in direct property expenses(8,754)(8,566)

Less: capitalised to investment properties being developed(3,289)(3,022)

Other personnel costs8801,077

Directors' fees771774

Total employee-related expenses and directors' fees16,02816,816

Operating and corporate expenses

Information technology2,7402,637

Investor related expenses776755

Occupancy costs375418

Professional fees4,5012,489

Trustees' fees106118

Corporate insurance fees489667

Other751866

Total operating and corporate expenses9,7387,949

Auditor's remuneration:

Audit and review of financial statements

Statutory audit and review of the consolidated financial statements300321

Other services - Audit or review related services

Audit of joint venture financial statements4241

Audits of special purpose financial information in accordance with tenancy agreements5755

Other services - Other assurance services and other agreed-upon procedures

Limited assurance over selected Greenhouse Gases (GHG) information included in the climate-

related disclosures5643

Agreed upon procedures in respect of a specified remuneration metric8-

Other services - Non-assurance related services

Attendance to finance business partner training programme4-

Assurance readiness over scope 3 GHG emissions18-

Total other services185139

Total fees paid to auditor485460

Employment and administration expenses26,25125,225

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report50
3.2 Expenses (continued)

Recognition and measurement

Interest and finance charges

The interest and finance charges on bank loans are expensed in the period in which they occur, other than associated

transaction costs which are capitalised and amortised over the term of the facility to which they relate.

The interest expense on fixed-rate green bonds is recognised using the effective interest rate method.

To determine the amount of borrowing costs capitalised to investment properties and inventories that are being constructed

or developed, the Group uses the weighted average interest rate applicable to its outstanding borrowings during the year. For

2026 this was 4.95% (2025: 5.49%).

Employee entitlements

Employee benefits are expensed as the related service is provided. Details of the employee entitlements expense in relation to

share-based payments is outlined in note 4.8.4.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report51
3.3 Tax expense

A reconciliation of profit before income tax to income tax expense follows:

2026

$000

2025

$000

Profit before income tax78,43994,507

Prima facie income tax expense at 28%(21,963)(26,462)

Adjusted for:

Fair value gain/(loss) on interest rate derivatives1,121(2,832)

Fair value loss on investment properties(10,578)(3,254)

Impairment loss on inventories(3,680)-

Loss on disposal of investment properties(329)(4)

Share of loss in equity-accounted investee(11)-

Depreciation9,1058,506

Net deferred leasing costs(1)(232)

Straight-lining of fixed rental increases1,148684

Deductible capitalised expenditure2,4892,741

Prior year adjustment(122)66

Other802211

Current tax expense(22,019)(20,576)

Depreciation recoverable(3,677)(18,335)

Fair value (gain)/loss on interest rate derivatives(1,121)2,832

Deferred leasing costs and other temporary differences(1,174)(1,436)

Deferred tax expense(5,972)(16,939)

Income tax expense(27,991)(37,515)

Imputation credits available for use in subsequent periods4,4534,804

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report52
3.3 Tax expense (continued)

Recognition and measurement

Current tax

Current tax is the expected tax payable on the taxable income for the year, using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted

at balance date, and any adjustment to tax payable in respect of previous years.

Deferred tax

Deferred tax is recognised in respect of all taxable temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities

for

financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for taxation purposes. For deferred tax liabilities or assets arising on

investment property measured at fair value, it is assumed that the carrying amounts of investment property will be recovered

through sale (refer to note

4.5).

Imputation credits

The imputation credits available represent the balance of the imputation credit account at the end of the reporting period,

adjusted for imputation credits which will arise from the payment of the income tax liability.

4. Financial position
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report53

4.1 Trade and other receivables

2026

$000

2025

$000

Trade debtors8,2429,756

Allowance for expected credit losses(2,439)(2,363)

Net trade receivables5,8037,393

Prepayments6,9948,866

Trade and other receivables12,79716,259

The movement in the allowance for credit losses is as follows:

2026

$000

2025

$000

Opening allowance for expected credit losses2,3631,745

Increase in allowance for expected credit losses recognised in profit or loss during the year1,1391,113

Receivables written off during the year as uncollectible(418)(406)

Unused amounts reversed(645)(89)

Closing allowance for expected credit losses2,4392,363

The Group’s trade receivables arise principally from rental income, expense recoveries and other amounts due from tenants. Credit

risk is managed through ongoing monitoring of tenant balances, tenant credit quality and arrears positions across the portfolio.

The allowance for expected credit losses primarily reflects balances that are aged, subject to financial stress, under dispute, or

otherwise assessed as having a heightened risk of non-recovery. In determining the allowance, the Group considers historical loss

experience together with forward-looking factors and tenant-specific circumstances at balance date. The closing allowance is

concentrated in a limited number of tenant balances with elevated recovery risk. The allowance represents 30% (2025: 24%) of

gross receivables.

Recognition and measurement

Trade receivables are recognised initially at the amount of consideration that is unconditional and are subsequently measured

at amortised cost less an allowance for expected credit losses. The Group applies the simplified expected credit loss

model under IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and recognises lifetime expected credit losses for all trade receivables. The

allowance is determined using a provision matrix informed by historical loss experience, current receivables ageing,

tenant-

specific circumstances and forward-looking information relevant to the property sector and broader economic environment.

Receivables are written off when there is no reasonable expectation of recovery.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report54
4.2 Investment properties

Overview

Investment properties comprise land and buildings held to earn rental income and/or for capital appreciation. At 31 March 2026, the

Group’s investment property portfolio had a carrying value of $3,116.0 million (2025: $3,209.2 million).

During the year, the Group recognised a net fair value loss on investment properties of $37.8 million (2025: $11.6 million loss). This

movement primarily reflects changes in development cost assumptions and market conditions, including movements in capitalisation

rates, discount rates and market rental growth rates.

Recognition and measurement

Investment properties are initially recognised at cost, including directly attributable transaction costs, and are subsequently

measured at fair value.

Fair values are determined at least annually by independent registered valuers. Gains or losses arising from changes in fair value

are recognised in profit or loss in the period in which they arise.

Investment properties under development are initially measured at cost. Cost includes directly attributable development

expenditure, including construction costs, professional fees and borrowing costs incurred in respect of qualifying assets during

the development period. Investment properties under development are carried at cost until their fair value can be reliably

determined, at which point they are measured at fair value, with any difference recognised in profit or loss.

Lease incentives

Lease incentives provided to tenants are capitalised as part of the carrying value of investment properties and are amortised

on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease as a reduction of rental income.

Ground leases

Where the Group holds investment properties under ground lease arrangements, a lease liability is recognised in accordance

with NZ IFRS 16 Leases. The corresponding right-of-use asset is included within the carrying value of investment properties.

Lease liabilities are measured at the present value of future lease payments.

Investment properties held for sale

Investment properties are classified as held for sale where their carrying amount is expected to be recovered principally

through a sale transaction and the criteria of NZ IFRS 5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations are met.

Investment properties held for sale continue to be measured at fair value.

Disposals

Investment properties are derecognised on disposal. The gain or loss on disposal is calculated as the difference between the

net proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset at the date of disposal and is recognised in profit or loss in the period in

which the disposal occurs.

Portfolio composition and movements

The Group’s investment property portfolio comprises assets across retail-led mixed-use, office, other and development

land categories.

The movement in investment properties during the year is summarised in the table below.

Key movements during the year include the reclassification of ASB North Wharf from the office portfolio to investment

properties held for sale, the disposal of The Plaza, capital expenditure and development activity across the portfolio, and fair

value movements reflecting updated valuation assumptions.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report55
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

Investment properties held by the Group are as follows:

Valuer

Capitalisation

rate

2026

%

Fair value

31 March 2025

$000

Capital

movements

2026

$000

Fair value

gain/(loss)

2026

$000

Fair value

31 March 2026

$000

Retail-led mixed-use

Sylvia Park PrecinctVarious5.941,735,74834,55914,1831,784,490

LynnMallJLL7.50205,0001,90811,592218,500

The Base

1

Bayleys6.88224,3001,0639,537234,900

2,165,04837,53035,3122,237,890

Office

Vero CentreColliers6.13456,50015,273(21,773)450,000

ASB North Wharf212,000(199,705)(12,295)-

The Aurora CentreCBRE6.88147,000665(665)147,000

815,500(183,767)(34,733)597,000

Other

The Plaza

2

126,000(116,160)(9,840)-

Centre Place North

1

Bayleys9.0232,2251,029(5,454)27,800

158,225(115,131)(15,294)27,800

Development land

Drury development (Stage 2)70,0001,009(23,009)48,000

3,208,773(260,359)(37,724)2,910,690

Gross up of lease liabilities414(2)(54)358

Investment properties - non-current3,209,187(260,361)(37,778)2,911,048

Investment properties held for sale

Properties held for sale

3

-205,000-205,000

Gross up of lease liabilities----

Investment properties held for sale - current-205,000-205,000

Total investment properties3,209,187(55,361)(37,778)3,116,048

1Represents the Group's 50% ownership interest.

2The Plaza was disposed of in December 2025.

3During the current financial year, ASB North Wharf was reclassified from the office portfolio to investment properties held for sale.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report56
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

Valuer

Capitalisation

rate

2025

%

Fair value

31 March 2024

$000

Capital

movements

2025

$000

Fair value

gain/(loss)

2025

$000

Fair value

31 March 2025

$000

Retail-led mixed-use

Sylvia Park Precinct

1

Various5.921,679,50047,1179,1311,735,748

LynnMallCBRE7.63202,0003,334(334)205,000

The Base

2

Colliers7.13205,1003,80715,393224,300

2,086,60054,25824,1902,165,048

Office

Vero CentreColliers5.88-477,348(20,848)456,500

ASB North WharfJLL6.43212,000475(475)212,000

The Aurora CentreColliers6.50146,000409591147,000

358,000478,232(20,732)815,500

Other

The PlazaJLL8.88112,00016,377(2,377)126,000

Centre Place North

2

Colliers8.7032,225919(919)32,225

144,22517,296(3,296)158,225

Development land

Drury development (Stage 2)74,5007,235(11,735)70,000

2,663,325557,021(11,573)3,208,773

Gross up of lease liabilities464(1)(49)414

Investment properties - non-current2,663,789557,020(11,622)3,209,187

Investment properties

held for sale

Properties held for sale

3

458,000(458,000)--

Investment properties held for sale - current458,000(458,000)--

Total investment properties3,121,78999,020(11,622)3,209,187

1Sylvia Park Precinct was valued “as if complete” at $1.737 billion based on a weighted capitalisation rate of 5.92% (including the as if complete capitalisation rate of Resido Lynton

build-to-rent). The deduction of $0.8 million outstanding development costs for the Resido Lynton build-to-rent development results in an “as is” value of $1.736 billion net of

seismic costs.

2Represents the Group's 50% ownership interest.

3During the previous financial year, Vero Centre was reclassified from investment properties held for sale to the office portfolio.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report57
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

The movement in the Group's investment properties during the year is as follows:

Retail-led

mixed-use

$000

Office

$000

Other

$000

Development

land

$000

Held for sale

$000

Total

$000

Balance at 31 March 2025 excluding gross up

of lease liabilities2,165,048815,500158,22570,000-3,208,773

Capital movements:

Transfers between asset classes-(205,000)--205,000-

Transfer to inventories---(5,830)-(5,830)

Acquisitions5,640----5,640

Disposals--(118,920)--(118,920)

Capitalised costs (including lease

incentives, fees and fixed rental income)34,61219,8253,8803,808-62,125

Capitalised interest and finance charges446362253,031-3,738

Amortisation of lease incentives, fees and

fixed rental income(3,168)1,372(316)--(2,112)

37,530(183,767)(115,131)1,009205,000(55,359)

Fair value gain/(loss) on investment

properties excluding gross up of

lease liabilities35,312(34,733)(15,294)(23,009)-(37,724)

Balance at 31 March 2026 excluding gross

up of lease liabilities2,237,890597,00027,80048,000205,0003,115,690

Gross up of lease liabilities:

Balance at 31 March 2025414----414

Capital movements(2)----(2)

Fair value movements(54)----(54)

Balance at 31 March 2026 excluding gross

up of lease liabilities358----358

Balance at 31 March 2026 including gross

up of lease liabilities2,238,248597,00027,80048,000205,0003,116,048

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report58
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

The movement in the Group's investment properties during the prior year is as follows:

Retail-led

mixed-use

$000

Office

$000

Other

$000

Development

land

$000

Held for sale

$000

Total

$000

Balance at 31 March 2024 excluding gross up

of lease liabilities2,086,600358,000144,22574,500458,0003,121,325

Capital movements:

Transfers between asset classes-458,000--(458,000)-

Capitalised costs (including lease

incentives, fees and fixed rental income)54,95321,03016,5804,487-97,050

Capitalised interest and finance charges2,272-1,0352,748-6,055

Amortisation of lease incentives, fees and

fixed rental income(2,967)(798)(319)--(4,084)

54,258478,23217,2967,235(458,000)99,021

Fair value gain/(loss) on investment

properties excluding gross up of

lease liabilities24,190(20,732)(3,296)(11,735)-(11,573)

Balance at 31 March 2025 excluding gross

up of lease liabilities2,165,048815,500158,22570,000-3,208,773

Gross up of lease liabilities:

Balance at 31 March 2024464----464

Capital movements(1)----(1)

Fair value movements(49)----(49)

Balance at 31 March 2025414----414

Balance at 31 March 2025 including gross

up of lease liabilities2,165,462815,500158,22570,000-3,209,187

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report59
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

Key estimate: Valuation assumptions

Estimation uncertainty

All investment properties are classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy because their valuation depends on significant

unobservable inputs. The determination of fair value involves the use of unobservable inputs and requires the application of

significant estimations. The most significant assumptions are capitalisation rates, discount rates and market rental growth rates.

Small changes in key assumptions may result in material changes to the carrying value of investment properties.

The valuation of investment properties represents a key source of estimation uncertainty.

The valuations and underlying assumptions are reviewed for reasonableness at each reporting date, with reference to external

market evidence and the specific characteristics of each property.

The valuation of Stage 2 development land at Drury involves significant estimation uncertainty, including development-

related assumptions. A key estimate relates to future development costs required to complete the development, including

infrastructure, construction and other development expenditure. The estimation uncertainty disclosed in note 4.3 in relation to

Stage 1 development land at Drury is also relevant to Stage 2 development land at Drury, as both stages are exposed to common

development-related assumptions, although they are measured under different accounting bases.

Valuation process

The fair value of investment properties is determined using valuations performed by independent registered valuers. These

valuers are members of the New Zealand Institute of Valuers and have appropriate experience in valuing property of a similar

nature and location.

Valuations are performed at least annually. The valuation reports and underlying assumptions are reviewed for reasonableness,

having regard to market evidence and the specific characteristics of each property.

The valuations are prepared using recognised valuation methodologies, including the income capitalisation approach and the

discounted cash flow approach. The approach adopted for each property reflects its nature, tenancy profile and stage of

development. Other valuation approaches, including the direct comparison approach, may also be used where appropriate

depending on the nature of the asset.

Key valuation assumptions

The valuation of investment properties requires the use of significant assumptions. The most significant assumptions applied

by the independent valuers are capitalisation rates, discount rates and market rental growth rates.

Other assumptions, including market rents, vacancy allowances, incentives and capital expenditure requirements, are also

applied in determining fair value.

These assumptions are determined with reference to market evidence, including recent comparable transactions, prevailing

market conditions and the specific characteristics of each property.

Given the nature of property valuations, these inputs are inherently subjective and changes in these assumptions may have

a material impact on the carrying value of investment properties and the resulting fair value movements recognised in profit

or loss.

Other valuation considerations

Seismic considerations are reflected in property valuations where relevant, based on the best available information regarding

potential remediation requirements and associated costs at the reporting date. These considerations are incorporated into

valuations either through adjustments to cash flows or through valuation inputs such as capitalisation rates.

On 28 September 2025, the New Zealand Government announced proposed changes to the earthquake-prone building regime.

The proposals include a more targeted, risk-based approach to remediation and changes to how seismic risk is assessed. While

legislation is expected to be enacted in a future period, the impact of these proposed changes remains subject to further

development. The Group will continue to monitor these developments and reflect them in valuations as appropriate.

Climate-related risks are also considered as part of the valuation process and are reflected in valuation inputs where

appropriate, including discount rates and capitalisation rates.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report60
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

Valuation inputs

The following table sets out these key unobservable inputs and the ranges adopted by the valuers across the various properties

making up the Group’s retail-led mixed-use, office and other portfolios.

Class of propertyInputs used to measure fair value

Range of significant

unobservable inputs

20262025

Retail-led mixed-use

1

Core capitalisation rate

2

5.9% - 7.5%5.9% - 7.6%

Other income capitalisation rate

2

5.9% - 9.0%5.9% - 8.3%

Discount rate

2

7.8% - 8.8%7.3% - 10.6%

Terminal capitalisation rate

2

5.3% - 7.8%5.3% - 7.4%

Gross market rent (per sqm)

3,4

$408 - $951$415 - $938

Rental growth rate (per annum)

4

1.5% - 5.5%1.1% - 5.5%

OfficeCore capitalisation rate

2

6.1% - 6.9%5.9% - 6.5%

Discount rate

2

7.9% - 8.0%7.5% - 7.9%

Terminal capitalisation rate

2

6.3% - 7.1%6.0% - 6.7%

Gross market rent (per sqm)

3,4

$603 - $822$602 - $802

Rental growth rate (per annum)

4

1.0% - 3.2%1.3% - 3.9%

OtherCore capitalisation rate

2

9.0% - 9.0%8.8% - 8.9%

Other income capitalisation rate

2

9.3% - 10.0%8.9% - 9.9%

Discount rate

2

9.1% - 9.1%9.4% - 10.0%

Terminal capitalisation rate

2

9.0% - 9.0%9.0% - 9.0%

Gross market rent (per sqm)

3,4

$500 - $500$554 - $662

Rental growth rate (per annum)

4

0.0% - 3.0%1.0% - 2.5%

1Retail-led mixed-use excludes adjoining properties and Resido build-to-rent located at Sylvia Park.

2The higher the capitalisation rates and discount rate, the lower the fair value.

3Weighted average by property.

4The higher the market rent and growth rate, the higher the fair value.

Sensitivity to valuation inputs

A sensitivity analysis showing the impact of changes in key valuation assumptions on the fair value of investment properties is

provided below.

The analysis focuses on the key unobservable inputs that have the most significant impact on valuations, being capitalisation

rates, discount rates and market rental growth rates. An increase in capitalisation rates or discount rates would generally result

in a decrease in fair value, while an increase in market rental growth rates would generally result in an increase in fair value.

The sensitivity analysis illustrates the directional impact of changes in these assumptions, with all other variables held constant.

In practice, these assumptions may be interrelated, and changes may not occur in isolation.

The analysis should not be regarded as a prediction of future valuation outcomes.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report61
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

Capitalisation rateDiscount rateMarket rental growth rate

31 March 2026

Adopted

value- 25bp+ 25bp- 25bp+ 25bp- 25bp+ 25bp

Retail-led mixed-use

Actual valuation ($000)2,237,890

Impact of assumption change ($000)89,600(82,700)36,900(42,600)(42,900)40,300

Impact of assumption change (%)4.0(3.7)1.6(1.9)(1.9)1.8

Office

Actual valuation ($000)597,000

Impact of assumption change ($000)25,500(23,600)11,100(11,100)(3,800)3,300

Impact of assumption change (%)4.3(4.0)1.9(1.9)(0.6)0.6

Other

Actual valuation ($000)27,800

Impact of assumption change ($000)800(600)400(600)(500)1,100

Impact of assumption change (%)2.9(2.2)1.4(2.2)(1.8)4.0

31 March 2025Adopted value

Capitalisation

rate

- 25bp

Capitalisation

rate

+ 25bp

Discount rate

- 25bp

Discount rate

+ 25bp

Retail-led mixed-use

Actual valuation ($000)2,165,048

Impact of assumption change ($000)81,700(77,500)35,000(35,300)

Impact of assumption change (%)3.8(3.6)1.6(1.6)

Office

Actual valuation ($000)815,500

Impact of assumption change ($000)36,500(32,500)15,200(14,600)

Impact of assumption change (%)4.5(4.0)1.9(1.8)

Other

Actual valuation ($000)158,225

Impact of assumption change ($000)6,300(5,800)3,400(3,100)

Impact of assumption change (%)4.0(3.7)2.1(2.0)

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report62
4.2 Investment properties (continued)

The valuation of investment properties is complex with a number of interrelated key inputs and assumptions.

When calculating the income capitalisation value, the gross market rent has a strong interrelationship with the core capitalisation rate.

An increase in the gross market rent and an increase in the core capitalisation rate could potentially offset the impact to fair value.

The same can be said for a decrease in each input. A directionally opposite change in the two inputs could potentially magnify the

impact to the fair value.

When calculating the discounted cash flow value, the discount rate has a strong interrelationship with the terminal capitalisation rate.

An increase in the discount rate and a decrease in the terminal capitalisation rate could potentially offset the impact to fair value. The

same can be said for an opposite movement in each input. A directionally similar change in the two inputs could potentially magnify

the impact to the fair value.

The following table explains the key inputs used to measure fair value for investment properties.

Valuation techniques

Income capitalisation approachA valuation technique which determines fair value by capitalising a property's core net

income at an appropriate, market derived rate of return with subsequent capital adjustments

for near-term events, typically including letting up allowances, capital expenditure (including

seismic expenditure) and the difference between contract and market rentals.

Discounted cash flow approachA valuation technique which requires explicit assumptions to be made regarding the

prospective income, expenses and capital expenditure (including seismic expenditure)

of a property over an assumed holding period, typically 10 years. The assessed cash flows are

discounted to present value at an appropriate, market-derived discount rate to determine

fair value.

Direct comparison approachA valuation technique which determines fair value by comparing the subject property to

sales of comparable properties in surrounding locations. Adjustments are made to reflect the

individual characteristics of the subject property.

Residual approachA valuation technique used primarily for property which is undergoing, or is expected

to undergo, redevelopment. Fair value is determined through the estimation of a gross

realisation on completion of the redevelopment with deductions made for all costs

associated with converting the property to its end use including finance costs and a typical

profit margin for risks assumed by the developer.

Unobservable inputs within the income capitalisation approach

Gross market rentThe annual amount for which a tenancy within a property is expected to achieve under a new

arm's length leasing transaction, including a fair share of property operating expenses.

Core capitalisation rateThe rate of return, determined through analysis of comparable market-related sales

transactions, which is applied to a property's core net income to derive value.

Other income capitalisation rateThe rate of return which is applied to other, typically variable or uncontracted, sources of

property income to derive value and that is assessed with consideration to the risks in

achieving each income source.

Unobservable inputs within the discounted cash flow approach

Discount rateThe rate, determined through analysis of comparable market-related sales transactions,

that is applied to a property's future net cash flows to convert those cash flows into a

present value.

Terminal capitalisation rateThe rate which is applied to a property's core net income at the end of an assumed holding

period, typically 10 years, to derive an estimated future market value.

Rental growth rateThe annual growth rate applied to market rents over an assumed holding period, typically

10 years.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report63
4.3 Inventories

2026

$000

2025

$000

Opening balance89,17173,500

Transfer from investment properties5,830-

Additional expenditure16,64215,671

Impairment loss(13,143)-

Closing balance98,50089,171

The Group classifies inventories as current assets where they are expected to be realised in the normal operating cycle, even when

that cycle exceeds 12 months.

The Group’s inventories relate to Stage 1 land held for development at Drury. During the year, the Group transferred a further two

hectares of land from investment properties to inventories following a change in use, evidenced by the negotiation to develop and sell

that parcel of land. The land was reclassified at its fair value at the date of transfer, with reference to the March 2025 independent

external valuation determined on a per square metre basis.

Inventories are measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value (NRV). The Group uses external valuation reports to estimate

NRV. During the year, an impairment loss of $13.1 million was recognised to write inventories down to their estimated NRV. The

impairment loss reflects revised assumptions regarding development costs and expected selling prices.

Recognition and measurement

Inventories comprise properties that are being developed or redeveloped for sale in the ordinary course of business. When

inventories arise from a change in use of investment properties such as by the commencement of development with a view to

sell, the properties are reclassified as inventories at their deemed cost, which is the fair value at the date of reclassification.

They are subsequently carried at the lower of cost and NRV. NRV is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business

less costs to complete redevelopment and selling expenses.

Key judgement and estimate: inventories

Judgement is required in determining when the intended use of a property changes from long-term investment to development

for sale. A change in intention alone does not result in reclassification; the Group considers all relevant facts and circumstances,

including the stage of development, level of development works required and progress of sale negotiations.

The determination of NRV involves significant estimation. The most significant estimate relates to the future development costs

required to complete the inventory. These costs include infrastructure, construction and other development expenditures

necessary to bring the land to a saleable condition.

Future development cost estimates are based on current project budgets, contracted rates where available, and management’s

assessment of forecast costs to complete. These estimates are inherently uncertain and may change as projects progress,

particularly in response to:


changes in construction cost inflation


revisions to development scope


updated infrastructure requirements


changes in procurement strategies or contractor pricing

Changes in these assumptions have a direct and proportionate impact on valuation outcomes.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report64
4.4 Equity-accounted investments

Ownership interestCarrying amount

EntityOwnership

Nature of

relationship

2026

%

2025

%

2026

$000

2025

$000

Mackersy Property LimitedSharesJoint Venture50%-7,841-

The movement in the Group's equity-accounted investments is as follows:

Reconciliation to carrying amounts

2026

$000

Opening net assets-

Additions: Conversion from loan to equity6,500

Transaction costs1,381

Estimated performance-based earn-out2,700

Liability for contingent consideration(2,700)

Loss and total comprehensive loss(40)

Closing net assets7,841

The below table summarises the Group's share of MPL's performance for the period 1 December 2025 to 31 March 2026 and net assets

as at 31 March 2026.

Summarised statement of comprehensive income

1 Dec 2025 to

31 March 2026

$000

Property management revenue3,014

Loss and total comprehensive loss after tax(81)

Kiwi Property's share of loss (50%)(40)

Summarised statement of financial position

2026

$000

Total assets11,230

Total liabilities(2,174)

The Group’s equity-accounted investment comprises a 50% interest in MPL, an incorporated investment vehicle which pursues

property investment and management opportunities. The investment provides exposure to property investment opportunities

through a jointly controlled structure.

In November 2024, the Group entered into a $6.5 million convertible loan agreement with MPL. In December 2025, subject to certain

conditions being met, the loan converted into a 50% shareholding in MPL. Any loan repayments previously made by MPL to the Group

were returned to the original shareholders of MPL, which allowed the conversion value in December 2025 to be $6.5 million. The

convertible loan to MPL was originally classified as loan receivable in the Group's consolidated statement of financial position in the

previous financial year.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report65
4.4 Equity-accounted investments (continued)

The investment includes performance-based earn-out and origination adjustment mechanisms between shareholders. These are

calculated by reference to MPL’s future financial performance and may result in additional payments to, or receipts from, other

shareholders, thereby adjusting the effective consideration for the investment. The earn-out has been recognised as part of the

cost of the investment. The Group has not recognised any assets or liabilities relating to the origination adjustment as they cannot

be reliably estimated. At 31 March 2026, the estimated fair value of the earn-out was $2.7 million. This amount has been presented

net within the carrying amount of the equity-accounted investment as it is not material to the Group’s financial position. The gross

investment balance before the earn-out is $10.5 million.

Recognition and measurement

The Group accounts for interests in joint ventures using the equity method. Under this method, the investment is recognised

initially at cost and subsequently adjusted for the Group’s share of the joint venture’s post-acquisition profit or loss and other

movements in net assets. The Group’s share of the joint venture’s profit or loss after tax is included in the Group’s profit or loss

before income tax, and the carrying amount is adjusted for the Group’s share of movements in other comprehensive income.

Transactions recorded directly in equity, outside

profit or loss and other comprehensive income, are not reflected in the Group’s

carrying amount.

Gains or losses arising from the transfer of investment properties to a joint venture are recognised only to the extent of the other

investors’ interest, except where cash is received, in which case the cash‑related portion is recognised in full.

At each reporting date, the Group assesses whether any indicators of impairment exist for its equity‑accounted investments. If

indicators are present, the recoverable amount is estimated and compared with the carrying amount. The recoverable amount

is the higher of value in use (VIU) and fair value less costs of disposal (FVLCD). VIU is based on discounted expected future cash

flows, while FVLCD reflects the price obtainable in an orderly market transaction.

Where the carrying amount exceeds the recoverable amount, an impairment loss is recognised in profit or loss. Impairments

are not allocated to underlying assets and are reversed only if the recoverable amount subsequently increases.

Where contingent consideration arises in connection with the acquisition of an interest in a joint venture, the Group assesses

whether the arrangement forms part of the cost of the investment.

Contingent consideration is initially recognised at fair value. The Group has elected to apply a cost accumulation approach,

subsequently changes in the fair value of contingent consideration are recognised as adjustments to the carrying amount of the

equity-accounted investment rather than in

profit or loss. The contingent consideration is reassessed at each reporting date.

Key judgement: Equity-accounted investment

The Group has determined that its interest in MPL is a joint venture. This assessment is based on the terms of the shareholder

and governance arrangements, under which decisions about the relevant activities of MPL require the unanimous consent of

the investing parties. The Group therefore has joint control of the arrangement.

Management has also assessed that the arrangement gives the investing parties rights to the net assets of MPL, rather than

direct rights to the underlying assets and obligations for the liabilities of MPL. Accordingly, the investment is accounted for as

a joint venture using the equity method.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report66
4.5 Deferred tax

2026

$000

2025

$000

Deferred tax assets

Interest rate derivatives6131,734

Deferred tax liabilities

Depreciation recoverable127,986124,309

Deferred leasing costs and other temporary differences9,7708,596

Deferred tax liabilities137,756132,905

Recognition and measurement

Deferred tax is provided for all taxable temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial

reporting purposes and the amounts used for taxation purposes. Deferred tax assets are recognised to the extent that it is

probable that future taxable profits will be available to utilise them. For deferred tax assets or liabilities arising on investment

property, it is assumed that the carrying amounts of investment property will be recovered through sale. Deferred tax is

disclosed on a net basis, as the deferred tax assets and the deferred tax liabilities relate to the same taxation authority.

The carrying amount of deferred tax assets is reviewed at each balance date and reduced to the extent that it is no longer

probable that sufficient taxable profit will be available to allow all or part of the deferred tax asset to be utilised.

Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured at the tax rates that are expected to apply to the year when the asset is realised

or the liability is settled, based on tax rates and tax laws applicable at balance date.

Key judgement: Deferred tax on depreciation

Deferred tax is provided in respect of depreciation expected to be recovered on the sale of investment properties at fair

value. In determining this liability, management is required to estimate the portion of each property’s fair value attributable to

depreciable building components and, where relevant, fixtures and fittings.

This allocation is based on information obtained from independent valuers and other specialist valuation inputs.

This is inherently judgemental because market evidence does not ordinarily identify, on a directly observable basis, the amount

a market participant would attribute to land, building and fixtures and fittings separately. As a result, changes in the allocation

of fair value between these components could materially affect the deferred tax liability recognised at balance date.

The allocation is most sensitive for assets with higher relative building or fit-out value and for properties where the allocation

between land and depreciable components is less directly observable. Management reviews the reasonableness of these

allocations annually having regard to external valuation evidence, recent transaction data where available, and the specific

characteristics of each property.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report67
4.6 Funding

4.6.1

 Interest bearing liabilities

Recognition and measurement

Interest-bearing liabilities are initially recognised at the fair value of the consideration received, less directly attributable

transaction costs. After initial recognition, they are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method. Under

this method, transaction costs and any premium or discount on issue are amortised over the expected life of the instrument

and included in interest and

finance charges in profit or loss.

The carrying amount of interest-bearing liabilities approximates their fair value, except for fixed-rate green bonds, the fair value

of which is disclosed separately based on quoted market prices.

The Group's secured interest bearing liabilities are as follows:

2026

$000

2025

$000

Current interest bearing liabilities

Fixed-rate green bonds-101,457

Non-current interest bearing liabilities

Bank loans - total facilities1,100,0001,000,000

Bank loans - undrawn facilities(284,000)(217,000)

Bank loans - drawn facilities816,000783,000

Fixed-rate green bonds400,736400,180

1,216,7361,183,180

Interest bearing liabilities1,216,7361,284,637

2026

$000

2025

$000

Face value of fixed-rate green bonds - current-100,000

Face value of fixed-rate green bonds - non-current400,000400,000

Face values400,000500,000

20262025

Weighted average interest rate for drawn debt

(inclusive of bonds, active interest rate derivatives, margins and line fees)4.81%5.30%

Weighted average term to maturity for the combined facilities2.9 years3.1 years

The Group has total committed bank facilities of $1,100 million (2025: $1,000 million), of which $284 million (2025: $217 million)

remained undrawn at balance date. The weighted average interest rate on drawn debt at balance date was 4.81% (2025: 5.30%), and

the weighted average term to maturity was 2.9 years (2025: 3.1 years).

The Group maintains a diversified debt maturity profile with no significant concentrations in the short term. Debt maturities are

structured to comply with Treasury Policy limits, with less than 30% of facilities maturing within 12 months and no more than 35% in

any subsequent 12-month period.

All interest-bearing liabilities have contractual maturities beyond 12 months from the reporting date.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report68
4.6.1

 Interest bearing liabilities (continued)

Bank loans

The Group’s bank loans are provided by a group of domestic and international banks, comprising ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited,

Bank of New Zealand, China Construction Bank (New Zealand Branch), Commonwealth Bank of Australia, The Hongkong and Shanghai

Banking Corporation Limited (New Zealand Branch), Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Limited (Auckland Branch), MUFG Bank,

Ltd (Auckland Branch), and Westpac New Zealand Limited.

During the year, total committed bank facilities increased from $1,000 million to $1,035 million in September 2025. Additional

conditional facilities of $100 million were established to support refinancing of the KPG040 green bond. Following completion of the

refinancing, total committed facilities were reduced to $1,100 million.

Certain interest-bearing liabilities are subject to financial covenants. The Group complied with all covenant requirements during the

year (2025: compliant).

Fixed-rate green bonds

The Group has issued fixed-rate green bonds, which are listed on the NZX Debt Market. The bonds are secured and rank equally with

other secured obligations under the Group’s funding arrangements.

Details of the bonds are set out below:

NZX code

Value of

issue

$000Date issued

Date of

maturity

Interest

rateInterest payable

Fair value

2026

$000

Fair value

2025

$000

KPG040100,00012-Nov-1812-Nov-254.06%May, November-99,708

KPG050150,00019-Jul-2119-Jul-282.85%January, July143,843140,110

KPG060125,00027-Mar-2327-Sep-296.24%March, September129,380130,195

KPG070125,00019-Dec-2419-Jun-305.35%June, December125,129124,708

Fixed-rate green bonds398,352494,721

The fair value of the bonds is based on quoted market prices and is classified as Level 1 in the fair value hierarchy.

Security

The Group’s interest-bearing liabilities are secured by a Global Security Deed granted by Kiwi Property Group Limited and certain of

its subsidiaries (the Charging Group) in favour of the lenders and bondholders.

At 31 March 2026, the Charging Group comprised Kiwi Property Group Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings

No. 2 Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No. 3 Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No. 4 Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No. 5 Limited,

Kiwi Property Holdings No. 7 Limited, Sylvia Park Business Centre Limited, Kiwi Property Te Awa Limited and Kiwi Property Centre

Place Limited.

Under the Global Security Deed, the Charging Group grants security over all of its present and after-acquired property. This includes

first-ranking registered mortgages over substantially all of the Group’s investment properties, together with security over other assets

of the Charging Group.

The interest-bearing liabilities are also supported by guarantees from the Charging Group entities. The composition of the Charging

Group may change from time to time in accordance with the terms of the funding arrangements.

The security arrangements apply to both bank interest-bearing liabilities and fixed-rate green bonds, which rank equally with each

other under the Group’s secured funding structure.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report69
4.6.2

 Interest rate derivatives

The Group uses interest rate derivatives to manage exposure to interest rate movements. The following table provides details of the

fair values, notional values, terms and interest rates of the Group's interest rate derivatives.

2026

$000

2025

$000

Interest rate derivative assets - current-51

Interest rate derivative assets - non-current2,475706

Interest rate derivative liabilities - current(675)(3)

Interest rate derivative liabilities - non-current(3,987)(6,945)

Total fair values of interest rate derivatives(2,187)(6,191)

Notional value of interest rate derivatives - fixed-rate payer - active500,000625,000

Notional value of interest rate derivatives - fixed-rate payer - forward starting235,000215,000

Notional values735,000840,000

Fixed-rate payer swaps:

Weighted average term to maturity - active1.6 years1.9 years

Weighted average term to maturity - forward starting5.1 years5.5 years

Weighted average term to maturity2.7 years2.8 years

Fixed-rate payer swaps:

Weighted average interest rate - active

1

3.94%2.98%

Weighted average interest rate - forward starting

1

4.02%4.12%

Weighted average interest rate3.97%3.27%

1Excluding fees and margins.

The fair value of interest rate derivatives is determined using valuation techniques based on observable market data and is classified

as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy.

The Group does not designate interest rate derivatives in hedge accounting relationships. Accordingly, changes in fair value are

recognised in profit or loss.

Recognition and measurement

Interest rate derivatives are initially recognised at fair value on the date the contract is entered into and are subsequently

remeasured to fair value at each reporting date.

The fair value of interest rate derivatives is determined using valuation techniques that incorporate observable market data,

including forward interest rate curves and discount rates. These valuations are typically prepared by an independent treasury

advisor and are corroborated against valuations provided by counterparties.

Transaction costs are recognised in profit or loss as incurred.

The Group does not apply hedge accounting. Accordingly, changes in the fair value of interest rate derivatives are recognised

in profit or loss in the period in which they arise.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report70
4.6.3

 Capital management

The Group’s objective in managing capital is to maintain a strong and flexible balance sheet that supports its strategic objectives,

preserves financial flexibility, and safeguards the Group’s ability to continue as a going concern while delivering sustainable returns

to shareholders.

The Group manages its capital through a mix of debt and equity funding, while ensuring that it:


Maintains appropriate credit metrics to support access to diversified funding sources, including bank and capital markets funding,


Complies with externally imposed capital requirements (see below),


Operates within its target gearing range of 25 – 35%, and


Continues to operate as a going concern.

The principal externally imposed capital requirement is contained in the Group’s Senior Facilities Agreement, which requires total

finance debt to be no more than 50% of total tangible assets. A consistent 50% gearing limit also applies to the Group’s fixed-rate

green bonds under the Master Trust Deed with the Supervisor (Public Trust). The Group complied with these requirements throughout

the year.

The Group’s gearing ratio at 31 March 2026 was 37.4%, which is outside of its target gearing range. Gearing levels continue to be

monitored in the context of market conditions, portfolio optimisation and capital allocation.

The Group assesses the adequacy of its capital structure, cost of capital and gearing as part of its broader strategic planning

processes.  Maintaining a disciplined approach to balance sheet management and capital allocation is a key strategic priority.

The Group continuously reviews its capital structure to:


Ensure sufficient liquidity (refer note 5.3) and committed funding facilities are available on a cost-effective basis to support its

operating activities and development pipeline,


Maintain financial capacity to respond to market opportunities and unforeseen contingencies, and


Optimise returns to shareholders over the long term.

The Group may adjust its capital structure through a range of initiatives, including:


Allowing for shareholder participation in the dividend reinvestment plan (DRP) to retain capital within the business,


Recycling capital through the divestment of non-core or mature assets,


Adjusting the timing and scale of capital expenditure and development activity, and/or


Accessing equity or debt capital markets as appropriate.

At 31 March 2026, the Group’s market capitalisation was below the carrying amount of its net assets. Market capitalisation is affected

by a range of factors, including broader market conditions, investor sentiment, sector outlook, leverage and interest rate expectations,

and may therefore differ from the carrying value of net assets at a point in time. Having regard to the independent external valuations

of the Group’s investment properties and the related disclosures in note 4.2, the Group considers the carrying values recognised at

balance date to be appropriate.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report71
4.7 Trade and other payables

2026

$000

2025

$000

Trade creditors20,85528,376

Interest and finance charges payable3,4063,144

Development costs payable11,2948,485

Employment liabilities4,4544,481

Rent received in advance4,2524,771

Goods and Services Tax payable1,1531,218

Trade and other payables45,41450,475

Recognition and measurement

Trade and other payables are carried at amortised cost and due to their short-term nature are not discounted. Provisions are

recognised when the Group has a legal or constructive obligation as a result of a past event, it is probable that a future outflow

of cash or other benefit will be required and a reliable estimate can be made of the amount of the obligation.

4.8 Equity

4.8.1 Share capital

The following table provides details of movements in the Group’s issued shares:

2026202620252025

Number

000

Amount

$000

Number

000

Amount

$000

Balance at the beginning of the year1,625,2161,713,5171,591,9721,682,795

Issue of shares:

Dividend reinvestment22,22021,05332,12128,845

Long-term incentive plan - shares issued1,270-1,043-

Long-term incentive plan - shares vested-1,000-994

Employee share ownership plan - shares issued80-80-

Employee share ownership plan - shares vested-80-96

Disposal of treasury shares---787

Balance at the end of the year1,648,7861,735,6501,625,2161,713,517

Recognition and measurement

Share capital is recognised at the fair value of the consideration received by the Company. Costs relating to the issue of new

shares have been deducted from proceeds received.

All shares carry equal weight in respect of voting rights, dividend rights and rights on winding up of the Company and have no

par value.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report72
4.8.2

 Dividends

Dividends paid during the year comprised:

Payment date

2026

cps

2026

$000Payment date

2025

cps

2025

$000

Dividends paid1.35021,9591.42522,688

Imputation credits0.3014,8890.1903,020

Q4 final dividend19-Jun-251.65126,84821-Jun-241.61525,708

Dividends paid1.40022,9231.35021,507

Imputation credits0.3385,5350.2934,666

Q1 interim dividend19-Sep-251.73828,45820-Sep-241.64326,173

Dividends paid1.40023,0831.35021,655

Imputation credits0.3666,0390.3745,999

Q2 interim dividend19-Dec-251.76629,12220-Dec-241.72427,654

Dividends paid1.40023,0831.35021,799

Imputation credits0.3555,8610.3335,372

Q3 interim dividend20-Mar-261.75528,94424-Mar-251.68327,171

Total dividends paid5.55091,0485.47587,649

Total imputation credits1.36122,3241.18919,057

Total dividends6.911113,3726.664106,706

Dividend payments are determined by the Board having regard to a range of factors, including with particular reference to the Group’s

adjusted funds from operations (AFFO), which is the primary measure used by the Group to assess underlying and recurring cash flows

available for distribution. AFFO is a non-GAAP performance measure and is calculated with reference to the guidelines established

by the Property Council of Australia.

In determining the amount of a dividend, the Board also has regard to, amongst other things, the solvency requirements under the

Companies Act 1993, the Group’s banking and green bond covenants, internal financing targets, future investment plans, current and

forecast earnings, operating cash flows, and the prevailing economic and competitive environment. Having regard to these matters,

the Group targets a dividend payout ratio of approximately 90% to 100% of AFFO.

The Group operates a Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRP), under which eligible shareholders may elect to reinvest cash dividends in

additional ordinary shares. The Board may, at its discretion, suspend the DRP at any time and may determine whether shares issued

under the DRP are issued at a discount. The DRP applied to the 2025 Q4 final dividend and the 2026 Q1 interim dividend. During the

year, $21.1 million of dividends were reinvested under the DRP (2025: $28.8 million).

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report73
4.8.3

 Earnings per share

20262025

Profit and total comprehensive profit after income tax attributable to shareholders ($000)50,44856,992

Weighted average number of shares for the purpose of basic profit/(loss) per share (000)1,640,7961,594,613

Weighted average number of shares for the purpose of diluted profit/(loss) per share (000)1,646,3431,600,132

Basic profit/(loss) per share (cents)3.073.57

Diluted profit/(loss) per share (cents)3.063.56

4.8.4

 Share-based payments

Long-term incentive (LTI) plans

Performance Share Rights LTI Plan

Participants of the LTI plan are issued Performance Share Rights (PSRs) for service periods of three years. The number of PSRs that can

be exercised and converted into shares in the Company depends on a mix of the Company's shareholder return relative to comparator

entities and a return on contributed equity metric over a three year performance period. On vesting, the participant is entitled to

receive one share upon the valid exercise of each vested PSR they hold.

Recognition and measurement

The fair value of the LTI plans at grant date is recognised over the vesting period of the plan as an employee entitlements

expense, with a corresponding increase in the share-based payments reserve. The fair value is independently measured using

an appropriate option pricing model.

Number of performance share rights

Start of

performance period

Measurement

date

Performance

share right

price at grant

date

Balance at

the

beginning of

the year

Granted

during the

year

Exercised

during the

year

Forfeited

during the

year

Balance at the

end of the

year

2026

1 April 202531 March 2028$0.877-1,718,165-(294,575)1,423,590

1 April 202431 March 2027$0.8351,948,878--(360,036)1,588,842

1 April 202331 March 2026$0.8741,960,234--(261,765)1,698,469

1 April 202231 March 2025$1.0711,575,106-(1,270,247)(304,859)-

Total5,484,2181,718,165(1,270,247)(1,221,235)4,710,901

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report74
4.8.4

 Share-based payments (continued)

Number of performance share rights

Start of

performance period

Measurement

date

Performance

share right

price at grant

date

Balance at

the

beginning of

the year

Granted

during the

year

Exercised

during the

year

Forfeited

during the

year

Balance at

the end of the

year

2025

1 April 202431 March 2027$0.835-2,219,208-(270,330)1,948,878

1 April 202331 March 2026$0.8742,373,248--(413,014)1,960,234

1 April 202231 March 2025$1.0711,872,591--(297,485)1,575,106

Previous plansVariousVarious1,170,480-(1,043,072)(127,408)-

Total5,416,3192,219,208(1,043,072)(1,108,237)5,484,218

The fair value of the LTI plans have been determined using a Monte Carlo simulation to model a range of future share price outcomes

for the Company and comparator entities. The fair value at grant date and the measurement inputs used were as follows:

Performance Share Rights LTI Plan

Measurement date31 March 202831 March 202731 March 2026

Weighted average performance share right price at grant date$0.877$0.835$0.874

Risk-free rate3.50%4.50%4.49%

Standard deviation of the comparator entities14.7% - 30.9%14.1% - 21.2%15.5% - 22.7%

Correlation between Company share price and comparator entities12.1% - 49.7%14.7% - 54.4%30.5% - 57.5%

Estimated fair value per share$0.560$0.558$0.612

The volatility and correlation measures were derived from measuring the standard deviation and correlation of returns for listed

entities in the S&P/NZX All Real Estate Index over a three-year period. The risk free rate was based on government bond yields over

the same period.

It has been assumed that participants will remain employed with the Company on the vesting date. Dividend assumptions are based

on projected dividend payments over the vesting period.

The employee entitlements expense relating to the LTI plan for the year ended 31 March 2026 is $1.0 million (2025: $1.3 million) with

a corresponding movement in the share-based payments reserve. The unamortised fair value of the remaining performance share

rights at 31 March 2026 is $0.7 million (2025: $1.0 million).

5. Financial risk management
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report75

In the normal course of business, the Group is exposed to financial risks associated with its financial instruments. These risks include

interest rate risk, credit risk and liquidity risk.

The Group’s financial instruments include cash and cash equivalents, trade and other receivables, trade and other payables,

interest-bearing liabilities and interest rate derivatives.

The Board has overall responsibility for establishing and overseeing the Group’s risk management framework. The Audit, Risk and

Sustainability Committee assists the Board in monitoring risk management, compliance and financial controls.

The Group’s risk management framework is designed to identify, assess and manage financial risks in a manner that supports the

Group’s operations and funding requirements.

5.1 Interest rate risk

Nature of the risk

Interest rate risk is the risk that changes in market interest rates will impact the Group’s financial performance or the fair value

of its financial instruments. The Group’s exposure arises primarily from floating rate bank interest-bearing liabilities and interest

rate derivatives.

Risk management

The Group manages interest rate risk by maintaining an appropriate mix of fixed and floating rate debt and by using interest

rate derivatives, primarily interest rate swaps, to provide greater certainty over future interest costs. Other approved derivative

instruments may be used in accordance with Treasury Policy.

Interest rate risk is managed within Board-approved hedging bands, which specify minimum and maximum levels of fixed rate cover

over a rolling horizon. The Group remained within these limits at balance date.

The Group also seeks to maintain a spread of debt maturities in order to reduce refinancing risk.

Exposure

Details of the Group’s interest-bearing liabilities and interest rate derivatives are provided in note 4.6.

Exposure to interest rate derivative counterparties is managed in accordance with Treasury Policy, including limits on concentration

with any single counterparty and minimum diversification requirements.

The Group actively manages refinancing risk, with Treasury Policy requiring refinancing arrangements to be in place at least six months

prior to facility maturity.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report76
5.1 Interest rate risk (continued)

Sensitivity to interest rate movements

The sensitivity analysis below shows the impact on profit or loss and equity of reasonably possible changes in interest rates at balance

date, with all other variables held constant.

An increase in interest rates would generally result in higher interest costs but may also increase the fair value of interest

rate derivatives. Conversely, a decrease in interest rates would generally reduce interest costs but may decrease the fair value

of derivatives.

20262025

1

25 bps increase

($000)

25 bps decrease

($000)

25 bps increase

($000)

25 bps decrease

($000)

Impact on interest and finance charges(790)790(395)395

Impact on fair value of interest rate derivatives3,341(3,379)4,033(4,083)

Net impact on profit/(loss)2,551(2,589)3,638(3,688)

Net impact on equity1,837(1,864)2,619(2,655)

1The interest rate sensitivity has been recalculated to present a reasonably possible range as at 31 March 2025.

5.2 Credit risk

Nature of the risk

Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty will fail to meet its contractual obligations, resulting in financial loss to the Group. The Group’s

primary exposure to credit risk arises from trade receivables and cash and interest rate derivative counterparties.

Risk management

The Group manages tenant credit risk through established leasing and credit assessment processes, ongoing monitoring of receivable

balances and tenant-specific risk factors. Where appropriate, security arrangements are obtained.

Credit risk associated with cash deposits and interest rate derivatives is managed by transacting with financial institutions of

acceptable credit quality and by diversifying exposures across counterparties.

Exposure

The carrying amounts of financial assets recognised in the consolidated statement of financial position represent the Group’s

maximum exposure to credit risk. These amounts are presented net of any allowance for expected credit losses.

The Group is not exposed to significant concentrations of credit risk.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report77
5.3 Liquidity risk

Nature of the risk

Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will be unable to meet its financial obligations as they fall due.

Risk management

The Group manages liquidity risk by maintaining sufficient committed borrowing facilities, monitoring forecast cash flows and

ensuring access to funding sources.

The Group seeks to maintain committed funding facilities sufficient to cover its forecast debt requirements and approved

capital commitments.

Exposure

The Group’s Treasury Policy requires committed funding facilities to cover at least 100% of projected debt, including approved capital

commitments. This requirement was met at balance date.

At 31 March 2026, the Group had committed bank facilities of $1,100 million, of which $284 million remained undrawn.

The table below analyses the Group’s financial liabilities by contractual maturity, based on undiscounted cash flows.

The Group monitors its liquidity position on an ongoing basis to ensure that sufficient funding is available to meet its obligations as

they fall due.

Contractual cash flows (principal and interest)

Consolidated Statement

of Financial Position

$000

Total

$000

0-6

months

$000

6-12 months

$000

1-2 years

$000

2-5 years

$000

>5 years

$000

2026

Trade and other payables recognised

as financial liabilities

32,14932,14932,149----

Interest bearing liabilities1,216,7361,559,3409,7119,711327,4511,212,467-

Net interest rate derivatives2,1872,7503,3181,936543(2,513)(534)

Total financial liabilities1,251,0721,594,23945,17811,647327,9941,209,954(534)

Contractual cash flows (principal and interest)

Consolidated Statement

of Financial Position

$000

Total

$000

0-6

months

$000

6-12 months

$000

1-2 years

$000

2-5 years

$000

>5 years

$000

2025

Trade and other payables recognised

as financial liabilities

36,86136,86136,861----

Interest bearing liabilities1,284,6371,478,48632,306130,760275,082913,854126,484

Net interest rate derivatives6,1917,0271,0171,6923,0962,014(792)

Total financial liabilities1,327,6891,522,37470,184132,452278,178915,868125,692

6. Other disclosures
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report78

6.1 Related party transactions

The Group holds its 50% interests in The Base and Centre Place North through unincorporated joint ventures. The principal activity

of the joint ventures is to own and manage the joint venture properties. Kiwi Property manages the joint venture properties on behalf

of the joint ventures and receives management fees in accordance with the Property Management Agreements.

The transactions with the joint ventures and the balances outstanding at 31 March 2026 are outlined in the tables below.

These transactions are conducted on normal commercial terms and are not considered individually material to the Group’s

financial performance.

During the year, the following income or expense reimbursements were received or receivable from the joint ventures:

2026

$000

2025

$000

Property management revenue2,3962,288

Expenditure reimbursement3,1103,173

Leasing fees1,105540

Development management fees242114

Legal fees172110

Retail design management fees3033

Total related party transactions7,0556,258

The following balances were receivable from/(payable to) the joint ventures at balance date:

2026

$000

2025

$000

The Base625(19)

Centre Place North3597

Total related party balances984(12)

The following distributions were received from the joint ventures during the year:

2026

$000

2025

$000

The Base15,41714,492

Centre Place North1,6252,666

Total related party distributions17,04217,158

The following contributions were made to the joint venture during the year:

2026

$000

2025

$000

The Base-2,949

Total related party contributions-2,949

At 31 March 2026, a contingent consideration liability of $3.4 million (present value: $2.7 million) has been recognised relating to the

Group's investment in MPL (2025: nil). No amounts have been settled during the year. Refer to note 4.4 for more information.

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report79
6.2 Key management personnel

2026

$000

2025

$000

Directors' fees771774

Short-term employee benefits3,9173,514

Other long-term benefits5(7)

Share-based payments822984

Key management personnel costs5,5155,265

Additional disclosures relating to key management personnel are set out in the remuneration report. Further details regarding

share-based payments can be found in note 4.8.4.

6.3

 Commitments

The following costs have been committed to but not recognised in the consolidated

financial statements as they will be incurred in

future reporting periods.

2026

$000

2025

$000

Capital expenditure at Sylvia Park16,2469,266

Capital expenditure at Vero Centre12,929-

Capital expenditure at ASB North Wharf18,988-

Capital expenditure at Drury development26,0481,530

Capital commitments74,21110,796

The capital expenditure commitments at ASB North Wharf will transfer to the purchaser upon the property being settled.

Ground leases

Ground leases exist over ASB North Wharf, The Base, Centre Place North and certain adjoining properties. In addition, ground leases

also exist over parts of the land at Sylvia Park. The amount paid in respect of ground leases during the year was $0.1 million (2025:

$0.1 million). The leases terminate between June 2031 and May 2136.

The ground leases are accounted for in line with NZ IFRS 16 Leases as outlined in note 4.2.

6.4

 Subsequent events

On 30 April 2026, the sale of ASB North Wharf for $205.0 million became unconditional. The sale includes the transfer of capital

expenditure commitments disclosed in note 6.3, and settlement is expected to occur on 29 May 2026.

On 18 May 2026, the Board declared a final dividend for the quarter ended 31 March 2026 of 1.400 cents per share (cps) (equivalent

to $23.0m), together with imputation credits of 0.277 cps. The dividend record date is 11 June 2026 and payment will occur on

19 June 2026.

Independent auditor's report
TO THE SHAREHOLDERS OF KIWI PROPERTY GROUP LIMITED

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report80

OpinionWe have audited the consolidated financial statements of Kiwi Property Group Limited and its

controlled entities (the ‘Group’), which comprise the consolidated statement of financial position as

at 31 March 2026, and the consolidated statement of comprehensive income, statement of changes

in equity and statement of cash flows for the year then ended, and notes to the consolidated financial

statements, including material accounting policy information. In our opinion, the accompanying

consolidated financial statements, on pages 36 to 79, present fairly, in all material respects, the

consolidated financial position of the Group as at 31 March 2026, and its consolidated financial

performance and cash flows for the year then ended in accordance with New Zealand Equivalents to

IFRS Accounting Standards (‘NZ IFRS’) as issued by the External Reporting Board and IFRS Accounting

Standards (‘IFRS’) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board.

 

Basis for opinionWe conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (‘ISAs’) and

International Standards on Auditing (New Zealand) (‘ISAs (NZ)’). Our responsibilities under those

standards are further described in the Auditor’s Responsibilities for the Audit of the Consolidated

Financial Statements section of our report. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is

sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

We are independent of the Group in accordance with Professional and Ethical Standard 1 International

Code of Ethics for Assurance Practitioners (including International Independence Standards) (New

Zealand) (‘PES 1’) issued by the New Zealand Auditing and Assurance Standards Board and the

International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants’ International Code of Ethics for Professional

Accountants (including International Independence Standards) (‘IESBA Code’) as applicable to

audits of financial statements of public interest entities. We have also fulfilled our other ethical

responsibilities in accordance with PES 1 and the IESBA Code.

Our firm carries out other assignments for the Group in relation to other assurance-related

services (such as review of the consolidated interim financial statements, audits of joint venture

financial statements, audits of special purpose financial information in accordance with tenancy

agreements, agreed upon procedures in respect of a specified remuneration metric and limited

assurance over selected greenhouse gas information included in the climate related disclosures)

and non-assurance-related services (such as the finance business partner training programme and

assurance readiness over scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions). These services have not impaired

our independence as auditor of the Company and Group. The firm has no other relationship with, or

interest in, the Company or any of its subsidiaries.

 

Audit materialityWe consider materiality primarily in terms of the magnitude of misstatement in the financial

statements of the Group that in our judgement would make it probable that the economic decisions

of a reasonably knowledgeable person would be changed or influenced (the ‘quantitative’ materiality).

In addition, we also assess whether other matters that come to our attention during the audit would

in our judgement change or influence the decisions of such a person (the ‘qualitative’ materiality). We

use materiality both in planning the scope of our audit work and in evaluating the results of our work.

We determined materiality for the Group financial statements as a whole to be $6.25 million.

Key audit mattersKey audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance

in our audit of the consolidated financial statements of the current period. These matters were

addressed in the context of our audit of the consolidated financial statements as a whole and in

forming our opinion thereon and we do not provide a separate opinion on these matters.

 

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report81
Key audit matterHow our audit addressed the key audit matter

Valuation of Investment Properties

As disclosed in note 4.2 of the consolidated financial

statements, as at 31 March 2026 the Group holds $3.1 billion

of investment properties, including investment properties

classified as held for sale, across the retail-led mixed-use,

office, development land and other sectors. These assets

are held at fair value. Further, as disclosed in note 4.3 of

the consolidated financial statements, as at 31 March 2026

the Group holds $98.5 million of inventories relating to

development land. The Group obtains a valuation for this

development land to estimate the net realisable value of

the inventories.

The investment property and development land valuations

require estimates and key assumptions to be made. Further

the inputs used to determine these fair values are not based

on observable market data. Small percentage changes in any

of the key inputs or assumptions used in the valuations could

result in a material change in the overall valuation of the

investment properties and development land.

All investment properties and development land were valued

as at 31 March 2026 by independent registered valuers, and

the Group has adopted the assessed values as determined

by the valuers.

Investment Properties are valued using recognised

valuation methodologies, including the income capitalisation

approach and the discounted cashflow approach, or a

combination of both. The calculation includes assumptions

in respect of capitalisation rates, discount rates, market

rental growth rates, market rents, vacancy rates, incentives

and capital expenditure requirements, including allowances

for seismic strengthening works. Development land is

valued using either a direct sales comparison or residual

value approach.

The valuation of investment properties and development

land (recognised as inventory) is a key audit matter due to

the significance of revaluation gains/losses or impairments,

and the related carrying amounts in the financial statements.

Additionally, significant judgement is required in determining

the fair values.

Our audit procedures focused on the appropriateness of the

valuation methodologies and key inputs applied in the models.

We assessed the valuers’ experience and professional

accreditations. This included having each of the valuers confirm

their independence, qualifications and that the scope of work

undertaken was in line with professional valuation standards

and

financial reporting standards. In addition, we considered

the Group’s process for reviewing and challenging the valuation

reports to ensure that they accurately reflect the individual

characteristics of each property.

We have read the valuation reports for all properties and

development land that are subject to valuation at year end.

We checked for any limitations of scope in the valuation

reports that would impact the reliability of the valuations. For

all properties, we agreed the carrying amount to the external

valuation reports. Where considered appropriate, discussions

were held with the valuers to confirm the valuation approach

used. These discussions related to the general market, as well as

specific properties identified by us.

The major inputs to the investment property valuation process

were tested across a sample of properties. For the sample

selected, key changes in rental assumptions, market rental

growth rates, occupancy, discount rates, capitalisation rates

and terms were agreed to underlying lease agreements and

to market comparatives where relevant. Capitalisation rates,

discount rates and yields were compared to property industry

publications and other observable market data where available.

For development land valuations we tested the key inputs

by agreeing information to underlying records on a sample

basis and compared assumptions against market data where

available. Where relevant, we obtained and tested support for

management’s estimate of costs on properties with

significant

development or seismic works.

Our internal valuation specialists were used in assessing the

appropriateness of the valuation methodology for a sample

of properties.

For assets held for sale that are under contractual offers,

we agreed the carrying amount to the signed sale and

purchase agreement.

 

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report82
Other informationThe directors are responsible on behalf of the Group for the other information. The

other information comprises the information in the Annual Report that accompanies the

consolidated financial statements and the audit report, the Sustainability Report and Climate-

related Disclosures.

Our opinion on the consolidated financial statements does not cover the other information and we

do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and consider whether it is materially inconsistent

with the consolidated financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise

appears to be materially misstated. If so, we are required to report that fact. We have nothing to

report in this regard.

 

Directors’ responsibilities

for the consolidated

financial statements

The directors are responsible on behalf of the Group for the preparation and fair presentation of

the consolidated financial statements in accordance with NZ IFRS and IFRS, and for such internal

control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of consolidated financial

statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the consolidated financial statements, the directors are responsible on behalf of the

Group for assessing the Group’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable,

matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the

directors either intend to liquidate the Group or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative

but to do so.

 

Auditor’s responsibilities for

the audit of the consolidated

financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial

statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and

to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of

assurance but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs and ISAs (NZ)

will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or

error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be

expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these consolidated

financial statements.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the consolidated financial statements

is located on the External Reporting Board’s website at:

https://www.xrb.govt.nz/standards/assurance-standards/auditors-

responsibilities/audit-report-1-1/

This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

 

Restriction on useThis report is made solely to the Company’s shareholders, as a body. Our audit has been

undertaken so that we might state to the Company’s shareholders those matters we are required

to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by

law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company’s shareholders

as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed. 

Andrew Boivin, Partner

for Deloitte Limited

Auckland, New Zealand

18 May 2026

Other
information

Contents

Corporate governance84

Remuneration report86

Other investor information97

Directory104

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report83

Corporate governance
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report84

We are committed to the highest standards of

corporate governance.

The Board has approved policies and practices that aim to reflect

best practice corporate governance. Our corporate governance

framework draws on guidelines, principles, recommendations,

and requirements from a variety of sources including the

NZX Listing Rules and NZX Corporate Governance Code (the

NZX Code).

The overarching purpose of the NZX Code is to promote

good corporate governance. The NZX Code contains corporate

governance principles. For each principle, the NZX Code sets out

good practice recommendations.

NZX Code compliance

Kiwi Property has followed the recommendations set out

in the NZX Code for the year ended 31 March 2026, except

to the extent set out in the Kiwi Property FY26 Corporate

Governance Statement, which is available on our website

kp.co.nz/about-us/corporate-governance.

This statement is current as at 31 March 2026 and has been

approved by the Board.

The corporate governance policies, practices and

processes that Kiwi Property adopted or followed

for the year ended 31 March 2026 are summarised,

or referred to, in the Kiwi Property FY26 Corporate

Governance Statement.

The following disclosures are required to be made in this

Annual Report by the NZX Listing Rules, the Companies Act

1993 and other legislation, rules or disclosure regimes.

Director independence

Director independence is determined in accordance with

the requirements of the NZX Listing Rules. The Board has

determined that, as at

31 March 2026, taking into consideration

all relevant factors including the director’s interests, position

and relationships and the non-exhaustive factors in Table 2.4

of the NZX Corporate Governance Code, that all directors

of the Company were independent: Simon Shakesheff,

Michele Embling, Chris Aiken, Peter Alexander, Carlie Eve, and

Kevin Kenrick.

Board committees

The Board has established two standing committees, being

the Audit, Risk and Sustainability Committee and the People

and Culture Committee (formerly called the Remuneration and

Nominations Committee). In addition, during FY26 the Board

established an Investment Committee as an ad hoc committee

of the Board to assist the Board with the proper and efficient

discharge of its responsibilities to exercise due care, diligence

and skill in relation to the oversight of material capital allocation

decisions, among other things.

The

members of the Audit, Risk and Sustainability Committee are

Michele Embling (Chair), Carlie Eve and Simon Shakesheff.

The members of the People and Culture Committee are Kevin

Kenrick (Chair), Chris Aiken and Peter Alexander.

The members of the ad hoc Investment Committee are Peter

Alexander (Chair), Chris Aiken and Carlie Eve.

More information on the responsibilities and operations of the

committees can be found in the Company’s FY26 Corporate

Governance Statement, which is available on our website

kp.co.nz/about-us/corporate-governance.

Inclusion, diversity and equity

The Board has evaluated the performance of the Company

against its Inclusion, Diversity and Equity Policy and considers

that the Company has complied with the policy.

More information concerning the Company’s Inclusion, Diversity

and Equity Policy and the Company’s performance against its

measurable objectives can be found in the Company’s FY26

Corporate Governance Statement, which is available on our

website kp.co.nz/about-us/corporate-governance.

Gender diversity

The following table provides a breakdown of the gender

composition of the directors and officers of the Company,

together with all employees as at the current and prior

balance dates:

2026

FemaleMale

Gender

diverse

Directors2 (33%)4 (67%)-

Officers

1

3 (50%)3 (50%)-

All employees

2

99 (67%)48 (33%)-

2025

3

FemaleMale

Gender

diverse

Directors2 (33%)4 (67%)-

Officers

1

2 (40%)3 (60%)-

All employees

2

104 (67%)51 (33%)-

1Officers comprise the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer and all General

Managers of the Company.

2Employees include permanent (full time and part time) and fixed term employees

and excludes casual employees.

3The FY25 “All employees” gender figures have been restated to exclude Directors

which were included in the figures reported for “All employees” in FY25, to align with

standard reporting practices. This has resulted in the total employee population

documented for FY25 being reduced by 2 females and 4 males.

Corporate governance (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report85

Board Skill Matrix and Experience

Each year we review the Board’s skills and capabilities, to ensure that the Board continues to have an appropriate level of skills to

support the Company in achieving its objectives and managing the business. The Board demonstrates strong skills in the areas of

property, financial, commercial and capital markets, as well as people, culture and sustainability, all areas that are important for the

operation of the Company.

CapabilityKey elementSimon

Shakesheff

Carlie

Eve

Chris

Aiken

Kevin

Kenrick

Michele

Embling

Peter

Alexander

IndustryProperty investment

Property development

Broad investment and funds management

Financial expertise – prior CFO and/or CA, ability to

Chair audit committees

GovernanceListed governance experience

Scale commercial governance experience –

regulatory and / or private

ESG (including climate), sustainability, social license

to operate

CommercialSenior leadership (preferably as sector-

aligned CEO)

Experience leading commercial and

cultural innovation

M&A, growth transformation,

entrepreneurial leadership

Capital markets experience

Customer

connection

Experience implementing retail market strategies

Branding and marketing

StakeholderStakeholder and shareholder focus and networks

TechnologyOversight of technology infrastructure

and cybersecurity

‘Front end’ technology and digital engagement

People and

culture

Executive succession planning and remuneration

People and talent management; inclusion, diversity

and equity

Key:

This individual is an expert in these areas on the basis of extensive practical experience / senior oversight relevant to

Kiwi Property

Good general awareness and understanding of these areas as relevant to Kiwi Property

Remuneration report
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report86

Message from the People and Culture Committee Chair

Dear Shareholders,

I am pleased to present this Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 March 2026 (FY26) on behalf of the Board’s People

and Culture Committee (formerly the Remuneration and Nominations Committee). Our approach to remuneration underpins our

success, ensuring that we can attract, motivate and retain diverse talent at all levels of the company and ensures alignment between

performance, remuneration and the interests of shareholders.

During the past year, the People and Culture Committee have worked with management to simplify and strengthen goal setting,

improve external market remuneration benchmarks, and update our short-term incentive scheme. We will be implementing a new

short-term incentive scheme for FY27 with a greater risk-reward profile for our most senior people, while focusing on rewarding

collective effort through company performance for our wider population. This new scheme is described in more detail within the

Remuneration Report.

The CEO’s remuneration outcomes for FY26 reflect Kiwi Property’s performance against its strategic, financial and operational

performance goals. His incentive outcomes for FY26 reflect solid business performance during a period of challenging market and

economic conditions. Performance highlights for FY26 include strong AFFO growth, divestment of non-core assets, and delivery of

the IKEA pedestrian link to boost Sylvia Park customer flow and retail sales.

This year’s Remuneration Report provides a more detailed overview of the performance factors that influence the CEO’s remuneration

outcomes – specifically the measures, targets and results considered by the Board when determining the CEO’s short-term incentive

payment and the vesting of eligible long-term incentives.

I trust the improved transparency in this year’s Report assists the understanding of our approach to remuneration.

1,2

Kevin Kenrick,

Chair of the People and Culture Committee

1

The information provided in the Remuneration Report is for information purposes only and should not be relied on as (and is not) an indication (including guidance of any

kind whatsoever) or guarantee of the future performance of Kiwi Property. Except as required by law, Kiwi Property undertakes no obligation to provide additional or updated

information or revise or reaffirm the information in the Remuneration Report whether as a result of new information, future events, results or otherwise.

2This Remuneration Report has been prepared with the intent to provide transparency over Kiwi Property’s remuneration policy and practices, actual CEO remuneration, and

performance criteria and outcomes under the Company’s incentive schemes. Except as otherwise stated, the information contained in this Report relates to the financial year

ended 31 March 2026.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report87

Our remuneration approach

Our remuneration strategy is designed so that the way we pay and reward our people enables the attraction, motivation, performance

and retention of people with the capability, experience, and drive needed to deliver results that grow our business and create value

for our stakeholders.

Our remuneration principles


We recognise performance through pay.


We align performance expectations to our strategy, goals and values.


We make pay decisions that are fair, consistent, and free from bias, including across gender and other diversity.


We aim to be competitive in the markets we hire from.


We make pay decisions that the business can sustain, balancing affordability with long-term performance and shareholder value.

Our remuneration structure

Fixed remunerationShort-term incentive (STI)Long-term incentive (LTI)


Consists of base salary and employer

contributions to KiwiSaver.


Reflects the scope of the role

and individual’s skills, experience

and performance.


Benchmarked against the median of

the market or the upper quartile for

business critical roles when needed to

attract and retain key talent.


Annual, cash-based discretionary, at-

risk incentive for eligible employees.


The Company’s financial performance

determines the funding available

for payments.


Individual performance against agreed

goals and our values determines

individual component outcomes.


Discretionary, equity-based incentive

for executives and select senior

employees by invitation.


Operates over a 3-year time

horizon subject to financial and

shareholder measures.


Rewards the delivery of sustained

results over the long-term.

Remuneration packages and time horizons

Our executive remuneration packages are structured to ensure a significant proportion of remuneration is at-risk based on

performance and aligns executive earning potential to the delivery of strategic and financial performance that creates value for

shareholders. The following table sets out the remuneration package construct for the CEO and members of the Executive Team

(executives) excluding KiwiSaver contributions.

Base salaryShort-term incentive (target)Long-term incentive (target)

% of Total% of Total% of Total

CEO402733

Executives582517

The target and maximum remuneration (excluding KiwiSaver) for the Chief Executive Officer and executives (average) for FY26 are set

out below.

Chief Executive Officer (000s)

Total $1,747

Total $1,841

$0$500$1,000$1,500$2,000

Maximum remuneration

Target remuneration

Base salary

STILT I

$700 (40%)

$469 (27%)$578 (33%)

$700 (38%)

$563 (31%)

$578 (31%)

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report88

Executives average (000s)

Total $658

Total $691

$0$200$400$600$800

Maximum remuneration

Target remuneration

Base salary

STILT I

$381 (58%)

$163 (25%)

$114 (17%)

$381 (55%)

$196 (28%)$114 (17%)

$700 (40%)

Remuneration outcomes for the CEO and executives are delivered over a time horizon of up to three years balancing focus on both

annual strategic and financial performance and long-term value creation.

LTI VestsLT I

STI PaidSTI

Base Salary

Year 1Year 2Year 3

Performance assessed

over FY

Performance assessed over 3-year period

Short term incentive (STI)

Our STI Scheme provides eligible employees with the opportunity to be rewarded for their performance and contribution to our annual

strategic, financial and operational performance. The STI Scheme is funded based on the Company’s financial performance, measured

by Operating Earnings before Interest and Tax

1

(Operating EBIT), with a minimum level of performance required to be met for any

payments to be made.

The target for the Operating EBIT measure is set each year based on the Board approved strategic and financial plan. The level of

Operating EBIT achieved relative to the target determines the level of funding available for payments under the Scheme, decreasing

or increasing in line with actual performance such that the Scheme is fully funded by financial performance.

Incentive targets for employees are set with the potential for participants to earn more for above target performance. Individual

outcomes under the Scheme are determined with reference to each participant’s performance against specific individual goals and

their demonstration of our Values. For the CEO and executives, these goals are aligned to our strategic priorities, financial plan, and

key operational performance measures.

Long term incentive (LTI) scheme

Our LTI Scheme provides executives and select senior employees, at the invitation of the Board, with the opportunity to receive shares

in the Company if long-term performance goals are met. The LTI is delivered in the form of Performance Share Rights (PSR), with the

intent of aligning the remuneration of executives and senior employees with the interests of and value delivered to shareholders over

the longer term.

Grants made under the LTI Scheme are subject to a three-year performance and vesting period, at the end of which eligible PSRs will

vest and become exercisable by participants, subject to the satisfaction of the performance measures set for the grant. Grants are

typically made annually to eligible employees at the approval of the Board, and participants are required to remain employed by the

Company through the performance and vesting period of the grant.

1

Operating EBIT is an internal non-GAAP measure used by the Group to assess its operating performance. It is calculated using total revenue less operating expenses before

group elimination of intercompany revenue and expenses, and excludes income tax expense and net finance costs.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report89

In FY26 the basis for calculating target incentives changed from fixed annual remuneration to base salary. The target incentive for the

CEO is set at 82.5% of base salary, for executives at 30%, and for other participating senior employees at 20%.

The grants made under the PSR Scheme in FY26 and which will be eligible for vesting at the end of FY28 were subject to the following

performance measures:

MeasureWeightingDescription

Return on

contributed

equity (ROCE)

40%


The Company’s ROCE over the performance period must be within a target range set by the

Board as part of the budget approval process.


ROCE is calculated as Adjusted Funds from Operations divided by average contributed equity

over the performance period.


If the ROCE outcome meets a minimum of 95% of the target, 50% of this component is eligible

to vest, increasing on a straight-line basis to 100% if the ROCE outcome meets or exceeds

100% of the target.


The prior year’s opportunity for this component to vest above 100% if the ROCE target was

exceeded, was removed in FY26. However, should the ROCE target be exceeded but both TSR

measures fail to meet the minimum threshold, the Board has discretion to allow  additional

share rights to vest up to and not exceeding an amount equivalent to 40% of the share rights

relating to the ROCE component.

Relative total

shareholder

return (rTSR)

30%


The Company’s total shareholder return (TSR) must achieve the 50th percentile of the TSRs

of a peer group of the entities that make up the S&P/NZX All Real Estate Index (excluding Kiwi

Property and CDL Investments New Zealand Limited).


If Kiwi Property’s TSR over the performance period is at the 50th percentile of the peer group,

50% of this component will be eligible to vest, increasing on a straight-line basis to 100% if Kiwi

Property’s TSR is at or exceeds the 75th percentile of the peer group.

Absolute total

shareholder

return (aTSR)

30%


The Company’s TSR must exceed the Company’s cost of equity (COE) over the

performance period.


COE is calculated and compounded annually.


If the Company’s TSR meets or exceeds the Company’s COE, 100% of this component is

eligible to vest.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report90

Changes for FY27

New short-term incentive (STI) scheme

During FY26, the Company undertook a review of the STI Scheme with the intent of ensuring it was fit for purpose, delivering

appropriate rewards relative to Kiwi Property’s performance, and aligned to the metrics that matter most to our shareholders.  The

review considered current STI scheme practice in New Zealand and Australia with a specific focus on property industry companies.

The new STI Scheme introduces the following changes:


Changing the financial measure for assessing company performance from Operating EBIT to Adjusted Funds From Operations

(AFFO). This strengthens the linkage between Kiwi Property’s STI Scheme and the creation of shareholder value and is aligned

with industry practice in both New Zealand and Australia, where AFFO/FFO measures are widely used as the financial measure in

STI schemes.


AFFO performance acts as a gate, with the Scheme requiring the Company to achieve a minimum 95% of target before any STI

payments are made, at which point a multiplier of 40% applies to the company component. The Scheme scales to a multiplier of

100% for 100% achievement of the AFFO target and provides a maximum potential multiplier of 120% for achievement at or above

110% of the AFFO target.


For employees in more senior roles with a greater influence over financial and strategic outcomes (approximately 40% of eligible

employees), STI will be equally weighted to both company performance and individual delivery, enabling meaningful differentiation

based on individual performance outcomes. For all other employees, STI outcomes will be based solely on overall company

performance, reinforcing a collective focus on shared success.


The individual component for those in more senior roles will be based on performance against specific individual strategic,

financial, and operational goals. Individual multipliers can range from 0% up to a maximum of 125% for exceeding target

outcomes.  A multiplier of 0% in either component will result in no STI payment. 


The maximum earning opportunity is 150% of STI target for senior employees with both a company and individual component, and

120% for employees with only a company component.

These changes establish a much simpler STI Scheme that rewards our people for their contribution to overall company performance

and motivates our most senior employees with a greater risk/reward performance outcome dynamic.

Rebalancing of remuneration components

Prior to 1 July 2023, the Company’s employment agreements provided for STI to be calculated on fixed remuneration. This meant that

KiwiSaver contributions paid on base salary were included in the calculation of STI targets. Our standard employment terms were

revised from 1 July 2023 to change this from fixed remuneration to base salary for new employees. In introducing the new STI scheme

for FY27, the Company decided to transition the two-thirds of employees on older employment agreements to revised terms and

achieve consistency across our workforce.

From 1 April 2026, all employees who remained on the legacy employment terms were offered a variation to their employment

agreements to change STI to be calculated on base salary rather than fixed remuneration.  As consideration for accepting this

variation, remuneration components were rebalanced so that total remuneration at target remained unchanged. This included

the CEO, resulting in the target value of the CEO’s STI decreasing by an amount equivalent to increases in base salary, KiwiSaver

contributions on base salary, and the target value of LTI.

The CEO’s remuneration components before and after this rebalancing are set out as below for transparency.

Base salaryKiwiSaver

1

Fixed

remuneration

STI targetLTI targetTotal

Before$700,400$24,514$724,914$471,194$577,830$1,773,938

After$706,748$24,736$731,484$459,387$583,067$1,773,938

1The value of KiwiSaver contributions at 3.5% of base salary. KiwiSaver contributions paid on STI are in addition to the remuneration amounts set out above.

The Board had previously exercised its discretion to transition the calculation of LTI targets from fixed remuneration to base salary

effective from 1 April 2025.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report91

Remuneration outcomes

CEO remuneration outcomes

The CEO’s remuneration for the year ended 31 March 2026 comprised base salary, short-term incentive payments relating to

performance in FY26, vesting of LTI grants made in prior reporting periods, and employer contributions to KiwiSaver on the CEO’s base

salary and short-term incentive payment.

The following table outlines the remuneration earned by the CEO in FY26:

RemunerationBase salarySTILTIKiwiSaverTotal

Amount$700,400$328,243

1

$727,856

2

$30,859$1,787,358

1STI for the performance period 1 April 2025 - 31 March 2026, which will be paid subsequent to the date of these financial statements.

2Represents value of rights eligible for vesting on 31 March 2026 (estimate based on the share price at 31 March 2026). The final value will be determined on the actual date the

rights are converted to shares, subsequent to the date of these financial statements.

The total CEO remuneration in the table above is based on remuneration earned during the financial year, some of which is paid

subsequent to 31 March 2026. The CEO’s remuneration as included in the Employee remuneration table on page 93 is based on

remuneration paid or received during the financial year, some of which may have been earned in the prior reporting period.

Short-term incentive outcome

The Company's STI scheme is described on page 88.

The Board follows a structured assessment process, assessing performance against financial, strategic and operational goals set at

the start of the year.

The FY26 Operating EBIT result generated an STI funding pool of 87%, which was then applied to the Board’s assessment of the CEO’s

performance against FY26 goals.

In assessing performance, the Board considered the achievement of results and the relevant environmental headwinds and tailwinds

impacting performance.

A summary of CEO performance relative to FY26 goals is summarised in the table below:

FY26 CEO STI priority goalsThresholdTargetStretchResult

Board

assessment

AFFO Growth (cps)+2.5%+3%+3.5%+5%Exceeded

Boost Investment Capacity via

divestment of non-core assets

< $100m$150m> $200m$324mExceeded

Drury Stage 1 land sales$75m$100m$150m$115mAchieved

Drury Stage 1 projected IRR

1

> 18%> 20%> 22%< 18%Not Achieved

Enhance Sylvia Park

Board assessment against milestone delivery plans for IKEA works,

Southern Enhancement, Asian Supermarket projects

Achieved

1Drury Stage 1 forecast project returns were below the Board-approved threshold return expectation. As Drury is a significant multi-year development, forecasted IRR outcomes

may change over time as development delivery progresses, costs are refined and future land sales are achieved.

The Board assessed the CEO’s overall performance as Achieved with an STI payment outcome of 70% of target.

STI target

Overall Board

assessment

Final STI outcome

as % of target

STI

payment

$468,918Achieved70%$328,243

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report92

Long-term incentive outcome

The LTI granted to the CEO in FY24 reached its vesting date on 31 March 2026.  As outlined in the table below, based on actual

performance results, 100% of the performance share rights vested and were able to be exercised by the CEO.

MeasureWeightingThresholdTargetStretchResult

ROCE40%4.98%5.23%5.48%5.75%

Relative TSR30%50th75th100th

Absolute TSR30%8.16%9.21%

Vesting Outcome100%

Performance Share Rights that have been granted, vested or forfeited by the CEO for the year ended 31 March 2026 are detailed in

the following table:

Grant dateVesting dateGrant value

Number of

rights granted

Number of

rights forfeited

Number of

rights vested

Number due to

vest in FY27

1 April 202231 March 2025$768,028716,844(138,744)(578,100)-

1 April 202331 March 2026$721,745826,172-Not yet applicable(799,842)

1 April 202431 March 2027$690,391826,816-Not yet applicableNot yet applicable

1 April 202531 March 2028$577,830658,807-Not yet applicableNot yet applicable

For the LTI scheme with a vesting date of 31 March 2026, performance against the ROCE, relative TSR and absolute TSR measures

resulted in a vesting outcome of 100%. The Board reduced the vesting outcome by 26,330 shares to correct a miscalculation in the

number of rights with a vesting date of 31 March 2025.  

Restricted Share Rights that have been granted, vested or forfeited by the CEO for the year ended 31 March 2026 are detailed in the

following table:

Grant dateVesting dateGrant value

Number of

rights granted

Number of

rights forfeited

Number of

rights vested

Number due to

vest in FY27

1 April 202231 March 2025$1,1641,086-(1,086)-

1 April 202331 March 2026$1,1641,332-Not yet applicable(1,332)

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report93

Historical remuneration outcomes

The following table shows the remuneration earned by the CEO over the past five years.

Financial yearBase salarySTILTIKiwiSaverOtherTotal

1

FY26$700,400$328,243

2

$727,856

3

$30,859-$1,787,358

FY25$700,400$324,635$502,947$30,751-$1,558,733

FY24$700,400$409,977$356,492$33,311$39,027$1,539,207

FY23$700,400$425,354$368,756$33,773$32,762$1,561,045

FY22$680,000$378,739$395,345$31,762$29,348$1,515,194

1The remuneration presented in this table for prior reporting periods has been restated to include the value of KiwiSaver employer contributions paid on STI to be consistent

with the reporting approach adopted for FY25.

2STI for the performance period 1 April 2025 - 31 March 2026, which will be paid subsequent to the date of these financial statements.

3Represents value of rights eligible for vesting on 31 March 2026 (estimate based on the share price at 31 March 2026). The final value will be determined on the actual date the

rights are converted to shares, subsequent to the date of these financial statements.

CEO remuneration in FY27

The board reviewed the CEO’s on-target remuneration package for FY27 and determined his current remuneration was appropriate

relative to market benchmarks with no further changes proposed for FY27 as set out below.

Base salarySTI TargetLTI TargetTotal On-Target RemunerationKiwiSaver

1

Total Remuneration

FY27$706,748$459,386$583,067$1,749,201$40,815$1,790,016

1Represents the value of KiwiSaver employer contributions at 3.5% of base salary and the short-term incentive at target value.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report94

Employee remuneration

During FY26, 98 employees, including 12 former employees, received remuneration totalling $100,000 or more

1

.

Amount of remuneration (from $ to $)Number of employees

100,000 - 109,9998

110,000 - 119,9994

120,000 - 129,9995

130,000 - 139,9998

140,000 - 149,99910

150,000 - 159,9994

160,000 - 169,99911

170,000 - 179,9992

180,000 - 189,9993

190,000 - 199,9992

200,000 - 209,9994

210,000 - 219,9993

220,000 - 229,9993

230,000 - 239,9992

240,000 - 249,9993

250,000 - 259,9993

260,000 - 269,9993

270,000 - 279,9992

280,000 - 289,9992

290,000 - 299,9991

300,000 - 309,9992

310,000 - 319,9991

320,000 - 329,9992

330,000 - 339,9991

380,000 - 389,9991

400,000 - 409,9991

440,000 - 449,9991

450,000 - 459,9991

510,000 - 519,9991

720,000 - 729,9991

730,000 - 739,9991

770,000 - 779,9991

1,560,000 - 1,569,9991

Total employees earning $100,000+98

1Includes salary payments, allowances and employer contributions to KiwiSaver, and the value of short-term incentives paid and long-term incentives vested during the

financial year.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report95

Long-term incentives - executives and other employees

Performance Share Rights that have been granted, vested or forfeited by participants (being the executives and other invited

employees, but excluding the CEO) are detailed in the following table:

Grant dateVesting date

Total

participants

Grant

value

Number of

rights

granted

Number of

rights

forfeited

Number of

rights vested

Number due to

vest in FY27

1 April 202231 March 202513$1,458,4111,361,213(669,066)(692,147)-

1 April 202331 March 202614$1,351,5331,547,076(674,779)Not yet applicable(848,416)

1 April 202431 March 202713$1,162,6471,392,392(630,366)Not yet applicableNot yet applicable

1 April 202531 March 202812$931,3371,059,358(294,577)Not yet applicableNot yet applicable

For the LTI scheme with a vesting date of 31 March 2026, performance against the ROCE, relative TSR and absolute TSR measures

resulted in a vesting outcome of 100%. The Board reduced the vesting outcome by 23,881 shares to correct a miscalculation in the

number of rights with a vesting date of 31 March 2025.

Note 4.8.4 of the consolidated financial statements provides further details of the number of shares granted, forfeited and vested.

Performance and development

All our permanent employees participate in regular performance and development conversations including a formal end-of-year

performance review. The outcomes of the end-of-year review inform decisions regarding remuneration increases in accordance with

the Company’s policy.

Annual remuneration review

The Board is responsible for the overall remuneration strategy and for reviewing and setting the remuneration of the CEO. The People

and Culture Committee is responsible for reviewing and setting the remuneration of the direct reports of the CEO and advising the

Board on the remuneration of the CEO. The Board sets the total pool available for remuneration of our employees at the time the annual

budget is approved.

We benchmark remuneration using market data from external remuneration consultancies, including EY and PwC, to underpin our

remuneration decision making and ensure our remuneration is competitive.

Equal pay

We aim to ensure equal pay through our remuneration processes, including when undertaking our annual remuneration review.  In

doing so, we follow the principles outlined in our Inclusion, Diversity and Equity Policy to ensure remuneration decisions and outcomes

are free from bias.

Remuneration report (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report96

Director remuneration

The directors’ remuneration is paid in the form of directors’ fees. At the Company’s 2022 annual meeting, shareholders approved a

total directors’ fee pool of $854,000 per annum.

As at 31 March 2026, the pool was allocated by the Board as follows:

Fee

Number of persons

holding office

Total fee pool

Chair (including membership of all committees)$181,0001$181,000

Director (excluding the Chair)$99,0005$495,000

Chair of the Audit, Risk and Sustainability Committee (ARSC)$25,0001$25,000

Audit, Risk and Sustainability Committee member$14,5002$29,000

Chair of the People and Culture Committee (PCC)$20,0001$20,000

People and Culture Committee member$11,5002$23,000

Discretionary pool$81,000

Total$854,000

The fees paid to our directors during the year ended 31 March 2026 are outlined below.

DirectorDutiesBase fees

Committee

chair fees

Committee

member fees

Fees

Simon ShakesheffChair$180,125$180,125

Member of the ARSC

Christopher AikenDirector$98,500$14,375$112,875

Member of the PCC

Member of the former ESGC

Peter AlexanderDirector$98,500$11,500$110,000

Member of the PCC

Member of the former ESGC

Michele Embling

1

Director$83,825$18,750$102,575

Chair of the ARSC

Carlie EveDirector$98,500$5,000$13,750$117,250

Member of the ARSC

Chair of the former ESGC

Kevin KenrickDirector$98,500$20,000$118,500

Chair of the PCC

Mary Jane Daly

2

Director$24,250$5,000$29,250

Chair of the former Audit and

Risk Committee

Total$770,575

1Michele Embling joined the Board on 27 May 2025.

2Mary Jane Daly retired from the Board on 30 June 2025.

Other investor information
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report97

Reporting entity

Kiwi Property Group Limited (the Company) was incorporated

under the Companies Act 1993 on 16 October 2014. In December

2014, investors approved a move from a unit trust to a company

structure. Prior to this approval, the entity (known as Kiwi Income

Property Trust) was a unit trust established under the Unit Trusts

Act 1960 by a Trust Deed dated 21 August 1992.

Stock exchange listing

The Company’s shares are quoted on the NZX under the ticker

code KPG and the Company’s green bonds are quoted on the

NZDX under the ticker codes KPG050, KPG060 and KPG070.

Credit rating

S&P Global Ratings has assigned a corporate credit rating of BBB

(stable) to the Company and an issue credit rating of BBB+ to

each of the Company’s fixed-rate senior secured green bonds

(KPG050, KPG060 and KPG070).

Further information about S&P Global Ratings’ credit rating

scale is available at www.spglobal.com. A rating is not a

recommendation by any rating organisation to buy, sell or hold

the Company’s securities. The credit ratings referred to in this

annual report are current as at the date of this annual report and

may be subject to suspension, revision or withdrawal at any time

by S&P Global Ratings.

Changes in the nature of the business

There were no changes to the nature of the Company’s business

or that of its subsidiaries during the year.

NZX waiver

During the year ended 31 March 2026 NZX did not grant and

publish any waivers following an application by the Company and

the Company did not rely on any NZX waivers.

NZX disciplinary action

There has been no public exercise by NZX of any of its powers set

out in Listing Rule 9.9.3 in relation to the Company.

Auditor

Deloitte Limited has undertaken the audit of the consolidated

financial statements for the 31 March 2026 financial year.

Climate reporting

Kiwi Property is a climate reporting entity for the purposes of the

Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 (FMC Act). We will publish

our Climate-related Disclosures on a group basis for the year

ended 31 March 2026 in compliance with the Aotearoa New

Zealand Climate Standards issued by the External Reporting

Board (XRB), as required by the FMC Act. Kiwi Property's Climate-

related Disclosures for the year ended 31 March 2026 are

accessible on our website at kp.co.nz/investors/reporting-suite.

Donations

During the year to 31 March 2026 the Company donated $3,000

to Leukaemia & Blood Cancer New Zealand (Firefighter Sky

Tower Challenge), $1,000 to Shakti Dance School, $917 to Mental

Health Foundation (Auckland Marathon), $870 each to Predator

Free NZ Trust and Ronald McDonald House (volunteering),

$441 to Givealittle (Westpac Chopper Appeal), $414 to

Pancare Foundation (fundraising) and $300 to Volunteering

Auckland Trust.

The Company’s Sponsorship, Donations and Volunteering Policy

states that the Company will not sponsor any political event

or organisation.

Directors of the Company and its subsidiaries

As at 31 March 2026, the directors of the Company were Simon

Shakesheff (Chair), Michele Embling (from 27 May 2025), Kevin

Kenrick, Chris Aiken, Peter Alexander and Carlie Eve. Mary Jane

Daly ceased to be a director from 1 July 2025.

As at 31 March 2026, the directors of the subsidiary companies

of Kiwi Property Group Limited, being Kiwi Property Holdings

Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No. 2 Limited, Kiwi Property

Holdings No. 3 Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No. 4 Limited,

Kiwi Property Holdings No. 5 Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No.

6 Limited, Kiwi Property Holdings No. 7 Limited, Kiwi Property

Holdings No. 8 Limited, Kiwi Property Centre Place Limited, Kiwi

Property Te Awa Limited and Sylvia Park Business Centre Limited,

were Clive Mackenzie and Louise Hill.

Directors of the Company’s subsidiaries do not receive any

remuneration or other benefits in their capacity as a director of

those companies, except the indemnity and insurance referred

to below.

Directors’ indemnity and insurance

In accordance with the constitution of the Company and section

162 of the Companies Act 1993, the directors of the Company

continue to receive an indemnity from the Company and

insurance to cover liabilities that may arise out of the normal

performance of their duties.

The directors of the subsidiary companies also continue to

receive an indemnity from Kiwi Property Group Limited and

insurance to cover liabilities that may arise out of the normal

performance of their duties.

Annual meeting of shareholders

The Company’s annual meeting of shareholders will be held on

Tuesday, 23 June 2026.

Interest register entries

In accordance with section 211(1)(e) of the Companies Act 1993,

listed below are details of the entries made in the Interests

Register of the Company during the year, together with the

existing entries as at 31 March 2026.

Other investor information (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report98

NameName of company/entityNature of interest

Simon ShakesheffAssembly Funds ManagementDirector

CBUS PropertyDirector

HomeCo Daily Needs Real Estate Investment TrustChair

Management Investment Committee of NSW Tcorp (formerly NSW Treasury)Member

SGCHDirector

SS & AR Pty LimitedDirector

Ingenia Communities Group LimitedDirector

Chris AikenAiken Equities LimitedDirector and shareholder

Broad Construction NZ Limited

1

Director and shareholder

Broad Homes NZ LimitedDirector and shareholder

Broad Living NZ LimitedDirector and shareholder

Catalina Advisory LimitedDirector and shareholder

Jianji Distribution NZ Limited

1

Director and shareholder

The Adare Company LimitedDirector

Weston Lea LimitedDirector

Murray Aynsley Properties Limited

2

Director

Peter AlexanderAREA LimitedPrincipal

Dilworth Trust Board

1

Trustee

Kainga Ora Construction Programme Assurance PanelMember

Smith & Caughey Holdings LimitedChair

Sargasso Holdings LimitedDirector

Carlie EveDiocesan Heritage FoundationChair

Fonterra Shareholders' FundDirector

Kevin KenrickBank of New ZealandDirector

Michele EmblingTranspower New Zealand Limited

2

Chair

IAG New Zealand Limited

2

Director

AIA New Zealand Limited

2

Director

Toitū Tahua: Centre for Sustainable Finance

2

Member

Mary Jane DalyAIG Insurance New Zealand Limited

1

Chair

Partners Life

1

Chair

Fonterra Shareholders' Fund

1

Chair

Kiwibank Limited

1

Director

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment - Risk and

Advisory Committee

1

Member

1Entry removed by notice given by the Director during the year.

2Entry added by notice given by the director during the year.

Directors’ holdings of quoted financial products and transactions in quoted financial products

In accordance with NZX Listing Rule 3.7.1(d), listed below are the directors of the Company who had a relevant interest in quoted

financial products of the Company as at 31 March 2026.

Other investor information (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report99

DirectorNumber and type of quoted financial products

Simon Shakesheff26,000 ordinary shares in the Company

Michele Embling20,000 ordinary shares in the Company

Chris Aiken110,000 ordinary shares in the Company

Peter Alexander30,586 ordinary shares in the Company

Kevin Kenrick29,602 ordinary shares in the Company

Set out below are disclosures made by directors of the Company in respect of changes in shareholding in the Company during the

period 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026 for the purposes of section 148(2) of the Companies Act 1993:

DirectorTransaction dateNature of transactionNumber of sharesNature of interestConsideration

Michele Embling12 Feb 2026On market purchase20,000 ordinary sharesBeneficial$1.02 per share

Peter Alexander19 Sep 2025Acquisition under DRP

1

417 ordinary sharesLegal and beneficial$1.0123 per share

Kevin Kenrick19 Sep 2025Acquisition under DRP

1

404 ordinary sharesLegal and beneficial$1.0123 per share

Peter Alexander19 Jun 2025Acquisition under DRP

1

454 ordinary sharesLegal and beneficial$0.8831 per share

Kevin Kenrick19 Jun 2025Acquisition under DRP

1

440 ordinary sharesLegal and beneficial$0.8831 per share

1Dividend reinvestment plan operated by Kiwi Property Group Limited.

Shareholder statistics
AS AT 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report100

Twenty largest shareholders

Shareholder

Number of

shares

% of total

issued shares

HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited <040-016842-230>268,155,30216.26%

BNP Paribas Nominees NZ Limited <BPSS40>219,397,40713.31%

Accident Compensation Corporation145,569,0078.83%

Citibank Nominees (NZ) Ltd107,894,9486.54%

Apex Custodian Nominees91,577,0615.55%

JPMorgan Chase Bank66,270,5354.02%

HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited <HKBN45>54,801,2253.32%

New Zealand Depository Nominee54,505,1143.31%

FNZ Custodians Limited37,087,1012.25%

JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited35,001,2902.12%

Custodial Services Limited34,876,1862.12%

New Zealand Superannuation Fund Nominees Limited32,834,9141.99%

Adminis Custodial Nominees Limited31,130,0421.89%

Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited29,259,6041.77%

Public Trust21,473,1701.30%

PT Booster Investments Nominees Limited18,325,7661.11%

New Zealand Permanent Trustees Limited17,234,0181.05%

Fountain Trustee Limited16,750,0001.02%

Bnp Paribas Nominees NZ Limited14,541,2210.88%

Masfen Securities Limited12,151,9100.74%

Total1,308,835,82179.38%

Total shares on issue1,648,786,706

Spread of shareholders

Size of holding

Number of

holders

% of total

holders

Number of

shares

% of total

issued shares

1-1,0008279.30%370,8020.02%

1,001-5,0001,61518.16%4,805,6620.29%

5,001-10,0001,49916.86%11,404,2710.69%

10,001-50,0003,70141.63%87,558,7345.31%

50,001-100,0007057.93%49,456,8413.00%

100,001 and over5446.12%1,495,190,39690.68%

Total8,891100.00%1,648,786,706100.00%

Bondholder statistics
AS AT 31 MARCH 2026

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report101

Twenty largest bondholders

Bondholder

Number of

bonds

% of total

issued bonds

Custodial Services Limited <4>131,247,00032.81%

Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1 Custody>52,782,00013.20%

FNZ Custodians Limited43,097,00010.77%

BNP Paribas Nominees NZ Limited <BPSS40>27,769,0006.94%

HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited <040-016842-230>20,775,0005.19%

TEA Custodians Limited13,188,0003.30%

Citibank Nominees (NZ) Limited <CNOM90>12,471,0003.12%

PT (Booster Investments) Nominees Limited11,430,0002.86%

HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited <HKBN45>11,160,0002.79%

Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1 E>10,737,0002.68%

Investment Custodial Services Limited <C>5,776,0001.44%

Adminis Custodial Nominees Limited4,773,0001.19%

JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited4,271,0001.07%

Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited <1 Nrl Ail>3,669,0000.92%

FNZ Custodians Limited3,020,0000.76%

Custodial Services Limited2,289,0000.57%

NZX WT Nominees Limited1,992,0000.50%

New Zealand Permanent Trustees Limited1,881,0000.47%

FNZ Custodians Limited1,313,0000.33%

Private Nominees Limited1,259,0000.31%

Total364,899,00091.22%

Total bonds on issue400,000,000

Bondholder statistics (continued)
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report102

Spread of KPG050 bondholders (July 2028 maturity)

Size of holding

Number of

holders

% of total

holders

Number of

bonds

% of total

issued bonds

1-1,000-0.00%-0.00%

1,001-5,0005618.01%280,0000.19%

5,001-10,0009229.58%839,0000.56%

10,001-50,00012138.91%2,982,0001.99%

50,001-100,000175.47%1,323,0000.88%

100,001 and over258.04%144,576,00096.38%

Total311100.00%150,000,000100.00%

Spread of KPG060 bondholders (September 2029 maturity)

Size of holding

Number of

holders

% of total

holders

Number of

bonds

% of total

issued bonds

1-1,000-0.00%-0.00%

1,001-5,000276.70%135,0000.11%

5,001-10,0009122.58%872,0000.70%

10,001-50,00022656.08%6,242,0004.99%

50,001-100,000338.19%2,593,0002.07%

100,001 and over266.45%115,158,00092.13%

Total403100.00%125,000,000100.00%

Spread of KPG070 bondholders (June 2030 maturity)

Size of holding

Number of

holders

% of total

holders

Number of

bonds

% of total

issued bonds

1-1,000-0.00%-0.00%

1,001-5,000257.74%125,0000.10%

5,001-10,0007523.22%716,0000.57%

10,001-50,00018256.35%4,730,0003.78%

50,001-100,000185.57%1,303,0001.04%

100,001 and over237.12%118,126,00094.50%

Total323100.00%125,000,000100.00%

Substantial product holders
Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report103

In accordance with section 293 of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013, listed below are the names and details of all persons who,

according to the Company’s records and disclosures made, are substantial product holders of the Company as at 31 March 2026. The

total number of ordinary shares on issue at 31 March 2026 was 1,648,786,706.

Name

Number of shares held

at date of notice

1

Date of notice

Milford Asset Management Limited177,142,0155-Feb-26

Accident Compensation Corporation156,563,11519-Dec-25

1The number of ordinary shares listed in the table are as per the last substantial product holder notice filed by the relevant shareholder on or prior to 31 March 2026. As substantial

product holder notices are required to be filed only if the total holding of a shareholder changes by 1% or more since the notice filed, the number noted on this table may differ

from that shown in the list of 20 largest shareholdings.

This annual report is dated 18 May 2026 and is signed on behalf of the Board by:

Simon Shakesheff

Chair

Michele Embling

Chair of the Audit, Risk and Sustainability Committee

Registrar
MUFG Corporate Markets

A division of MUFG Pension

& Market Services

Level 30, PwC Tower

15 Customs Street West

PO Box 91976

Auckland 1142

T: +64 9 375 5998 or 0800 377 388

W: mpms.mufg.com

E: enquiries.nz@cm.mpms.mufg.com

Auditor

Deloitte Limited

Deloitte Centre

Levels 15-20

1 Queen Street

Private Bag 115033

T: +64 9 303 0700

W: deloitte.co.nz

Bankers

ANZ Bank New Zealand Limited

Bank of New Zealand

China Construction Bank

(New Zealand Branch)

Commonwealth Bank of Australia

The Hongkong and Shanghai

Banking Corporation Limited

(New Zealand Branch)

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China

Limited, Auckland Branch (ICBC)

MUFG Bank, Ltd (Auckland Branch)

Westpac New Zealand Limited

Company

Kiwi Property Group Limited

Level 7, Vero Centre

48 Shortland Street

PO Box 2071

Auckland 1140

T: +64 9 359 4000

W: kp.co.nz

E: info@kp.co.nz

Bond supervisor

Public Trust

Level 16, SAP Tower

151 Queen Street, Auckland

Private Bag 5902

Wellington 6140

T: 0800 371 471

W: publictrust.co.nz

E: cts.enquiry@publictrust.co.nz

Security trustee

New Zealand Permanent Trustees

Limited

Level 16, SAP Tower

151 Queen Street, Auckland

Private Bag 5902

Wellington 6140

T: 0800 371 471

E: cts.enquiry@publictrust.co.nz

Directory

Kiwi Property 2026 Annual Report104

kp.co.nz

---

FY26 Movement from FY25
Net rental income $202.4m +4.3%

Operating profit before tax $126.2m +8.6%

Net profit after tax $50.4m -11.5%

Adjusted funds from operations $100.2m +8.0%

Net tangible assets per share $1.12 -2.4%

Full year dividend 5.60 cents per share +3.7%


Executing on strategy

Kiwi Property today released its annual results for the twelve months ended 31 March 2026

(FY26), delivering a robust operating performance and continued advancement of its

strategic priorities. Performance benefited from rental growth, improved occupancy,

disciplined cost management and progress on capital recycling initiatives. These

contributors were partly offset by valuation movements, resulting in lower profit after tax.


Kiwi Property Chair Simon Shakesheff noted the strong progress on the capital recycling

programme: “ during the year, we sold The Plaza in Palmerston North for $118.9m, with

settlement occurring in December 2025. Following the successful nine-year lease extension

at ASB North Wharf in July last year, we also progressed a conditional sale of that asset,

which was announced in January.” Since year end, Overseas Investment Office approval has

been received for the ASB transaction, with settlement of the $205 million sale expected in

May 2026.


Including the settlement of the ASB North Wharf sale, pro forma gearing reduces to 33.3%.

Reflecting the strengthening balance sheet, S&P removed the ‘Negative’ outlook on Kiwi

Property’s credit rating, with the issuer rating now BBB/Stable.


Portfolio performance

Kiwi Property delivered continued rental growth across the portfolio, supported by positive

leasing momentum and improving occupancy. The total leasing spread on new leases was

6.3%, contributing to rental growth of 4.5% for the year. Portfolio occupancy increased to

99.0%, up from 96.9% in FY25. Vero Centre’s occupancy in particular lifted to 99.1%, up

from 92.4% at the start of the financial year.


Net rental income increased by 4.3% to $202.4 million. Operating profit before tax

increased by 8.6% to $126.2 million and adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) rose by

8.0% to $100.2 million. These results reflect improved operating performance and lower

interest costs, partly offset by income lost from the sale of The Plaza during the year.


NZX RELEASE

18 May 2026


Disciplined FY26 execution strengthens balance

sheet



2

At our centres, retail sales increased by 1.6% over the year to $1.9 billion, with foot traffic up

by 3.0% to 36.7 million visits over the same period.


Asset valuations and earnings resilience

As at 31 March 2026, Kiwi Property’s total property portfolio was valued at $3.0 billion

1

,

reflecting a fair value decline of 0.9% over the year. Net tangible assets per share

decreased 2.4% to $1.12. Increases in retail-led mixed-use asset values were more than

offset by softer office valuations and a reduction in the value of Drury land, as development

costs exceeded valuation gains.


Despite these movements, operating performance remained sound, supporting net profit

after tax of $50.4 million, compared with $57.0 million in FY25.


Cost discipline

Kiwi Property maintained a disciplined approach to cost management throughout FY26.

Kiwi Property CEO Clive Mackenzie noted that “employment and administration expenses

decreased by $0.9 million, or 3.6%, compared with the prior year, after normalising for costs

associated with the ASB North Wharf lease extension and other one-off transaction items.”


Strategy refresh

During the year, the Board and management refreshed Kiwi Property’s strategy to ensure it

remains clear, focused and aligned with the Company’s long-term objectives. Shakesheff

commented that “our strategy remains consistent, but we have refined how we describe it.

The refresh reaffirms Kiwi Property’s emphasis on best-in-class retail assets in prime

locations, with mixed-use elements incorporated where they enhance asset quality and

long-term returns.”


Shakesheff added, “the refreshed strategy is structured around four connected pillars —

Assets, Capital, Customer and Capability. Together, these pillars guide the ownership and

active management of high-quality assets, disciplined capital allocation to support growth

and balance sheet strength, delivery of compelling experiences for customers and tenants,

and the development of organisational capability to support consistent performance over

time.”


Asset initiatives

The December opening of the new pedestrian link between IKEA and Level One at Sylvia

Park is a visible milestone, broadening customer flow between the two destinations and

increasing foot traffic through the centre, particularly to upper-level retail on Level One.

This momentum at Sylvia Park is complemented by the commencement of the southern

enhancement project, expanding Kmart’s retail footprint and introducing additional

hospitality options. Asian grocer STACKS will also begin trading mid-year, further

diversifying the tenant mix and reflecting a growing Asian catchment, broader food and

beverage preferences, and overseas best practice.


Drury remains a key long-term growth project for Kiwi Property, with meaningful progress

achieved during FY26. CEO Clive Mackenzie noted that “during the year, we negotiated

conditional agreements with Costco, Harvey Norman and Briscoe Group, together with an



3

unconditional agreement with Foodstuffs.” These transactions mean approximately 77% of

the Stage 1 large-format retail (LFR) precinct intended for sale is under contract, with total

proceeds of $115 million expected to be received between FY27 and FY29.


With the majority of Stage 1 LFR sales now secured, the focus has shifted to execution.

Stage 1 civil works are underway, including the construction of key roads, installation of

drainage and provision of utility services, and Stage 2 Fast-track consent was received at

the end of last year.


Mackenzie said these milestones provide greater certainty around delivery while

maintaining flexibility: “ the progress achieved at Drury allows us to take a staged and

disciplined approach to development, while continuing to unlock value and support balance

sheet strength over time,” he said.


Leadership

This year, Kiwi Property strengthened leadership capability in areas critical to capital

management and strategic execution. Shaun Reed was appointed to the executive team as

General Manager Capital Transactions. Following the resignation of Steve Penney, Sarah

Theodore will join as Chief Financial Officer in July.


Sustainability and capability

In FY26, Kiwi Property continued to simplify operations and invest in initiatives that enhance

asset quality and long-term resilience. Geneva House at Sylvia Park achieved a 5.5-Star

NABERSNZ Energy rating, and initiatives at Vero Centre progressed toward an estimated

29% reduction in gas consumption.


Investment also continued in capability, talent development, and AI adoption. This focus is

reflected in the latest people survey, which showed strong employee engagement of 80%

(in the upper quartile of similar-sized NZ businesses).


Dividend and guidance

Kiwi Property will pay a fourth quarter cash dividend of 1.40 cents per share (cps) on 19

June 2026, taking the full year cash dividend payment to 5.60 cps, in line with guidance.

The AFFO payout ratio is 92%.


Shakesheff said, “I am pleased to announce dividend guidance for the 2027 financial year of

5. 75 cps

2

, which represents growth of 2 .7% on the FY26 dividend. The forecast dividend is

expected to be at the higher end of our 90% to 100% target AFFO payout range.”


FY27 outlook

CEO Clive Mackenzie remains focused on disciplined execution: “ near-term priorities

include progressing selective initiatives to further enhance portfolio quality, including

completion of Sylvia Park’s southern enhancement project and the Vero Centre upgrade,

alongside continued progress at Drury through the staged completion of land sales.


We will also continue to carefully manage operating costs and capital expenditure, while

recycling capital from non-strategic assets where appropriate. This will help preserve



4

balance sheet flexibility and support reinvestment in opportunities aligned with our

strategy and capital allocation framework.”


“While geopolitical and macroeconomic conditions remain volatile, and in a period marked

by elevated interest rates, cautious capital markets and shifting customer behaviour, our

high-quality portfolio, clear strategy, and disciplined approach to execution provide a

strong foundation for long-term performance,” Mackenzie concluded.


Additional information

Kiwi Property has today also released an Annual Report, Annual Results Presentation,

Property Compendium, and Sustainability Report, which are available for download on the

company’s website, kp.co.nz, or from nzx.com.


ENDS




Notes:


General: Net rental income, operating profit before tax, and adjusted funds from operations are non-GAAP

performance measures. Refer to the Kiwi Property Annual Results Presentation for the twelve months ended

31 March 2026 for the definition and determination of non-GAAP performance measures, sales and

pedestrian counts.

1: Total portfolio value excludes held for sale assets and includes Drury land classified as inventories.

2: Dividend guidance and payments are contingent on the company’s financial performance through the

financial year and barring material adverse events or unforeseen circumstances.


For further information

Clive Mackenzie

Chief Executive Officer

clive.mackenzie@kp.co.nz

Fraser Gunn

Head of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations

fraser.gunn@kp.co.nz

+64 21 973 534


About us

Kiwi Property (NZX: KPG) is one of the largest listed property companies on the New Zealand

Stock Exchange and is a member of the S&P/NZX 20 Index. We have been around for over 30

years and proudly own and manage a significant real estate portfolio comprising some of New

Zealand’s best mixed-use, retail and office buildings. Our objective is to provide investors

with a reliable investment in New Zealand property through the ownership and active

management of a diversified, high-quality portfolio. Kiwi Property is licensed under the Real

Estate Agents Act 2008. To find out more, visit our website, kp.co.nz

---

Annual results
presentation

18 May 2026

For the year ended 31 March 2026

Contents
Section

Page

Business highlights3

Financial results FY2612

Asset and development update18

Strategic refresh and FY27 outlook26

Appendix 1: Financial update32

Appendix 2: Property update37

Glossary46

This annual results presentation for the year ended 31 March 2026 should be read in conjunction with the NZX announcement and annual report released on 18 May 2026. Refer to our website kp.co.nz or nzx.com. Property statistics

within this presentation represent partially or fully owned assets only; property interests managed on behalf of third parties are excluded. Unless otherwise indicated, all of the numerical data provided in this presentation is stated for

theyear ended and/or as at 31 March 2026. All amounts are in New Zealand dollars. Sylvia Park precinct comprises Sylvia Park shopping centre, ANZ Raranga, Geneva House, Resido, Sylvia Park Lifestyle and the adjoining properties.

Due to rounding, numbers within this presentation may not add up precisely to the totals provided and percentages may not precisely reflect the absolute figures. The non-GAAP financial information does not have a standardised

meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be comparable to similar financial information presented by other entities. The consolidated financial statements, which contain GAAP financialinformation, have been subject to

audit procedures by Deloitte. Refer to Glossary and Appendix 1 for the definitions and determination of non-GAAP measures.

2

Business highlights
3

Growth across key metrics
Operating performance supports earnings growth in FY26

4

36.7 million visits

to our centres

+3.0% vs. FY25

$1.9 billion

in annual sales

at our centres

+1.6% vs. FY25

$100.2 million AFFO

+8.0% vs. FY25

6.11 cents per share (+5.0% vs. FY25)

99.0% occupancy

across the total portfolio

vs. 96.9% in FY25

+4.5% rent growth

across the total portfolio

vs. +4.3% in FY25

AFFO

KEY

GROWTH

METRICS

Strong progress on FY26 priorities
Kiwi Property successfully progressed its key priorities during the year

Rent growth

5

Balance sheet

capacity

•As at FY26, gearing was lower by 1.0% from FY25 at 37.4%, supported by the sale of The Plaza in December

for $118.9 million.

•The sale of ASB North Wharf for $205 million is expected to settle in late May, with the impact of the sale

reducing pro forma gearing to 33.3% and providing scope for growth opportunities.

•Strong leasing momentum across the portfolio, with a total leasing spread of +6.3%.

1


•Office leasing spreads were +13.4%

1

, supported by tenant demand for premium office space within Vero.

•Retail-led mixed-use leasing spreads were +6.6%, supported by an improving retail trading environment.

1: Leasing spreads are calculated excluding held for sale assets and are not ownership adjusted.

Cost discipline

Sale of Drury LFR

sites

•Through disciplined cost management, employment and administration expenses were down by 3.6%

when compared to FY25 after adjusting for one-off costs.

•Taking advantage of lower relative interest costs, we refinanced the KPG040 $100 million green bond with

bank debt. Our weighted average interest rate has reduced from 5.30% in FY25 to 4.81% in FY26.

•~77% of large-format retail land intended to be sold at Drury is now under contract, with settlement and

profit recognition expected in FY27-FY29.

•Drury land sales will help to fund the project’s capital expenditure, with minimal net gearing impact on the

balance sheet expected.

Business highlights
•ASB agreed to extend its lease at North Wharf for a further nine years in July

2025 (taking it through to 2040).

•Following the successful lease extension which enhanced the asset’s

investment appeal, the sale of ASB North Wharf was announced in January

2026, is now unconditional and will settle in late May.

•The Drury development advanced materially during the year, with a land sale

to Foodstuffs in April 2025 and further conditional transactions with

Costco, Briscoe Group and Harvey Norman late last year.

•IKEA opened its first NZ store adjacent to Sylvia Park in early December. We

have seen significant foot traffic improvement, up by nearly 8% over the four

months since opening, compared to the year prior.

•Our latest people survey achieved an 80% employee engagement score (in

the upper quartile of similar-sized businesses)

1

, a six-year high.

•During the year, we refreshed our business strategy to refine how we

articulate our approach, reinforce capital discipline, and sharpen our focus on

four long-term strategic pillars: Assets, Capital, Customer and Capability.

1: Compared against NZ companies with 100-200 employees on the Culture Amp platform.

6

Strong leasing performance
Leasing momentum drives rental growth

+4.5%

Overall rental growth

FY25:+4.3%

99.0%

Portfolio occupancy

FY25:96.9%

3.6 years

Weighted average lease expiry (WALE)

1

FY25:3.8 years

1: WALE excludes Resido. General note: The current year figures on this page exclude

ASB North Wharf which is held for sale.

•Overall rental growth from retail-led mixed-use, office and other leasing

activity was +4.5%, with newleasing +6.3% and rent reviews +4.0%.

•Leasing momentum remained strong, with a leasing spread of +6.3%

driven by Sylvia Park (+7.0%) and The Base (+10.5%), alongside continued

strength in the office portfolio (+13.4%).

•Retail leasing outcomes were supported by high-profile new entrants

and expansion deals at Sylvia Park, reinforcing its position as New

Zealand’s leading retail destination.

•Vero Centre continues to perform, with renewals and new leasing

delivering leasing spreads of +13.4%. Occupancy increased to 99.1%, up

from 92.4% in FY25, leaving approximately one-third of a floor across the

building for lease.

•At year end, 66% of portfolio income is subject to fixed or CPI-based

rent reviews, providing a strong platform for future rental growth.

7

•Disciplined control over operating
costs has continued, with a sustained

focus on efficiency across the

business.

•Employment and administration

expenses have decreased by $0.9m

(-3.6%) after normalising for costs

associated with the ASB North Wharf

lease extension and other one-off

transaction items.

Management expense ratio (MER) improved by 5 bps

Cost control supports earnings resilience

8

20262025Variance

$m$m$m%

Employment and administration

expenses

26.325.2+1.0+4.1%

One-off costs(2.5)(0.5)-2.0+400.0%

Adjusted employment and

administration expenses

23.824.7-0.9-3.6%

Assets under Management (AuM)3,745.73,625.0

MER (Adjusted employment and

administration expenses / AuM)

63 bps

68 bps-5 bps

•Total portfolio sales totalled $1.9 billion for the
12 months ending 31 March 2026, representing

an increase of 1.6% compared to the prior year.

•Total occupancy costs (TOC) remained stable at

15.4% across our assets.

•Foot traffic continues to increase at Kiwi

Property’s assets. Over 1 million more visits were

made to centres in the portfolio than the prior

year (a 3.0% increase).

•The new walkway between Sylvia Park and IKEA

has contributed to a significant increase in foot

traffic at the centre – up by nearly 8% over the

first four months since opening.

Portfolio sales improve

Uplift in the wider NZ retail sector in the second half led to positive growth in retail sales

Retail-led mixed-use

1

Total portfolio

2

12 months ended31-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-25

Total sales$1.81b$1.78b$1.91b$1.88b

Total sales growth1.5%-1.2%1.6%-1.1%

Specialty sales

(per sqm)

3

$12,900$12,200$12,100$11,400

Specialty TOC

3,4

15.5%15.4%15.4%15.3%

Pedestrian count

5


(million)

32.731.936.735.6

1: Retail-led mixed-use sales include all reported sales provided by tenants at Sylvia Park, Sylvia Park Lifestyle, The Base Te Awa, The Base LFR and LynnMall. Calculated on a MAT basis. 2: Total portfolio sales include retail-led

mixed-use sales plus Centre Place North. 3: Retail-led mixed-use specialty sales comprise Sylvia Park, LynnMall and The Base Te Awa. Total specialty sales comprise retail-led mixed-use specialty sales plus Centre Place North.

4: Refer to Glossary for definitions. 5: Pedestrian count information is not collected for Sylvia Park Lifestyle. For The Base large format retail stores, pedestrian count information is calculated using vehicle movement data and

applying multipliers to estimate visitation. General note: All sales include GST.Sales are for the 12 months to 31-Mar-26. Comparative figures may vary from what has been reported previously as sales figures are updated as

annual audited sales are received.

9

•Portfolio valuation declined 1.3% ($41.0m) over
the 12 months to 31 March 2026.

•The retail-led mixed-use portfolio increased

1.6%, led by the shopping centres at Sylvia Park

(+2.2%), The Base (+4.2%) and LynnMall

(+5.6%), supported by income growth, leasing

momentum and accretive capital investment.

•The office portfolio declined, reflecting

capitalisation rate movements consistent with

broader NZ office market repricing, partially

offset by market rental growth.

•The $36.1m (19.8%) decrease in the combined

Drury valuation reflects development cost and

staging, with capital invested before income

and valuation uplift is realised. Value is

expected to be recognised over time as

stages are completed and lots are sold.

Valuations slightly lower year-on-year

Portfolio outcomes reflect market repricing and development staging

1: The capitalisation rate excludes Resido which is valued usingthediscounted cashflow methodology and certain Sylvia Park adjoining

properties which are valued using the direct comparison methodology. 2: Stage 1 of Drury’s development land is recognised in inventories and

Stage 2 is recognised in investment properties. General note: Values exclude the gross up of lease liabilities required by NZ IFRS 16. All values

and movements are presented on a like-for-like basis. The office portfolio at 31-Mar-25 included ASB North Wharf which is now held for sale.

The total portfolio excludes The Plaza which was disposed of during the current financial year (31-Mar-25 valuation: $126m).

10

31-Mar-26 valuation31-Mar-25 valuationMovement

Cap. rate

%

Val.

$m

Cap. rate

%

Val.

$m

Cap.

rate

bps

1

Val.

$m

Val.

%

Retail-led

mixed-use portfolio

6.232,237.96.262,165.0

-2.9

35.3+1.6

Office portfolio6.31597.06.03 603.5+28.2-22.4-3.6

Other 9.0227.88.7032.2+32.0-5.5-16.4

Development Land

2


Drury – Stage 1

N/A98.5N/A89.2N/A-13.1-11.8

Development Land

2

Drury – Stage 2

N/A48.0N/A70.0N/A-23.0-32.4

Total portfolio excluding

held for sale assets

6.283,009.26.242,959.9+4.6-28.7-0.9

Held for sale assetsN/A205.0N/A212.0N/A-12.3-5.7

Total portfolio6.283,214.26.243,171.9+4.6-41.0-1.3

Geneva House awarded a
5.5 star for its first NABERSNZ

energy rating

Aurora Centre increased from

5 star to 5.5 star NABERSNZ

29% reduction in gas

consumption

Following targeted investment

to phase out gas consumption

from the base build of Vero

Centre

Focus on sustainability

Continuing to progress the sustainability performance of our assets

11

NABERSNZ’s Energy for

Shopping Centres rating tool will

launch in New Zealand in late

2026

Sylvia Park will participate in the

pilot of the tool, with the

potential to add to our green

asset base in time

Financial results
FY26

12

Sylvia Park precinct +$7.8m
•Higher rental income from the full lease-up

of Geneva House and Resido.

Office portfolio +$1.2m

•Mainly driven by The Aurora Centre, from

carpark income and savings in operating

expenses.

The Plaza divested in December 2025

•Results reflect underlying performance up

to the divestment of this asset.

20262025Variance

$m$m$m%

Sylvia Park precinct

93.2 85.4 +7.8 +9.2

LynnMall

23.4 22.7 +0.7 +3.3

The Base

17.3 16.7 +0.6 +3.7

NOI – Retail-led mixed-use portfolio

133.9 124.7 +9.2 +7.4

NOI - Office portfolio

33.9 32.7 +1.2 +3.7

NOI – Other

1

17.8 18.1 -0.3 -1.9

Net operating income

2

(excluding divestment)185.6 175.6 +10.0 +5.7

The Plaza (divested in December 2025)

12.6 15.9 -3.3 -20.9

Net operating income

2

(including divestment)198.2 191.5 +6.7 +3.5

Other movements

3

4.2 2.7 +1.4 +54.5

Net rental income

2

202.4 194.1 +8.3 +4.3

13

1: Includes ASB North Wharf which is held for sale and the Group’s 50% interest in the Centre Place North Joint Venture 2: Refer to Glossary for

definitions. 3: Other movements include straight-lining of fixed rental increases, allowance for expected credit loss, other net income and NZ IFRS 16

expense reclassifications.

Net rental income up by 4.3%

Strong performance in retail-led mixed-use and office assets

1:Includes straight-lining of fixed rental increases of -$4.1m (2025: -$2.4m). 2:Refer to Glossary for definitions. 3:One-off costs are adjusted for
income tax where applicable.

20262025Variance

$m$m$m%

Net rental income202.4 194.1 +8.3+4.3

Property management revenue4.1 4.2 -0.1-2.4

Employment and administration expenses-26.3 -25.2 -1.1-4.4

Net finance expenses-54.0 -56.9 +2.9+5.1

Operating profit before income tax126.2 116.2 +10.0+8.6

Current tax expense-22.0 -20.6 -1.4-6.8

Amortisation of capitalised tenant assets

1

2.1 4.1 -2.0-48.8

Share-based payment expense0.5 1.0 -0.5-50.0

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment 0.5 0.7 -0.2-28.6

Funds from operations (FFO)

2

(non-GAAP) 107.3 101.5 +5.8+5.7

Maintenance capital expenditure-4.8 -5.1 +0.3+5.9

Capitalised tenant incentives and leasing fees-4.8 -4.1 -0.7-17.1

One-off costs

3

2.5 0.5 +2.0+400.0

Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO)

2

(non-GAAP)

100.2 92.8 +7.4+8.0

AFFO (cents per share)

6.11 5.82 +0.3+5.0

Dividend paid (cents per share)

5.60 5.40 +0.2+3.7

Dividend payout ratio

92%93%

14

AFFO up by $7.4m

•Effective tax rate on FFO flat at 17.0% (FY25:

16.9%).

•Net finance expenses decreased by $2.9m,

mainly due to a lower average interest rate

and lower debt balance.

Current tax expense increased by $1.4m

•Driven by higher operating profit, partially

offset by tax depreciation claimed on

investment boost incentive ($1.4m).

Dividend payout ratio of 92%

•Within target range of 90-100% of AFFO.

•The dividend reinvestment plan was

applicable for final FY25 and first FY26

quarterly dividends. $21.1m was reinvested in

FY26.

AFFO up by 8.0% driven by higher net rental income

FY26 dividend payout ratio of 92%

Investment properties and inventories
down $83m

•Divestment of The Plaza for $118.9m and

acquisition of an adjoining Sylvia Park

property for $5.6m.

•$82.5m in capital expenditure, offset by

-$50.9m of fair value and impairment

losses, and amortisation of lease

incentives, fees and fixed rental income

-$2.1m.

Gearing down 100bps to 37.4%

•Net proceeds from divestment of The

Plaza for $118.9m used to reduce debt.

•ASB North Wharf disposal brings pro

forma gearing down to 33.3%, providing

scope for growth opportunities.

•S&P credit rating outlook revised from

‘Negative’ to ‘Stable’ in December 2025.


Balance sheet20262025

Investment properties and inventories$3,215m$3,298m

Net tangible assets per share$1.12$1.14

Covenants

Gearing (must be <50%, finance debt / total tangible assets)37.4%38.4%

Interest cover ratio (must be >2.25 times)3.28 2.91

Credit ratings – S&P Global Ratings

Corporate (Issuer rating)BBB (stable)BBB (negative)

Fixed-rate green bonds (Issue rating)BBB+BBB+

15

General note: Further information about S&P Global Ratings’ credit rating scale is available at standardandpoors.com. A rating is not a recommendation by any rating organisation to buy, sell or hold Kiwi Property securities.

The rating is current as at the date stated in this presentation and may be subject to suspension, revision or withdrawal at any time by S&P Global Ratings.

Balance sheet management

Disciplined capital management strengthens balance sheet

220
240

330

310

-

125

125

150

-

-

Bank facilities

•Headroom of $284m, lower drawn debt

mainly due to the divestment of The Plaza

in December 2025.

Weighted average term to maturity of

2.9 years

•This reflects lower bank debt costs for

shorter tenor facilities, while maintaining a

healthy term to maturity.

Green bond maturity refinanced with bank

debt

•Additional $100m in banking facilities

established in November 2025, to

refinance KPG040 green bond series

($100m).

Bonds and banking profile

2026

$m

2025

$m

Total bonds outstanding 400.0 500.0

Bank facility drawn816.0 783.0

Total debt outstanding 1,216.0 1,283.0

Banking facility limit1,100.0 1,000.0

Headroom284.0 217.0

Weighted average term to maturity2.9 years3.1 years

16

Capital management - debt profile

Debt maturity profile as at 31 March 2026 ($m)

%

FY28

20.7%

FY29

32.0%

FY30

24.3%

FY31

23.0%

BondBank

Fixed-rate profile (includes bonds on issue Mar-26: $400m (Mar-25: $500m))
Percentage of drawn finance debt at fixed rates74%88%

Weighted average interest rate of active fixed-rate debt (excl. fees and margins)3.59%3.67%

Weighted average term to maturity of active fixed-rate debt (years)

2.36 2.64

Fixed-rate debt maturity profile

Weighted average interest rate of 4.81%

•Reduced by 49 bps from FY25 due to

lower interest rate profile and greater

proportion of bank debt, taking advantage

of attractive margins.

Fixed-rate profile

•During FY26, Kiwi Property entered into

$95m of fixed-rate interest rate

derivatives, providing greater certainty on

interest costs.

•Hedging is expected to increase to 84%

following settlement of the ASB North

Wharf sale, providing a high level of fixed

cover for the year ahead in an uncertain

interest rate environment.

17

Capital management - cost of debt

Bond and bank facilities20262025

Weighted average interest rate (inclusive of bonds, active interest rate

derivatives, margins and line fees)

4.81%5.30%

0.00%

1.00%

2.00%

3.00%

4.00%

5.00%

6.00%

7.00%

-

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

FY27FY28FY29FY30FY31

Face value of active hedges (including bonds) ($m) (LHS)

Weighted average interest rate of fixed-rate debt (excl. fees and margins) (%) (RHS)

18
Asset and

development update

19
Strategic portfolio repositioning continues

Focusing on strategically aligned assets with positive growth trajectories

Driving sustainable long-term growth for shareholders

•Kiwi Property’s programme of recycling non-strategic assets frees up capital for

reinvestment and is intended to enhance overall portfolio quality and performance over time.

•In line with our capital allocation framework, we continue to reposition the portfolio towards

assets with higher growth potential, supporting long-term value creation for shareholders.

Sales of The Plaza and ASB North Wharf

•With this focus, during FY26 we agreed the sales of:

•The Plaza for $118.9 million (settled in December 2025), and

•ASB North Wharf for $205 million (expected settlement in May 2026).

•Following the sales of these assets:

•74% of Kiwi Property’s total portfolio by value will be ‘retail-led mixed-use’, with high-

quality retail the primary usage of these assets.

•95% of our total portfolio by value will be located in Auckland and Hamilton. Our focus

is on growth areas such as these, with higher expected long-term population growth

versus the wider NZ population.

1

1: Stats NZ: Subnational population projections 2023 to 2053.

The Plaza, Palmerston North

ASB North Wharf, Auckland

20
Update on current developments

Targeted development supports long-term growth

Asian grocer at Sylvia Park


•Located at the northern end of Sylvia

Park, this project diversifies the

tenant mix, responding to a growing

Asian catchment, wider food &

beverage tastes and overseas

trends.

•Construction commenced in

November with the new tenant,

STACKS, expected to commence

trading at the end of Q1 FY27.

Sylvia Park southern enhancement


•This project includes an extension to

the existing Kmart tenancy and a

new customer respite experience

(including new and reconfigured food

offerings opening directly onto green

open space).

•Construction commenced in

February, with the works expected to

complete across Q2 and Q3 in FY27.

Vero Centre refresh

•Comprehensive refresh of shared

spaces to enhance amenity,

functionality and tenant experience.

•Works include upgrades to the

Shortland Street entry (including a

major digital art display) and Fort

Street entry, a vibrant refresh of the

Level 6 lobby and cafe, and a new

end-of-trip facility.

•The project started in January and

completion is expected in Q3 of FY27.

21
Drury progressing

Project update

•Stage 1 civil and infrastructure works are well underway.

•This includes the construction of key roads, installation of

drainage and provision of utility services.

•Completion of these works is required to create individual

sections and enable title to be issued to the large-format

retail land purchasers.

•The project’s financial returns are sensitive to cost, timing

and valuation movements. We remain focused on capital

discipline, settlement of contracted sales and staged

delivery.

Fast-track project approval granted

•Stage 2 of the Drury development was granted consent in

November 2025 under the Government’s Fast-track

Approvals Act 2025.

•The approval has increased the consented developable area

to ~140,000 sqm. This allows for a commercial retail centre,

including approximately:

•33,000 sqm commercial,

•96,000 sqm retail,

•10,000 sqm community activity, and

•Future residential activity.

Click here to

view aerial

footage of

development

progress at

Drury

21

LFR land sales agreed
•During FY26, we entered into four key large-format retail

(LFR) land sale & purchase agreements:

•The LFR land sales have been agreed at an average price of

$1,080/sqm for a total selling price of $115 million.

•Remaining sales are largely conditional on completing

agreed development works to enable the transfer of titles.

•These agreements result in 77% of the land intended for sale

for LFR purposes now under contract.

•Drury land sales are expected to help fund the project’s

capital expenditure, with minimal net gearing impact on the

KPG balance sheet.

22

Drury sale proceeds timing

Drury site plan

Boundaries are

indicative only.

Harvey

Norman

Rebel Sport

/ Briscoes

New World

Costco

Wholesale

Purchaser

LFR land

sold

Sale

agreed

Sale status

Expected settlement

FY27 FY28 FY29

Foodstuffs

(New World)

1.2 haQ1 FY26Unconditional

Costco6.4 haQ3 FY26Conditional

Harvey Norman2.0 haQ3 FY26Conditional

Rebel Sport /

Briscoes

1.1 haQ3 FY26Conditional

Total10.7 ha$115 million

23
Drury: key metrics

Key metricsStage 1Stage 2Total

Gross land area53.4ha

Acquisition cost$55.3m

Total additional costs incurred to date$100.7m

Total acquisition and development costs$155.9m

Current market value (March 2026)$146.5m

Saleable land area21.8ha17.1ha38.9ha

% of total saleable land area56%44%100%

Capex remaining post 31 March

1

~$92m~$75m~$167m

Completed value

2

~$239m~$137m~$376m

Proceeds from agreed land sales to date~$115mN/A~$115m

Target land development property IRR range15-20%

1: Stage 1 & 2 capex allowances reflect the costs to develop fully serviced super lots before development management fees and capitalised interest, and are shown on a real basis, i.e. before inflation allowances. 2: Completed

value assumes the sale of fully serviced super lots in Stage 1, and the assumed value of one large raw land parcel for Stage 2. Completed value for both stages is presented excluding inflation.

Target IRR range: we continue to target a land development property IRR of 15–20%. Achieving this range remains subject to delivery costs, timing, settlement of agreed sales,

future sales outcomes, market conditions and staging decisions.

•98% of the units were leased at March 2026 despite soft apartment leasing
conditions and increased supply.

•High-quality assets continued to demonstrate resilience, with new

competing supply having no material impact on Resido’s occupancy.

•Since September 2025, Resido has had at least 97% of units leased.

•Resido’s proximity to Sylvia Park is an advantage that supports demand and

retention, with residents naming it the standout benefit

2

and 97% reporting

they are satisfied or very satisfied with this amenity.

70%

80%

90%

100%

Mar-25Jun-25Sept-25Dec-25Mar-26

97% & above

Units leased %

Resido: moving towards stabilisation

1: Based on Tenancy Services data of 1 to 3-bed apartment units in Auckland for the three months ended February 2026.

2: Based on the latest resident satisfaction survey completed in November 2025.

General note: units leased include both occupied and unconditionally leased units at the reporting date, consistent with the broader

portfolio occupancy approach (noting the broader portfolio is measured on a net lettable area basis).

24

25
Mackersy Property investment

Cardinal Logistics building, Drury (managed by Mackersy)

Overview

•Mackersy Property is a New Zealand investment

management business with a diversified national portfolio

under management worth over $2 billion across multiple

property uses.

Investment progress

•Kiwi Property’s original $6.5 million investment, made via a

convertible loan in November 2024, was converted to a 50%

ownership interest during FY26 as planned.

•A recent independent valuation supports the cost of the

investment (including future earn-out payments).

Strategic rationale

•While the previously announced sale of Sylvia Park Lifestyle

into a Mackersy-managed large-format retail fund did not

proceed, the strategic merits of the investment remain.

•The investment provides ongoing exposure to a scaled

investment management platform with earnings growth

trajectory and optionality for future capital recycling and

partnerships.

26
Strategic refresh

& FY27 outlook

Spotlight on strategy
Our strategy remains consistent, but we have refined how we describe it

•Our purpose reflects the role our assets play in people’s

lives.

•Our ambition has been refined to more clearly express

what we do and why it matters. It highlights our

aspiration to deliver superior experiences and returns

for our customers and investors.

•Our strategic pillars reflect the maturity of our strategy:

they are long-term and enduring. The pillars describe

the fundamental drivers of value at Kiwi Property, and

are supported by annual goals and priorities.

•Read more about our refreshed strategy on page 14 of

our annual report.

27

Update

?

AMBITION:

AssetsCapitalCustomer

Capability

PURPOSE:

We own and

operate a

portfolio of the

best retail-led

mixed-use

assets in the

best locations.

We actively

manage the

balance sheet

and allocate

capital with

discipline to

fund growth and

deliver superior

returns.

We deliver

compelling

experiences that

meet the

evolving needs

of customers

and tenants.

We operate a

high-performing

organisation with

the people and

systems to

deliver

consistently and

adapt with

confidence.

STRATEGIC PILLARS:

We create places where people connect and thrive

To be New Zealand’s leading creator of retail-led destinations,

delivering superior experiences and returns

Our investment philosophy supports our refreshed strategy
Disciplined capital allocation focused on long-term value creation

How we allocate capital

Disciplined and returns-led

•Capital is prioritised to opportunities that are earnings

accretive, appropriately risk-adjusted, and aligned with our

strategic objectives.

•Active capital recycling is used to continuously improve

portfolio quality.

•Selective investment into higher-return opportunities where

risk is well understood and supported by proven capability.

Investment focus areas

We prioritise assets and opportunities that demonstrate:

•Strong, sustainable earnings supported by defensible

demand drivers.

•Resilience through the cycle, including scale, location, quality

and income durability.

28

Investment philosophy:

Ownership of a resilient, retail-led portfolio focused on best-in-class assets in high-growth nodes.

Core

Value Add

Opportunistic

7-9% p.a.

9-15% p.a.

15%+ p.a.

Investment type

Target property

returns

(pre-tax IRR)

Typical return focus

Stable, lower-risk income

Enhanced returns through leasing,

re -mixing & densification

Capital-led returns

•Embedded growth optionality, where additional capital enhances

long-term returns.

•Strategic fit with our platform, capabilities and balance sheet.

•Investments are assessed against defined return hurdles under

Kiwi Property’s Investment Decision-making Framework:

FY27 focus areas
Focused initiatives in FY27 to drive sustainable growth and create value for shareholders

Win on experience to

sustain leasing momentum

Maintain balance sheet

flexibility & deploy capital

with discipline

Lift operating performance

through an efficient &

high-performing team

29

Refine & grow our high-

quality retail-led portfolio

AssetsCapital

CustomerCapability

Market conditions and outlook
FY26 saw improvement across retail & office sectors

and transaction environment; some uncertainty ahead

FY26 performance

•Retail sales environment strengthened through the year.

•Office conditions remained competitive but we saw good leasing

demand for quality assets.

•Transaction activity resumed, enabling capital recycling.

FY27 outlook

•Conditions have become more complex.

•In recent months, market volatility and emerging cost pressures from

fuel supply disruption have increased uncertainty across the

operating environment.

•Kiwi Property’s portfolio is resilient; supported by quality assets with

high occupancy.

30

FY27 dividend guidance
Our goal is to deliver sustainable earnings and target 3% average annual dividend growth

31

General note: FY27 dividend guidance and payments are contingent on Kiwi Property’s financial performance through the financial year and barring material adverse events or unforeseen circumstances.

5.75 cps

FY27 full year dividend

+2.7% on prior year, expected to be at

higher end of 90% to 100% AFFO payout range

3.2%

Average annual dividend growth

over FY26 and FY27 (forecast)

32
Appendix 1:

Financial update

20262025Variance
$m$m$m%

Sylvia Park shopping centre

64.6 64.6 -0.0 -0.0

ANZ Raranga5.2 4.9 +0.3 +5.2

Sylvia Park Lifestyle6.3 6.4 -0.1 -0.8

Geneva House (3 Te Kehu Way)4.2 2.8 +1.4 +48.8

Resido7.7 1.3 +6.4 +511.6

Adjoining properties5.2 5.4 -0.2 -3.2

Sylvia Park precinct93.2 85.4 +7.8 +9.2

LynnMall23.4 22.7 +0.7 +3.3

The Base17.3 16.7 +0.6 +3.7

Retail-led mixed-use portfolio133.9 124.7 +9.2 +7.4

Vero Centre24.8 24.4 +0.4 +1.8

The Aurora Centre9.1 8.3 +0.8 +9.3

Office portfolio33.9 32.7 +1.2 +3.7

Centre Place North3.0 3.5 -0.5 -14.3

ASB North Wharf14.8 14.6 +0.2 +1.0

Other17.8 18.1 -0.3 -1.9

The Plaza – divested in December 202512.6 15.9 -3.3 -20.9

Net operating income198.2 191.5 +6.7 +3.5

Straight-lining of fixed rental increases4.1 2.4 +1.7 +68.0

Allowance for expected credit loss(0.1)(0.5)+0.4 +78.9

Other net income0.1 0.6 -0.5 -83.7

NZ IFRS 16 expense reclassifications0.1 0.1 +0.0 +37.0

Net rental income202.4 194.1 +8.3 +4.3

33

Net rental income contribution by property

20262025Variance
$m$m$m%

Profit after income tax

1

50.457.0 -6.6-11.5

Adjusted for:

Net fair value loss on investment properties37.811.6 +26.2+225.9

Net fair value (gain)/loss on interest rate derivatives -4.010.1 -14.1-139.6

Impairment loss on inventories13.1- +13.1+100.0

Loss on disposal of investment properties1.2- +1.2+100.0

Other income-0.3- -0.3-100.0

Straight-lining of fixed rental increases-4.1-2.4 -1.7-70.8

Amortisation of tenant incentives and leasing fees

6.16.6 -0.5-7.6

Share-based payment expense0.51.0 -0.5-50.0

Depreciation of property, plant and equipment0.60.7 -0.1-14.3

Deferred tax expense

6.016.9 -10.9-64.5

Funds from operations (FFO)

1

(non-GAAP) 107.3101.5 +5.8+5.7

Adjusted for:

Maintenance capital expenditure

-4.8-5.1+0.3+5.9

Capitalised tenant incentives and leasing fees

-4.8-4.1-0.7-17.1

One-off costs

2

2.50.5+2.0+400.0

Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO)

1

(non-GAAP)

100.292.8+7.4+8.0

34

AFFO reconciliation to profit after income tax

1: Refer to Glossary for definitions. 2: One-off costs are adjusted for income tax where applicable.

Year ended 31 March
20262025202420232022

$m$m$m$m$m

Dividend ($m)

92.286.9 90.5 89.5

87.9

Payout ratio

92%93%90%77%88%

cpscpscpscpscps

Dividend

5.60 5.405.705.705.60

Imputation credits

1.34 1.301.011.131.43

Gross dividend

6.94 6.706.716.837.03

Financial year

20262022-2025

(average)

Movement

cps

Movement

%

Dividend (cps)

5.60 5.60

+0.00+0.0%

Imputation (cps)

1.34 1.22

+0.12+10.0%

Gross dividend (cps)

6.94 6.82

+0.12+1.8%

35

Dividend five-year summary

As at
31-Mar-2631-Mar-25Movement

$m$m$m%

Investment properties3,116.03,209.2-93.2-2.9

Inventories98.589.2+9.3+10.4

Total investment properties and inventories3,214.53,298.4-83.9-2.5

Cash10.414.4-4.0-27.8

Trade and other receivables12.816.3-3.5-21.5

Other assets12.010.2+1.8+17.6

Total assets3,249.73,339.3-89.6-2.7

Finance debt1,216.71,284.6-67.9-5.3

Deferred tax liabilities137.8132.9+4.9+3.7

Other liabilities54.461.9-7.5-12.1

Total liabilities 1,408.81,479.4-70.6-4.8

Total equity1,840.91,859.9-19.0-1.0

Total equity and liabilities3,249.73,339.3-89.6-2.7

36

Balance sheet

37
Appendix 2:

Property update

Sylvia Park shopping centre
Sylvia Park precinct

Sylvia Park Lifestyle

Sylvia Park precinct

Geneva House

Sylvia Park precinct

ANZ Raranga

Sylvia Park precinct

Resido

Sylvia Park precinct

LynnMallThe BaseCentre Place North

The Aurora CentreVero Centre

Retail-led

mixed-use

OfficeOther

Our investment portfolio

38

General note: Investment portfolio shown excludes development land and ASB North Wharf which is held for sale.

31-Mar-2631-Mar-25
Retail-led

mixed-useOfficeOther Total

Retail-led

mixed-useOfficeOtherTotal

Number of assets

42174329

Value ($m)

1

2,237.9597.027.82,862.72,165.0815.5158.23,138.8

% of total portfolio by value70191896625595

Weighted average capitalisation rates

2

6.23%6.31%9.02%6.28%6.26%6.13%8.84%6.37%

Net lettable area (sqm)309,12864,22519,468392,820307,87185,84351,917445,630

Number of tenants813537293876859166993

% investment portfolio by gross income75%22%2%100%652510100

Occupancy (by area)

3

99.1%99.4%94.4%99.0%97.0%96.5%96.8%96.9%

Weighted average lease expiry by income (WALE)

4

3.1 years5.7 years2.2 years3.6 years3.2 years5.9 years2.3 years3.8 years

The following notes apply to all of Appendix 2(where applicable): 1: The value excludes the gross up of lease liabilities required by NZ IFRS 16 Leases. At 31-Mar-26, investment portfolio excludes development land with a value of

$146.5m (4.6% of total portfolio value) and ASB North Wharf which is held for sale at $205.0m (6.4% of total portfolio value). The Plaza was disposed of during the current financial year. 2: The weighted average capitalisation rate

excludes Resido which is valued usingthediscounted cashflow methodology and certain adjoining properties which are valued using direct comparison methodology. The rate at 31-Mar-26 also excludes ASB North Wharf which

is held at contract price. 3: Occupancy is calculated based on net lettable area, excluding vacant tenancies subject to current or committed development works. 4: WALE excludes Resido. General note 1: Kiwi Property owns

100% of all assets except The Base and Centre Place North, which are 50% owned. General note 2: Retail-led mixed-use assets comprise Sylvia Park precinct (where Sylvia Park Lifestyle, and the balance of the Sylvia Park

precinct, are counted as two assets), LynnMall and The Base.Held for sale assets are excluded at 31-Mar-26.

39

Investment portfolio summary

Adopted value $mCapitalisation rate %NLA sqmOccupancy %WALE years
As at31-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-25

Sylvia Park1,130.01,080.05.885.8893,82994,24099.599.63.02.9

ANZ Raranga88.489.46.256.0011,62011,620100.095.82.93.7

Geneva House

(3 TeKehu Way)

64.865.76.256.007,2777,27798.795.98.39.0

Sylvia Park Lifestyle89.090.06.256.3816,57816,57895.5100.03.5

4.1

Resido

1

200.0207.0N/AN/A18,36618,59497.781.8N/AN/A

Adjoining properties

2

212.3203.6N/AN/A36,04634,585100.090.43.02.8

Sylvia Park precinct1,784.51,735.75.945.92183,716182,89499.195.73.33.3

LynnMall218.5205.07.507.6336,77636,72099.499.82.42.6

The Base234.9224.36.887.1388,63588,25799.0100.02.83.1

Retail-led mixed-use

portfolio

2,237.92,165.06.236.26309,128307,87199.197.03.13.2

40

Portfolio statistics

1: Resido is valued using the discounted cash flow methodology. At 31-Mar-25 Resido is recognised at its ‘as is’ value, post deduction of costs to complete of $0.8m. 2:A capitalisation rate is not provided as many of the adjoining

properties are valued using direct comparison methodology. Occupancy and WALE metrics are provided for the adjoining properties that are not currently recorded as held for development.

Adopted value $mCapitalisation rate %NLA sqmOccupancy %WALE years
As at31-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-25

Vero Centre450.0456.56.135.8839,72039,71799.192.44.94.7

ASB North Wharf

1

N/A212.0N/A6.43N/A21,621N/A100.0N/A6.1

The Aurora Centre147.0147.06.886.5024,50524,505100.0100.07.78.7

Office portfolio597.0815.56.316.1364,22585,84399.496.55.75.9

Centre Place North27.832.29.028.7019,46819,68094.094.72.22.0

The Plaza

1

N/A126.0N/A8.88N/A32,237N/A97.4N/A2.3

Other27.8158.29.028.8419,46851,91794.096.82.22.3

Investment portfolio2,862.73,138.86.286.37392,820445,63099.096.93.63.8

Properties held for sale205.0-

Development land

2

146.5159.2

Total portfolio

3

3,214.23,297.9

41

Portfolio statistics (continued)

1: Statistics exclude ASB North Wharf, which is classified as held for sale as at 31-Mar-26, and The Plaza which was disposed of during the current financial year. 2: The value of development land includes the Drury Stage 2 land value

retained within the property portfolio plus the value of the Stage 1 land which is carried in inventories. 3: Excludes the gross-up of lease liabilities required by NZ IFRS 16 Leases.

Rent reviewsRetail-led
mixed-use

OfficeOtherTotal

No.3783342453

% investment portfolio gross income

1

48%11%2%61%

Rental movement (%)+3.9%+4.3%+4.3%+4.0%

Compound annual growth (%)+3.6%+1.3%+4.3%+2.6%

New leases and renewals

No.1111419144

% investment portfolio gross income

1

12%2%1%15%

Rental movement (%)+6.6%+13.4%-9.8%+6.3%

WALE (years)5.17.23.85.3

Total (excl. development leasing)

No.4894761597

% investment portfolio gross income

1

59%14%3%77%

Rental movement (%)+4.5%+6.0%-2.0%4.5%

1: The percentage is approximated using the newly achieved rent compared to the portfolio’s forecast gross income as at 31-Mar-26. 2:

Includes tenants that are on holdover, Activate leases (including in-centre advertising and short-term leasing) and leases that are no longer

subject to review. General note 1: Leasing statistics, except the future rent review structure as at 31-Mar-26, are not adjusted to reflect Kiwi

Property’s ownership interest. General note 2: The analysis on this page excludes Resido and held for sale assets.

42

Rent reviews and new leasing

Fixed

57%

Market

7%

Holdovers,

Activate,

etc.²

27%

CPI-based

10%

Future rent review structure

at 31-Mar-26

73%

7%
14%

16%

12%

13%

38%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

Vacant or holdoverFY27FY28FY29FY30FY31+

Lease expiry profile

% of investment portfolio gross income

Key:Retail-led mixed-useOfficeOther

General note: The analysis on this page excludes Resido and held for sale assets.

43

Lease expiry profile

1: Includes Sylvia Park, Sylvia Park Lifestyle, LynnMall, The Base Te Awa, The Base LFR and Centre Place North.2: IncludesSylvia Park, Sylvia Park Lifestyle, LynnMall, The Base Te Awa and The Base LFR. 3: Speciality sales and
speciality TOC includes Sylvia Park, LynnMall and The Base Te Awa. 4: Other centres relates to Centre Place North.5: Refer to Glossary for definitions. 6: Pedestrian count information is not collected for Sylvia Park Lifestyle. For

The Base large format retail stores, pedestrian count information is calculated using vehicle movement data and applying multipliers to estimate visitation. General note: All sales include GST. Sales are for the 12 months to 31-

Mar-26. Comparative figures may vary from what has been reported previously as sales figures are updated as annual audited sales are received.

All centres

1

Retail-led mixed-use centres

2,3

Other centres

4

31-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-2531-Mar-2631-Mar-25

Total sales (billion)$1.91$1.88$1.81$1.78$0.09$0.09

Total sales growth1.6%-1.1%1.5%-1.2%2.9%-0.5%

Like-for-like sales growth1.3%-3.6%1.7%-3.4%-6.8%-6.4%

Specialty sales (per sqm)$12,900$12,200$7,300$6,800

Specialty TOC

5

15.5%15.4%15.1%14.0%

Pedestrian count (million)

6

36.735.632.731.94.03.8

44

Retail sales

Sales by property
MAT $m

1

% var

12 months ended31-Mar-26vs 31-Mar-25

Sylvia Park858.21.5%

Sylvia Park Lifestyle

4

43.00.7%

Total Sylvia Park precinct901.21.4%

The Base Te Awa273.83.7%

The Base LFR

4

288.43.1%

Total The Base562.23.4%

LynnMall347.8-1.0%

Centre Place North95.02.9%

Portfolio total1,906.31.6%

45

Sales

2

by categoryMAT $m

1

% var. from 31-Mar-25

12 months ended31-Mar-26TotalLike-for-like

3

Supermarkets

208.54.6%4.6%

Department stores and DDS

169.84.6%4.6%

Cinemas

21.31.5%1.5%

Mini-majors

377.2-0.4%0.2%

Fashion

185.0-1.0%-2.1%

Commercial services (including

travel)

226.22.2%2.2%

Food

140.75.4%1.3%

Pharmacy and wellbeing

69.90.9%-0.2%

General (incl. Activate

5

)

81.4-8.5%-1.2%

Total1,4801.3%1.5%

1: All figures include GST. Sales are for the 12 months to 31-Mar-2026. 2: Includes Sylvia Park, LynnMall and The Base Te Awa. 3: Refer to Glossary for definitions. 4: Sales data is being requested from tenants who are not obliged to

provide it under their current leases. Total sales reported are shown, but due to the changing composition of those who do report, comparable statistics are variable.5: Activate includes short-term leasing.

Retail sales by property and category

46
Glossary

Glossary
Adjusted funds from operations

(AFFO)

Adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property. AFFO is a measure

commonly used by real estate entities to describe their underlying and recurring cash flows from operations. Broadly, AFFO adjusts FFO by

deducting the cost of lease incentives, leasing fees, maintenance capital expenditure for sustaining and maintaining existing space and one-

off costs. AFFO does not have a standard meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be comparable to information presented by

other entities. AFFO is calculated by Kiwi Property in accordance with the Voluntary Best Practice Guidelines issued by the Prop

erty Council of

Australia (the Guidelines). The reported AFFO information has been extracted from the relevant annual consolidated financial statements

which have been the subject to an audit pursuant to New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board.

Discount department store

(DDS)

Includes Kmart and The Warehouse.

Funds from operations

(FFO)

Funds from operations (FFO) is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property to assist investors in assessing the

Company’s underlying operating performance. FFO is a measure commonly used by real estate entities to describe their underlying and

recurring earnings from operations. FFO does not have a standard meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be comparable to

information presented by other entities. FFO is calculated by Kiwi Property in accordance with the Guidelines. The reported FFO information

has been extracted from the Company’s annual consolidated financial statements which have been the subject to an audit pursuant to the

New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board.

Gearing ratioCalculated as finance debt (which includes secured bank debt and the face value of bonds) over total tangible assets (which excludes interest

rate derivatives).

Generally accepted accounting

practice (GAAP)

A common set of accounting principles,standards and procedures that companies must follow when they compile their financial

statements. Kiwi Property’s financial statements comply with New Zealand Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards and

other guidance as issued by the External Reporting Board, as appropriate for profit-oriented entities, and with International Financial Reporting

Standards.

Like-for-like retail salesOnly includes sales from those tenants who have traded for the past 24 full months.

Management expense ratio

(MER)

Management expense ratio is an alternative non-GAAP measure used by Kiwi Property to assist investors in assessing the company’s

underlying operatingcosts. MER is a measure commonly used by real estate entities. MER does not have a standard meaning prescribed by

GAAP andtherefore may not be comparable to information presented by other entities. Kiwi Property determines MER by using adjusted

employment and administration expenses divided by the weighted average value of propertyassets under management. Employment and

administration expenses are adjusted by removing one-off costs incurred during the relevant financial year.

47

Glossary
Moving annual turnover(MAT)Annual sales on a rolling 12-month basis (including GST).

Net operating income(NOI)NOI is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property. NOI is a measure commonly used by real estate entities to

describe their operating earnings from investment properties. NOI is calculated by Kiwi Property as rental revenue from investment

properties, minus expenses directly attributable to those operations. NOI excludes income resulting from straight-lining of fixed rental

increases and includes the amortisation of lease incentives.

Net rental income (NRI)NRI is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property. NRI is calculated as NOI, including rental income resulting from

straight-lining of fixed rental increases, allowance for expected credit loss, other income and expense reclassifications required under NZ IFRS

16 Leases.

Net tangible assets (NTA)Represents net asset backing per share and calculated as net assets divided by shares on issue.

Operating profit before

income tax

Operating profit before income tax is an alternative non-GAAP performance measure used by Kiwi Property to assist investors in assessing the

Company’s performance for the year by adjusting for a number of non-operating items. Operating profit before income tax does not have a

standard meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be comparable to information presented by other entities. The reported

operating profit before income tax has been extracted from the relevant annual consolidated financial statements which have been the

subject to an audit pursuant to the New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External Reporting Board.

Profit after income taxThe reported profit after income tax has been prepared in accordance with GAAP and complies with New Zealand Equivalents to International

Financial Reporting Standards. The reported profit after income tax information has been extracted from the Company’s annual consolidated

financial statements which have been the subject to an audit pursuant to the New Zealand Auditing Standards issued by the External

Reporting Board.

Total occupancy cost (TOC)

TOC includes rent, operating costs and marketing levies (excluding GST) and is expressed as a percentage of moving annual turnover

(including GST).

48

The information in this presentation is an overview and does not contain all information necessary to make an investment decision. It is intended to constitute a summary of certain information relating to the
performance of Kiwi Property Group for the 12 months ended 31 March 2026. Please refer to Kiwi Property Group’s annual report including the consolidated annual financial statements for further information in relation

to the 12 months ended 31 March 2026.

The information in this presentation does not purport to be a complete description of Kiwi Property Group. This presentation is for information purposes only and is not an invitation or offer of financial products for

subscription, purchase or sale in any jurisdiction. This document is not a prospectus or product disclosure statement or other offering document under New Zealand law or any other law. An investment in the financial

products of Kiwi Property Group Limited is subject to investment and other known and unknown risks, some of which are beyond the control of Kiwi Property Group Limited. Kiwi Property Group does not guarantee its

performance or the performance of any of its financial products unless and to the extent explicitly stated in a prospectus or product disclosure statement or other offering document. In making an investment decision,

investors must rely on their own examination of Kiwi Property Group, including the merits and risks involved. Investors should consult with their own legal, tax, business and/or financial advisors in connection with any

acquisition of securities. This presentation does not constitute advice of any kind whatsoever and must not be relied on as such.

Past performance information given in this presentation should not be relied upon as (and is not) an indication or guarantee of future performance. This presentation contains certain forward-looking statements such

as indications of, and guidance on, future earnings and financial position and performance. The forward-looking statements contained in this presentation are not guarantees or predictions of future performance and

involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of Kiwi Property Group, and may involve significant elements of subjective judgement and assumptions as to

future events which may or may not be correct. There is no assurance or guarantee that actual outcomes will not materially differ from these forward-looking statements.

Kiwi Property makes no representation or warranty, express or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness, reliability or sufficiency of the information in this presentation or the reasonableness of the assumptions in this

document, any of which may change without notice. To the maximum extent permitted by law, Kiwi Property Group Limited and its directors, officers, employees, agents and advisers disclaim all liability and

responsibility (including without limitation any liability arising from fault or negligence on the part of Kiwi Property Group, its directors, officers, employees and agents) for any direct or indirect loss or damage which

may be suffered by any recipient through use of or reliance on anything contained in, or omitted from, this presentation.

Statements made in this document are made only as at the date of this document unless another date is specified. Except as required by law or regulation (including the NZX Listing Rules), Kiwi Property Group

undertakes no obligation to provide any additional or updated information or revise or reaffirm the information in this document whether as a result of new information, future events, results or otherwise.

Any sales information included in this document has been obtained from third parties or, where such information has not been provided by third parties, estimated by Kiwi Property Group based on information

available to it. The sales information has not been independently verified. The sales information included in this presentation will not be complete where third parties have not provided complete sales information and

Kiwi Property Group has not estimated sales information. This presentation should not be relied upon as a representation, warranty or undertaking in relation to the currency, accuracy, reliability or completeness of the

sales information contained in this presentation.

Pedestrian count information is not collected for Sylvia Park Lifestyle. For The Base large format retail stores, pedestrian count information is calculated using vehicle movement data and applying multipliers to

estimate visitation. Pedestrian count information contained in this document, including any multipliers utilised for the purposes of calculating pedestrian count data, may not have been verified, and Kiwi Property

makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or reliability of the pedestrian count information.

No contract or other legal obligations shall arise between Kiwi Property Group and any recipient of this document.

All images (including any dimensions) are for illustrative purposes only and are subject to change at any time and from time to time without notice.

Copyright in this document and the information contained in it is vested in Kiwi Property Group Limited. This document should not be copied, reproduced or redistributed without the prior written consent of Kiwi

Property Group Limited.

Disclaimer

49

Thank you
50

---

Distribution notice


Section 1: Issuer information

Name of issuer Kiwi Property Group Limited

Financial product name/description Ordinary Shares

NZX ticker code KPG

ISIN NZKPGE0001S9

Type of distribution Full Year X Quarterly

Half Year Special

DRP applies

Record date 11 June 2026

Ex-Date 10 June 2026

Payment date (and allotment date for

DRP)

19 June 2026

Total monies associated with the

distribution

$23,083,014

Source of distribution (for example,

retained earnings)

Retained earnings

Currency NZD

Section 2: Distribution amounts per financial product

Gross distribution $0.01677444

Total cash distribution $0.01400000

Excluded amount (applicable to listed

PIEs)

$0.00686572

Supplementary distribution amount $0.00125899

Section 3: Imputation credits and Resident Withholding Tax

Is the distribution imputed Partial imputation

If fully or partially imputed, please state

imputation rate as % applied

28% on the imputed component

Imputation tax credits per financial

product

$0.00277444

Resident Withholding Tax per financial

product

N/A

Section 4: Distribution re-investment plan (if applicable)

DRP % discount (if any) N/A

Start date and end date for determining

market price for DRP

N/A N/A

Date strike price to be announced (if not

available at this time)

N/A






Specify source of financial products to

be issued under DRP programme

N/A

DRP strike price per financial product

N/A

Last date to submit a participation

notice for this distribution in accordance

with DRP participation terms

N/A

Section 5: Authority for this announcement

Name of person authorised to make this

announcement

Fraser Gunn

Contact person for this announcement Fraser Gunn

Contact phone number +64 9 359 4093

Contact email address fraser.gunn@kp.co.nz

Date of release through MAP

18 May 2026

---

2026
Property Compendium

Contents
Overview3

Portfolio metrics4

Retail-led mixed-use8

Office16

Other19

Overview
About Kiwi Property

Kiwi Property (NZX: KPG) is one of the

largest listed property companies on

the New Zealand Stock Exchange and a

member of the S&P/NZX 20 Index.

We’ve been creating the spaces that

New Zealanders love for more than 30

years, with expertise in property

investment, development and asset

management.

We proudly own and manage over

$3 billion in direct property investments, as

well as manage properties valued at over

$450 million for third-party clients.

Our strategy

Our strategy is built on four pillars:

1.Assets

We own and operate a portfolio of the

best retail-led mixed-use assets in the

best locations.

2.Capital

We actively manage the balance sheet

and allocate capital with discipline to

fund growth and deliver superior returns.

3.Customer

We deliver compelling experiences that

meet the evolving needs of customers

and tenants.

4.Capability

We operate a high-performing

organisation with the people and

systems to deliver consistently and

adapt with confidence.

3

This compendium for the year ended 31 March 2026 should be read in conjunction with the NZX announcement and annual report released on 18 May 2026.

Refer to our website kp.co.nz or nzx.com. Property statistics within this document represent partially or fully owned assets only; property interests managed on

behalf of third parties are excluded. Unless otherwise indicated, all of the numerical data provided in this document is stated for theyear ended and/or as

at 31 March 2026. All amounts are in New Zealand dollars. Due to rounding, numbers within this document may not add up precisely to the totals provided and

percentages may not precisely reflect the absolute figures. All sales include GST. Sales are for the 12 months to 31 March 2026.

Portfolio metrics

Our investment portfolio
5

Sylvia Park shopping centre

Sylvia Park precinct

Sylvia Park Lifestyle

Sylvia Park precinct

Geneva House

Sylvia Park precinct

ANZ Raranga

Sylvia Park precinct

Resido

Sylvia Park precinct

LynnMallThe BaseCentre Place North

The Aurora CentreVero Centre

Retail-led

mixed-use

OfficeOther

7%
14%

16%

12%

13%

38%

Vacant or

holdover

FY27FY28FY29FY30FY31+

Our investment portfolio

6

Lease expiry profile (% of investment portfolio gross income)

2

Geographic diversification (by investment portfolio value)

1

Auckland86%

Hamilton9%

Wellington5%

$2.9bn

Investment portfolio

value

1

99.0%

Occupancy

3.6 years

WALE by income

$198.2m

FY26 NOI

Retail-led mixed-useOfficeOther

1: Investment portfolio value excludes assets held for sale and development land. 2: Excludes Resido.

Our investment portfolio (continued)
7

Portfolio tenant mix

BY INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO GROSS INCOME

As at 31 March 2026Retail led mixed-useOfficeOtherInvestment portfolio

Speciality shops44%1%67%35%

Mini-majors21%-12%16%

Government<1%26%9%6%

Banking7%2%-6%

Department stores

1

7%--5%

Residential6%--5%

Legal-21%1%5%

Insurance1%16%-4%

Finance<1%17%-4%

Other office2%12%-4%

Other industrial4%--3%

Supermarket3%--2%

Cinemas2%-8%2%

Consultancy<1%4%-1%

Other retail1%<1%3%1%

1: The department stores category includes discount department stores.

Retail-led mixed-use

Sylvia Park
Shopping Centre

9

Valuation metrics

286 Mount Wellington

Highway,

Mount Wellington,

Auckland

sylviapark.com

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Valuation$1,130.0m

ValuerJLL

Capitalisation rate5.88%

Sales performance

Annual sales$858.2m

Pedestrian count16.7m

Key tenants

FarmersThe Warehouse

KmartHOYTS Cinemas

H&MZara

PAK’nSAVENoel Leeming

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Asset typeMajor Regional Centre

Date completedJune 2007

Last refurbished/redeveloped2022

Net lettable area93,829 sqm

Tenants231

Carparks4,091

Property metrics

Occupancy99.5%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry3.0 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover10%

FY2719%

FY2818%

FY2912%

FY3010%

FY31+30%

Key tenants
ANZ Raranga

10

Valuation metrics

286 Mount Wellington

Highway,

Mount Wellington,

Auckland

sylviapark.com

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Kiwi Property 2026 Property Compendium

Valuation$88.4m

ValuerJLL

Capitalisation rate6.25%

ANZIAG

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Building gradeA-grade Office

Date completedDecember 2018

Last refurbished/redevelopedN/A

Net lettable area11,620 sqm

Tenants5

Carparks88

Property metrics

Occupancy100%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry2.9 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover0%

FY274%

FY289%

FY2960%

FY300%

FY31+27%

Sustainability credentials

NABERSNZ energy rating5.5 star

Green Star design and build rating

1

5 star

1: Green Star Office Design rating

ASBGeneva Finance
IWGLocal Doctors

Geneva House

11

Valuation metrics

3 Te Kehu Way,

Mount Wellington,

Auckland

sylviapark.com

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Valuation$64.8m

ValuerJLL

Capitalisation rate6.25%

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Building gradeA-grade Office

Date completedMarch 2023

Last refurbished/redevelopedN/A

Net lettable area7,277 sqm

Tenants13

Carparks178

Property metrics

Occupancy98.7%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry8.3 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover2%

FY270%

FY280%

FY290%

FY309%

FY31+89%

Sustainability credentials

NABERSNZ energy rating5.5 star

Green Star design and build rating

1

6 star

1: Green Star


Design & As Built NZv.10 Built rating

Key tenants

Sylvia Park Lifestyle
12

Valuation metrics

393 Mount Wellington

Highway,

Mount Wellington,

Auckland

sylviapark.com

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Valuation$89.0m

ValuerBayleys

Capitalisation rate6.25%

Sales performance

Annual sales$42.9m

Key tenants

Freedom FurnitureSpotlight

The Outlet

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Asset typeLarge Format Retail

Date completedNovember 2011

Last refurbished/redevelopedN/A

Net lettable area16,578 sqm

Tenants15

Carparks417

Property metrics

Occupancy95.5%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry3.5 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover4%

FY278%

FY2818%

FY2916%

FY3028%

FY31+28%

Property metrics
Occupancy97.7%

Resido

13

Valuation metrics

27 Lynton Road,

Mount Wellington,

Auckland

resido.co.nz

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Valuation$200.0m

ValuerCBRE

Key tenants

Urban Rest

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Asset typeBuild-to -rent

Date completedJune 2024

Apartment units295

Net lettable area18,366 sqm

Tenants256

Typology

Studio12

1-bedroom177

2-bedrooms101

3-bedrooms5

Sustainability credentials

Homestar design and build rating

1

9 star

1: 9 star Homestar v4.1 Built rating

LynnMall
14

Valuation metrics

3058 Great North

Road,

New Lynn, Auckland

lynnmall.co.nz

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Valuation$218.5m

ValuerJLL

Capitalisation rate7.50%

Sales performance

Annual sales$347.8m

Pedestrian count7.2m

Key tenants

WoolworthsNoel Leeming

FarmersJB-HiFi

Reading Cinemas

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Asset typeRegional Centre

Date acquired

(constructed 1963)

December 2010

Last refurbished/redeveloped2015

Net lettable area36,776 sqm

Tenants127

Carparks1,326

Property metrics

Occupancy99.4%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry2.4 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover11%

FY2715%

FY2818%

FY2920%

FY3011%

FY31+24%

The Base
15

Valuation metrics

Corner Te Rapa Road

and Wairere Drive,

Hamilton

the-base.co.nz

Portfolio:

Retail-led mixed-use

Valuation

1

$234.9m

ValuerBayleys

Capitalisation rate6.88%

Sales performance

Annual sales

2

$562.3m

Pedestrian count8.9m

Key tenants

Property overview

Ownership interest50%

Asset typeMajor Regional Centre

Date acquired

(constructed 2004-2014)

May 2016

Last refurbished/redeveloped2018

Net lettable area88,635 sqm

Tenants153

Carparks3,329

Property metrics

Occupancy99.0%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry2.8 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover5%

FY2721%

FY2822%

FY297%

FY3013%

FY31+32%

FarmersThe Warehouse

Mitre 10 MegaHOYTS Cinemas

BriscoesRebel Sport

Noel LeemingJB-HiFi

1: Kiwi Property’s 50% ownership interest. 2: Annual sales are unadjusted for ownership interest.

Office

Vero Centre
17

Valuation metrics

48 Shortland Street,

Auckland

CBD, Auckland

Portfolio:

Office

Valuation$450.0m

ValuerColliers

Capitalisation rate6.13%

Key tenants

Suncorpnib

Russell McVeaghCraigs Investment Partners

Wynn WilliamsSuntory Oceania

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Building gradePremium

Date acquired

(constructed 2000)

April 2001

Last refurbished/redeveloped2016

Net lettable area39,720 sqm

Tenants50

Carparks416

Property metrics

Occupancy99.1%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry4.9 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover2%

FY274%

FY2814%

FY294%

FY3025%

FY31+51%

Sustainability credentials

NABERSNZ energy rating4.5 star

The Aurora Centre
18

Valuation metrics

56 The Terrace,

Wellington,

CBD, Wellington

Portfolio:

Office

Valuation$147.0m

ValuerCBRE

Capitalisation rate6.88%

Key tenants

Ministry of Social Development

Property overview

Ownership interest100%

Building gradeA-grade

Date acquired

(constructed 1968)

April 2004

Last refurbished/redeveloped2014-2016

Net lettable area24,505 sqm

Tenants3

Carparks310

Property metrics

Occupancy100%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry7.7 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover0%

FY279%

FY280%

FY290%

FY300%

FY31+91%

Sustainability credentials

NABERSNZ energy rating5.5 star

Other

Centre Place North
20

Valuation metrics

501 Victoria Street,

Hamilton

centreplace.co.nz

Portfolio:

Other

Valuation

1

$27.8m

ValuerBayleys

Capitalisation rate9.02%

Sales performance

Annual sales

2

$95.0m

Pedestrian count4.0m

Key tenants

LINZRebel Sport

HOYTS Cinemas Chemist Warehouse

Property overview

Ownership interest50%

Asset typeSub Regional Centre

Date acquired

(constructed 1985)

December 1994

Last refurbished/redeveloped2011

Net lettable area19,468 sqm

Tenants72

Carparks612

Property metrics

Occupancy94.0%

Weighted Average Lease Expiry2.2 years

Lease expiry profile

Vacant or holdover18%

FY2721%

FY286%

FY2919%

FY3016%

FY31+19%

1: Kiwi Property’s 50% ownership interest. 2: Annual sales are unadjusted for ownership interest.

Disclaimer
The information in this document is an overview

and does not contain all information necessary to

make an investment decision. It is intended to

constitute a summary of certain information

relating to the performance of Kiwi Property Group

for the 12 months ended 31 March 2026. Please

refer to Kiwi Property Group’s annual report

including the consolidated annual financial

statements for further information in relation to the

12 months ended 31 March 2026.

The information in this document does not purport

to be a complete description of Kiwi Property

Group. This document is for information purposes

only and is not an invitation or offer of financial

products for subscription, purchase or sale in any

jurisdiction. This document is not a prospectus or

product disclosure statement or other offering

document under New Zealand law or any other law.

An investment in the financial products of Kiwi

Property Group Limited is subject to investment

and other known and unknown risks, some of which

are beyond the control of Kiwi Property Group

Limited. Kiwi Property Group does not guarantee

its performance or the performance of any of its

financial products unless and to the extent

explicitly stated in a prospectus or product

disclosure statement or other offering document.

In making an investment decision, investors must

rely on their own examination of Kiwi Property

Group, including the merits and risks involved.

Investors should consult with their own legal, tax,

business and/or financial advisors in connection

with any acquisition of securities. This document

does not constitute advice of any kind whatsoever

and must not be relied on as such.

Past performance information given in this

document should not be relied upon as (and is not)

an indication or guarantee of future performance.

This document contains certain forward-looking

statements such as indications of, and guidance

on, future earnings and financial position and

performance. The forward-looking statements

contained in this document are not guarantees or

predictions of future performance and involve

known and unknown risks and uncertainties and

other factors, many of which are beyond the

control of Kiwi Property Group, and may involve

significant elements of subjective judgement and

assumptions as to future events which may or may

not be correct. There is no assurance or guarantee

that actual outcomes will not materially differ from

these forward-looking statements.

Kiwi Property makes no representation or warranty,

express or implied, as to the accuracy,

completeness, reliability or sufficiency of the

information in this document or the

reasonableness of the assumptions in this

document, any of which may change without

notice. To the maximum extent permitted by law,

Kiwi Property Group Limited and its directors,

officers, employees, agents and advisers disclaim

all liability and responsibility (including without

limitation any liability arising from fault or

negligence on the part of Kiwi Property Group, its

directors, officers, employees and agents) for any

direct or indirect loss or damage which may be

suffered by any recipient through use of or reliance

on anything contained in, or omitted from, this

document.

Statements made in this document are made only

as at the date of this document unless another

date is specified. Except as required by law or

regulation (including the NZX Listing Rules), Kiwi

Property Group undertakes no obligation to

provide any additional or updated information or

revise or reaffirm the information in this document

whether as a result of new information, future

events, results or otherwise.

Any sales information included in this document

has been obtained from third parties or, where

such information has not been provided by third

parties, estimated by Kiwi Property Group based

on information available to it. The sales information

has not been independently verified. The sales

information included in this document will not be

complete where third parties have not provided

complete sales information and Kiwi Property

Group has not estimated sales information. This

document should not be relied upon as a

representation, warranty or undertaking in relation

to the currency, accuracy, reliability or

completeness of the sales information contained in

this document.

Pedestrian count information is not collected for

Sylvia Park Lifestyle. For The Base large format

retail stores, pedestrian count information is

calculated using vehicle movement data and

applying multipliers to estimate visitation.

Pedestrian count information contained in this

document, including any multipliers utilised for the

purposes of calculating pedestrian count data, may

not have been verified, and Kiwi Property makes no

representation or warranty as to the accuracy,

completeness or reliability of the pedestrian count

information.

No contract or other legal obligations shall arise

between Kiwi Property Group and any recipient of

this document.

All images (including any dimensions) are for

illustrative purposes only and are subject to

change at any time and from time to time without

notice.

Copyright in this document and the information

contained in it is vested in Kiwi Property Group

Limited. This document should not be copied,

reproduced or redistributed without the prior

written consent of Kiwi Property Group Limited.

---

Results announcement


Results for announcement to the market

Name of issuer Kiwi Property Group Limited

Reporting Period Twelve months to 31 March 2026

Previous Reporting Period Twelve months to 31 March 2025

Currency NZD

Amount (000s) Percentage change

Revenue from continuing

operations

$271,416 2.90%

Total revenue $271,416 2.90%

Net profit from continuing

operations

$50,448 -11.50%

Total net profit $50,448 -11.50%

Final Dividend

Amount per Quoted Equity

Security

$0.0140000

Imputed amount per Quoted

Equity Security

$0.0027744

Record Date 11 June 2026

Dividend Payment Date 19 June 2026

Current period Prior comparable period

Net tangible assets per Quoted

Equity Security

$1.12 $1.14

A brief explanation of any of

the figures above necessary to

enable the figures to be

understood

Please see attached results announcement for commentary

on the result.

Authority for this announcement

Name of person authorised to

make this announcement

Fraser Gunn

Contact person for this

announcement

Fraser Gunn

Contact phone number +64 9 359 4093

Contact email address fraser.gunn@kp.co.nz

Date of release through MAP 18 May 2026


Audited financial statements accompany this announcement.

---

2026 Sustainability Report
and Climate Statement

About this report
This document comprises the 2026

Sustainability Report and Climate

Statement for Kiwi Property Group.

All data in this Report is for the year

ended and/or as at 31 March 2026,

unless otherwise stated. Due to

rounding, numbers within this report

may not sum precisely to the totals

provided and percentages may not

precisely reflect the absolute figures.

This Report should be read in

conjunction with the 2026 Kiwi

Property Group Annual Report, which

is available on our website, kp.co.nz/

investors/reporting-suite. See also the

GRI Content Index at kp.co.nz/investors/

reporting-suite.

This document should be read in

conjunction with the disclaimer set out

on page 54 at the back of this report.

Contents

Message from the Chair

and Chief Executive Officer3

Sustainability report4

Sustainability strategy5

Materiality5

Bringing our purpose to life

at Sylvia Park6

Performance against

strategic targets7

Climate Statement15

Strategy17

Metrics and targets26

Governance30

Risk management32

Appendices34

Appendix One: Scenario analysis35

Appendix Two: Climate scenarios37

Appendix Three: Greenhouse

Gas Emissions Inventory Report40

Appendix Four: Independent

Limited Assurance Report49

Appendix Five: Detailed index

of climate-related disclosures52

2

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

Sustainability has always
been about thinking long term

for Kiwi Property. It’s the

discipline to stay focused

on what endures – the

quality of our assets, the

strength of our relationships,

and our contribution to

local communities.

Message from the Chair and Chief Executive Officer

Sustainability has a clear role in

how we create value. It is a key aspect

of our refreshed corporate strategy,

detailed in our 2026 Annual Report,

because we believe high-performing,

well-rated and community-connected

assets attract quality tenants, have

stronger occupancy, and support

superior returns for investors. We

see sustainability and long-term

performance of our assets as

interlinked and central to delivering

enduring value for our investors and

our local communities.

The inaugural 5.5 Star NABERSNZ

rating of Geneva House stems from

our actions today and decisions made

when the building was just a sketch

on the page. From its initiation to its

design, construction and operation,

each step has contributed to its

excellent energy performance today,

as well as its popularity with tenants.

Our approach to sustainability is

embedded across our assets, with

Sylvia Park providing a leading example

of how this is applied in practice.

From composting food waste and

comprehensive waste management

to water harvesting and reuse, on-site

solar generation, and strong integration

with public transport, sustainability

is considered across operational,

environmental and customer outcomes.

These initiatives are not static; we

continuously build on them over time,

enhancing performance as technology,

data and opportunities evolve. In doing

so, we support our assets, tenants and

customers to collectively minimise

environmental impact while creating

resilient, future-focused places.

While we faced challenges with

operational emissions this year,

we remain committed to our

decarbonisation plan and are taking

targeted action to return to a downward

trajectory. For more information on our

emissions please read the Metrics and

Targets section in our Climate Statement.

Our strong employee engagement

score of 80% is the culmination of

years of work to foster workplaces

where people feel they can contribute,

be themselves and grow their careers.

We have listened to our people to

understand what motivates them

and how we can best support them,

taking a sustained, multi-year approach

to improving our employee experience.

Together we have created an

environment in which our people

can thrive.

Sustainability is alive across our

business, in the ideas and efforts of

people at every level. We are proud

of what our people and partners have

achieved this year, and grateful for

the commitment and collaboration

that make this progress possible.

Thank you for your contributions.

As we look ahead, we remain focused

on the five sustainability priorities

that matter most to our stakeholders,

continuing to lay the groundwork today

for the outcomes of tomorrow.

Ngā mihi,

18 May 2026

Simon Shakesheff

Chair

Clive Mackenzie

Chief Executive Officer

3

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Sustainability report
4

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

MaterialitySustainability strategy
Thinking long term is a central part

of our culture and our business,

so that our assets are resilient for

future generations.

Sustainability means doing the right

thing – for our assets, our people

and the future. At Kiwi Property,

it’s woven into our corporate strategy

and shapes how we make decisions

every day.

Our sustainability strategy focuses

on the areas where we can make

the biggest difference, including

mitigating climate risks, and sets

clear targets to guide us forward.

It’s a journey we’ve been on for

more than a decade, and which

will continue for decades to come.

Material from a financial and

stakeholder perspective

• Decarbonise and reduce our footprint

• Demonstrate resilience

Material to stakeholders

•Build a future fit workforce

• Live up to our role in communities

Financially material

• Manage investments for

sustainability performance

Each year, we conduct an exercise

to ensure we are addressing

the sustainability issues most

relevant to our business and

our stakeholders.

We undertook a comprehensive

materiality assessment in 2024, which

identified five material sustainability

priorities. We reviewed feedback from

our customers, tenants and investors

and their feedback, along with

the priorities identified during the

materiality assessment, informed

the refresh of our Sustainability

Strategy in 2024.

Management reviews in 2025

and 2026 confirmed that the

priorities remain relevant and

aligned with stakeholder needs.

Our next comprehensive materiality

assessment is planned for 2027.

Manage investments for

sustainability performance

Decarbonise and reduce

our footprint

Demonstrate

resilience

Build a future fit

workforce

Live up to our role

in communities

5

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

RESIDO
9 STAR H O M ESTAR

TRAIN STATION

NZ ARTWORK

SCHOOL ECO WARRIORS

ONSITE COMPOSTING

ACCESSIBLE

AMENITIES

SOLAR

PUBLIC EV CHARGING

AWARD WINNING PLANTING

ANZ RARANGA

5 STAR GREEN STAR / 5.5 STAR NABERSNZ

GENEVA HOUSE

6 STAR GREEN STAR / 5.5 STAR NABERSNZ

RAINWATER HARVESTING

RESIDENT COMMUNITY HUB

COMMUNITY GARDENS

BUS HUB

Sylvia Park showcases how we deliver on

our purpose through our sustainability

strategy. The precinct is a connected,

thriving community destination. It’s a place

where people can live, work, shop and enjoy

spending time together. Each part of Sylvia

Park has a role to play, from the workplaces

and amenity in the commercial hub to the

friendly neighbours in our Resido residential

development, with train, bus and road links

to the CBD and beyond. The shopping centre

is Sylvia Park’s beating heart, with destination

dining and entertainment experiences

alongside retailers for small indulgences and

grocery runs. Features like the food waste

composting and community garden, rainwater

harvesting, on-site solar and EV charging help

reduce the precinct’s environmental impact.

Each part helps to make Sylvia Park a vibrant

place where people can connect and thrive.

Bringing our purpose to life

at Sylvia Park

6

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Performance against
strategic targets

Manage investments

for sustainability

performance

Decarbonise and

reduce our footprint

Demonstrate

resilience

Build a future-fit

workforce

Live up to our role

in communities

100% of key assets to have

climate risk mitigation and/or

adaptation plans by 2027.

All key assets have

climate mitigation or

adaptation plans in place.

Work with key suppliers to

integrate sustainability criteria

into all new agreements.

On track. We are

progressing our work

with key suppliers.

20% reduction of operational

(Scope 1, 2 and selected Scope 3)

GHG emissions

2

by 2030.

14% increase in operational

emissions compared to

FY24 base year.

New residential buildings

to target a minimum 7 star

Homestar rating.

Previously achieved.

1

No new

residential developments

were commenced or

completed in FY26.

40:40:20

3

gender split for our

Board, Executive Team and our

Senior Leadership Team.

Achieved for our Executive

and Senior Leadership

Teams. Not achieved for our

Board which is 67% male :

33% female.

New office and retail buildings

to target a minimum 5 star

Green Star rating.

Previously achieved.

1

No new

office or retail buildings

were commenced or

completed in FY26.

Aspiration that the workforce

more closely reflects the ethnic

make-up of New Zealand.

We continue to work towards

this aspiration so that the

make-up of our team reflects

our communities.

100% of new asset

developments designed for

climate resilience.

Previously achieved.

1


No new asset

developments were

commenced or

completed in FY26.

Divert 85% construction waste

(by weight) from landfill for

new developments.

86% of construction waste

(by weight) diverted from

landfill to date for our

current Sylvia Park southern

enhancement project.

Existing office buildings to

target a minimum 4.5 star

NABERSNZ rating.

All wholly owned office

buildings have a minimum

4.5 star NABERSNZ rating.

Maintain our employee

engagement in the upper

quartile of NZ businesses

4

Increased our employee

engagement to 80%

in FY26.

Zero fatalities at our assets due

to our property management

and health and safety practices.

Our focus on proactive

management of health and

safety has contributed

to zero fatalities within

our assets in FY26 that

were associated with our

property management and

health and safety practices.

1. Previously achieved targets are those which have been achieved since the target was set, with no projects within the criteria for this reporting period.

2. Operational emissions are the emissions attributed to the day-to-day activities of our buildings and operations. Kiwi Property’s selected scope 3 emissions include: waste from our operations, water, business travel (taxis, mileage, accommodation)

and transmission and distribution losses from energy (electricity and gas).

3. 40:40:20 meaning at least 40% women and 40% men, with 20% flexible for any gender.

4. Culture Amp New Zealand Companies (100-200) benchmark.

Not achieved

In progress

Achieved

Key

7

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Manage
investments for

sustainability

performance

Managing our investments for

sustainability performance means

considering environmental and

community impacts throughout

their lifecycle.

This extends from initial design

and construction through to their

ongoing operation, maintenance and

enhancement in future years.

Our active management contributes

to the long-term value of our assets,

increasing tenant appeal while

optimising efficiency and reducing

environmental impacts to support

enduring investor returns.

Sustainable developments

We integrate sustainability into

the design of our assets and

developments, which appeals to

customers and tenants. Our approach

to design, materials selection and

construction helps us to reduce the

environmental impact of our buildings.

We use industry rating tools such

as Green Star, NABERSNZ, and

Homestar to independently assess

the sustainability of our buildings and

developments. They consider factors

such as energy efficiency, indoor

environment and tenant wellbeing.

See the Climate Statement on page 15

for our current asset ratings.

We are continuing to support the

introduction of the NABERS Energy

rating for Shopping Centres to the

New Zealand market. Together with the

New Zealand Green Building Council

and our industry peers, we believe

the tool will provide an important

benchmark for the sustainability

performance of retail assets.

Energy excellence at

Geneva House

Geneva House exemplifies our

approach to managing investments

for sustainability performance, with

strong credentials across its design,

construction and energy performance.

Formerly known as 3 Te Kehu Way,

Geneva House is a 6 Green Star rated

premium office and medical hub in

the Sylvia Park precinct.

In November 2025, Geneva House

achieved a 5.5 star NABERSNZ Energy

rating, signifying energy performance

excellence. This is particularly notable

given it is the building’s first rating

since completion and exceeded our

4.5 star target for our office buildings.

The building features on-site solar

and EV charging, with sustainability

clauses in our leases underpinning

collaboration with our tenants on

our sustainability objectives for

this building.

Geneva House also received a Gold

Award in the 2025 New Zealand

Commercial Project Awards.

Energy efficiency

We benchmark the energy efficiency

and performance of our office assets

using the independent NABERSNZ

Energy rating tool.

In FY26, all wholly owned office

buildings in our portfolio met or

exceeded our target of a minimum

4.5 star NABERSNZ Energy rating.

Sustainable finance

Managing our investments for

sustainability performance provides

opportunities to attract investors

in the capital markets who have a

sustainability focus.

The proceeds from our three existing

green bonds form part of our wider

funding programme, which supports

sustainability-related initiatives including

energy efficiency improvements at Vero

Centre and Geneva House.

Our Sustainable Debt Framework sets

out how we intend to use sustainable

debt and the external principles and

standards we apply to govern the

management, reporting and assurance

of sustainable debt.

Case study

5.5 star

NABERSNZ energy rating for

Geneva House

8

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Decarbonise
and reduce

our footprint

We focus on reducing the

environmental impact of the

places we create and manage,

supporting our stakeholders on

their carbon reduction journey.

We aim to reduce greenhouse gas

(GHG) emissions, conserve resources

and promote healthier spaces

through integrated sustainable asset

design and operations. Enhancing our

assets’ sustainability performance

creates opportunities to partner with

suppliers and tenants in reducing

their environmental impact.

Operational emissions

Our annual operational emissions

(Scope 1, 2 and selected Scope 3

GHG emissions) increased by 14%

in FY26, compared to FY24. Our

total Scope 1 and 2 emissions were

1,235 tCO

2

e, compared to 1,055 tCO

2

e

in FY24. The increase in operational

emissions was driven primarily by the

inclusion of waste from operations at

Northlands Shopping Centre, which

was excluded in FY25, and increased

occupancy levels for our Resido

BTR development, which was not

operational in FY24.

We continued to deliver initiatives

from our Decarbonisation Plan,

including reducing gas use in the base

buildings at Vero Centre and The Plaza:

see case study. As at 31 March 2026,

55% of our assets (by NLA

1

) are gas-

free in the base building (FY25: 51%).

We remain focused on finding ways to

reduce energy consumption, increase

recycling and reduce waste sent to

landfill from both asset developments

and operations.

For further emissions information, see

the Climate Statement on page 15 and

Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory

Report on page 40.

Environmental impact

Energy

We saw a small increase in our

consumption of grid electricity of 4%

across our operations in FY26, driven by

the first full year of high occupancy at

Resido, a reduction in solar generation,

and an increase in consumption at

LynnMall. See the Climate Statement

on page 15 for details.

We are exploring new renewable

energy opportunities across

the portfolio and monitoring the

energy market to inform our energy

approach in the years ahead.

Waste

Operational waste sent to landfill

increased in our portfolio in FY26,

primarily due to Resido and the

inclusion this year of Northlands.

Northlands Shopping Centre is

managed by Kiwi Property but is

not owned by us.

Our waste management programmes

will continue to encourage tenants

and customers to reduce waste sent

to landfill and increase recycling. At

Sylvia Park shopping centre, our team

work with retailers in our recycling

centres to encourage good waste

management practices. We also have

on site composting for food waste that

is used on our community gardens.

We conduct ad-hoc waste audits across

our assets to monitor performance and

identify improvement opportunities.

Water

We remain focused on improving our

water management processes. We

installed an additional 20,000 litres

of rainwater harvesting at Sylvia Park

this year. Collected water is used for

garden irrigation and flushing toilets

in the shopping centre, reducing

potable water use.

Phasing out gas at Vero Centre

In line with our Decarbonisation

Plan, we are progressively

removing gas from our portfolio

to reduce emissions. This year we

continued this transition for the

common areas (base building)

of Vero Centre.

Gas had powered the heating

and hot water for the end-of-

trip facilities at Vero Centre so

we converted the hot water to

efficient electric units. We also

installed new electric heat pumps

for the lobby for further efficiency

gains. We optimised the building

temperature and timing schedules

to only use the remaining gas

boilers when needed.

Through these improvements,

gas use at Vero Centre has reduced

by 29% compared to FY25 and

contributed to maintaining

Vero Centre’s NABERSNZ rating

of 4.5 stars.

Case study

1. NLA stands for net lettable area, the total floor area

of a building that can be leased to tenants.

9

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Demonstrate
resilience

Proactively addressing the

complex, interconnected

challenges posed by climate

change supports the resilience

of our assets and our business.

Integrating climate resilience into

our core operations and decision-

making processes protects asset

values, reduces the risks of additional

costs associated with climate-

related disruptions, supports the

safety of our tenants and customers,

and minimises financial risks.

Climate risk

We seek to proactively identify

and manage climate risk, so we can

develop strategies that consider and

mitigate risks in the short, medium

and long term, and protect long-

term asset values. We work with

tenants, suppliers and stakeholders

to strengthen resilience and transition

toward a low-carbon future.

We provide detailed information

about our approach to assessing,

managing and monitoring climate

risks and opportunities in the Climate

Statement; see page 15 for details.

Adaptation and mitigation

We implement climate mitigation and

adaptation initiatives to strengthen

the resilience of our assets and

support the safety and wellbeing

of our people, tenants and

local communities.

We continue to monitor and regularly

review climate risk assessments at

both the asset and portfolio levels,

remaining aware of significant risks

and opportunities and advancing

proactive mitigation actions.

All key assets have climate risk mitigation

plans in place, which are reviewed

annually. Climate risk considerations

form part of our decision-making

processes for prioritisation and timing

of capital expenditure projects.

Our assets experienced little to no

damage during FY26’s significant

intense rainfall and flooding events.

Our emergency and safety procedures

support our response to extreme

weather events and are tested regularly

through asset drills. Facilities, customer

service and security teams participate

in desktop exercises addressing asset-

specific extreme weather scenarios,

such as flooding.

Responding to our changing

climate at The Base

The increasing frequency and

severity of intense rainfall events

is one of our material climate risks,

and water ingress from the roof

could result in physical damage and

disruption at our assets. Shopping

centres are particularly susceptible

to these impacts, due to the

complexity of their roof structures.

We recognise this risk to our assets

and in response we are working on

a multi-year project to significantly

upgrade guttering at The Base to

improve leak protection during

intense rainfall events and minimise

disruption for tenants, customers

and operations.

Find out more about our resilience-

focused asset initiatives in the

Climate Statement, page 15.

Case study

51% common

area electricity

at Sylvia Park

precinct

generated by

solar onsite.

10

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Build a future fit
workforce

We invest in our people because

a strong and diverse workforce is

essential for our success.

Our organisational culture thrives

when every person feels valued,

respected and empowered to

contribute to our business. Our

holistic health and safety approach

prioritises employee inclusion,

belonging and mental health.

This enhances employee engagement,

retention and satisfaction, driving

innovation, productivity and long-

term business performance.

People experience

We focus on fostering a collaborative,

culture and providing opportunities

for development and advancement to

deliver a great people experience.

Our FY26 employee engagement

score was 80%, up 5% from FY25

and ahead of the New Zealand top

25% benchmark. It was also our

highest result since 2021. A positive

culture, supportive managers, strong

connection, and having the right

tools and information to do the job

well were the main drivers of this

year’s result.

Our strong focus on career

advancement resulted in internal

promotions more than doubling to

17 in FY26, of which 70% were female

employees. Our high-performing

leadership programme continues to

develop our leaders as well as fostering

cross-functional collaboration, with

a second cohort completing the

programme this year.

We also focus on growing future talent,

and during FY26 we supported one

university student in partnership

with the Keystone Trust, providing a

scholarship, mentoring and part-time

work. A further two Scholars worked

with us in FY26, as we seek to create

longer-term opportunities that support

students in gaining experience while

strengthening our talent pipeline.

Health, safety and wellbeing

Ensuring the safety of our people

remains a key priority. No notifiable

employee injuries or safety incidents

were recorded during the year.

The overall wellbeing of our people

improved during FY26, increasing from

79% to 82% favourable.

Our people are taking charge of their

own health and wellbeing, through

the ‘My Everyday Wellbeing’ platform

introduced last year. Our people use

the platform to access wellbeing-

focused events, resources and

group challenges.

We also offer wellbeing initiatives such

as birthday leave, EAP counselling

services for staff and families, flexible

working arrangements and health

programmes such as flu vaccinations

and mole checks.

80%

employee engagement

82%

employee wellbeing score

11

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Connecting with communities
through employee volunteering

Our refreshed employee volunteering

programme brings together our

commitments to our people and

our local communities. It encourages

teams to take paid volunteering leave,

so they can contribute together.

Employee volunteer programmes

boost employee engagement, morale,

and retention by fostering a sense

of purpose and improving wellbeing.

Participation has grown across the

country, with twice the number

of teams participating to support

causes connected to our assets

and local communities, such as:

•Hosting family dinners at Ronald

McDonald House in Auckland

•Supporting women’s careers with

Dress for Success at LynnMall

•Restoring native plants in Auckland

•Preparing food for schools with

NZ Food Network

•Sorting donated clothing for

Nurturing Families

•Helping deliver community events

like The Long Run in Christchurch

with Crusade With Heart, and

•Supporting the Basket Burn at

The Base to raise money for

Hospice Waikato.

Community volunteering keeps our

teams connected to the people and

places around our assets and brings

our sustainability strategy to life.

Case study

Inclusion, diversity and equity

We reset our Inclusion, Diversity and

Equity Policy and strategy in November

2025, with the Board endorsing an

approach that fosters a culture of

inclusion. This included setting a new

business-wide 40:40:20 gender target to

further our support for gender equality.

See our Performance dashboard for

progress against our targets.

We continued refining our parental leave

offering with a focus on supporting the

long-term financial wealth of primary

caregivers. An industry review in

November 2025 confirmed our offering

is market-aligned and competitive.

Current and prospective employees

can explore our offering on the

New Zealand Parental Leave Register.

Our Chief Executive, Clive Mackenzie,

is a signatory to the Property Council

New Zealand Inclusion Alliance,

a further demonstration of our

commitment in this space.

50:50

gender representation

on the Executive Team

12

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Live up to
our role in

communities

Our assets sit at the heart of

our communities. They are

home to services, amenities and

experiences that our tenants,

residents, customers and local

communities use and enjoy.

Partnerships

We partner with our suppliers and

tenants to advance our common

sustainability goals.

Sustainable supply chain

Our ESG Procurement Guidelines

embed sustainability considerations

into our purchasing practices, assisting

us to understand the sustainability

of our key operational suppliers and

leveraging our purchasing power

to encourage positive environmental

and social outcomes.

We are reviewing our modern slavery

risk assessment and roadmap to

ensure their continued alignment

with regulatory and stakeholder

expectations, as the Modern Slavery

Bill moves through parliament.

Collaborating with tenants

Our sustainability ambitions are

interlinked with those of our tenants,

and we rely on each other to achieve

them. Feedback through our tenant

engagement programme shapes

how we collaborate to reduce our

assets’ environmental impact and

contribute to local communities.

Pleasingly, 64% of surveyed tenants

are satisfied or highly satisfied with

our sustainability approach.

Celebrating culture and

connection at The Base

Our popular playground at The Base

is now home to beautiful artwork,

bringing together local culture

and community. Together with

our partner Tainui Group Holdings,

we unveiled and blessed the

artwork in March 2026.

Designed by contemporary artist

Tukaroto Mahuta, Mahau is his idea

that the arms of the whare are

reaching out to protect our tamariki

(children). In keeping with the

playground’s use of both new and

recycled materials, the sculpture on

the Mahau has been carved from

a deep green Cleanstone - made

from recycled soft plastics.

“Ngaa Manu Taakaro” features

six pou that celebrate the different

personalities of native birds,

emphasising the role of difference

in learning, connection and

growth. The artwork adds another

dimension to this welcoming,

inclusive and fun playground

for children to enjoy.

Case study

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Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Community wellbeing
To live up to our role in communities,

our assets must be safe, inclusive

and welcoming to support

community wellbeing.

Ensuring tenant and

customer safety

We take our responsibility for tenant

and customer safety and wellbeing

very seriously. All assets are covered

by our Health and Safety Policy and

procedures, with safety integrated

into our management practices and

reported to the Executive Team and

the Board.

Several important safety initiatives

were completed during FY26:

•We redefined our company-wide

Health & Safety critical risks, which

were endorsed by the Board.

•We refreshed our asset risk and

emergency procedures, informed

by the FY25 retail safety and

security audit and aligned with

industry best practice. Around 80%

of our workforce then completed

emergency procedure safety

training, across asset teams, the

crisis management team and

Executive Team.

Fostering wellbeing in local

communities

Our assets are places where

community members come together

to connect, with 36.7 million customers

visiting our assets in FY26. We host

events that foster inclusion and

wellbeing for customers, tenants and

our Kiwi Property team throughout

the year.

Highlights from FY26 include:

•Helping raise more than $106,000

through Christmas gift wrapping,

with donations supporting national

and local charities.

•Supporting the Mental Health

Foundation’s Pink Shirt Day and

Mental Health Awareness Week

in our offices and assets.

•Sharing Holly’s Helping Wings books

with our Santa visitors, our third

Holly the Kākāpō wellbeing book

in partnership with the Mental

Health Foundation.

•Celebrating cultural events

important to our local communities

and our people, including Matariki,

Diwali and Lunar New Year.

•Our people participating in Round

the Bays and the Auckland Marathon

11km Traverse to raise money for the

Mental Health Foundation.

•Participating in the Try for Charity

touch tournament, helping to raise

$32,000 for the Keystone Trust.

Keystone

Try for Charity

Lunar New Year

at LynnMall

14

Kiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendicesSustainability report

Climate Statement
15

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate StatementClimate statement

Kiwi Property Group Limited is a climate
reporting entity under the Financial Markets

Conduct Act 2013 (FMCA). This Climate

Statement is the Group Climate Statement of

Kiwi Property Group Limited that is required

to be prepared under sections 461Z to 461ZB

of the FMCA. This Climate Statement includes

climate-related disclosures for Kiwi Property

Group Limited and its controlled entities.

References to “Kiwi Property”, “we” and “our”

in this Climate Statement are to the group as

a whole. The climate-related disclosures in this

Climate Statement comply with the Aotearoa

New Zealand Climate Standards (“NZ CS”)

issued by the External Reporting Board

(“XRB”). In preparing this Climate Statement,

Kiwi Property has elected to use the following

adoption provisions contained in NZ CS 2

(as amended from time to time):

i. Adoption provision 2, which exempts Kiwi

Property from disclosing the anticipated

financial impacts of climate-related risks

and opportunities it reasonably expects

in its first, second, third and fourth

reporting period;

ii. Adoption provision 5, which permits

Kiwi Property to exclude comparative

information for Scope 3 GHG emissions

in its third reporting period, in respect

of those categories that have not been

reported in the two prior years;

iii. Adoption provision 7, which exempts Kiwi

Property from disclosing an analysis of

the main trends evident for Scope 3 GHG

emissions from previous reporting periods

to the current reporting period in its first,

second and third reporting periods.

Reporting entity and statement of compliance

This climate statement includes sections

corresponding to each of the four main

sections of NZ CS 1, being Governance,

Strategy, Risk Management, and Metrics

and Targets. However, this climate statement

addresses the four mandatory sections in a

different order to the way in which they are

presented in NZ CS 1, to support readability.

In some instances, disclosures within each

section have also been reordered. Accordingly,

to assist in navigating this report, a table

indicating the page on which each disclosure

required by NZ CS 1 can be found is set out on

pages 52 and 53. In 2026, Kiwi Property has

evolved its approach to disclosure in some

areas, which has resulted in some re-ordering

and simplification of disclosures as compared

with the 2025 Climate Statement.

This disclosure covers the period from

1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026 (FY26).

Approved on behalf of the Board on

18 May 2026.

Important notice

This climate statement contains both

current and forward-looking information

that is based on:

•incomplete and estimated data; and

•our judgements, opinions and

assumptions about matters relating

to climate change and its impact on

Kiwi Property.

The information in this report is given

in good faith and has been obtained

from sources believed to be reliable

and accurate at the date of preparation.

However, climate change and the

frameworks that govern it are subject to

uncertainties and data challenges, and

this gives rise to uncertainties as to the

impact of these matters on Kiwi Property’s

business and the conditions in which

it operates. We caution reliance being

placed on information that is necessarily

subject to significant risks, uncertainties

and/or assumptions.

This climate statement contains

forward-looking statements and opinions,

including climate-related ambitions,

targets, assumptions, scenarios, risks

and opportunities, anticipated impacts

and strategies. These forward-looking

statements should not be taken as facts

or guarantees of future performance, but

rather as estimates, goals, forecasts and

judgements based on Kiwi Property’s

understanding and estimates of the current

and anticipated impacts of climate change

as at the date of publication of this climate

statement. Forward-looking statements

and opinions involve known and unknown

risks, uncertainties and other factors that

are, in many cases, beyond Kiwi Property’s

control and/or likely to change over time.

Kiwi Property’s performance against its

climate-related ambitions and targets, and

the strategies that it adopts, may differ

materially from what is described in this

report. In addition, climate-related risks

and opportunities may be more or less

significant than described in this report and

new risks and opportunities may eventuate

over time. Assumptions and scenarios

are subject to change without notice,

as are statements about climate change

and the global and domestic response to it.

Kiwi Property expects that some

forward-looking statements and/

or opinions in this document may be

restated or amended in future disclosures

as methodologies, data and strategies

continue to improve. Kiwi Property

does not represent that those forward-

looking statements and/or opinions

will not change following publication

of this climate statement, and gives no

undertaking to update the information in

this climate statement over time (subject

to legal or regulatory requirements,

including requirements to produce climate

statements under the Financial Markets

Conduct Act 2013 in future years).

This climate statement is not an offer

document and does not constitute an offer

or recommendation to invest in, distribute

or purchase financial products. Nothing in

this Report should be taken as investment,

capital growth, earnings or any other legal,

financial, tax or other advice or guidance.

Simon Shakesheff

Chair

Michele Embling

Chair of the Audit,

Risk & Sustainability

Committee

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

Risk managementStrategyGovernanceMetrics and targets

Strategy
This section describes the

current impacts of climate

change on our business,

the climate-related risks

and opportunities we have

identified, the anticipated

impacts of these, and how

we are positioning ourselves

for a low-emissions, climate-

resilient future. A description of

the scenario analysis we have

undertaken to inform this work

is outlined in Appendix 1.

Our business context

Kiwi Property is listed on the NZX and

owns and manages a high-quality

real estate portfolio, including some

of the country’s leading commercial

properties. Our retail-led mixed-use

assets feature large landholdings and

are strategically positioned in areas

marked for significant densification,

close to transport nodes. Sylvia

Park, LynnMall, The Base and Drury

are located in New Zealand’s ‘golden

triangle’ which spans Auckland,

Hamilton and Tauranga. This region

is the country’s economic powerhouse

and home to over 40% of the

population, putting our centres at

the heart of major catchment areas.

Our business strategy

With the business having delivered

on a number of its strategic priorities

including the refinement of our

portfolio, in 2026 we refreshed our

business strategy to reflect our

confidence in our retail-led approach

and evolve our ambitious vision for

the company. Our purpose is to

create places where people connect

and thrive and we strive to be

New Zealand’s leading creator of retail-

led destinations, delivering superior

experiences and returns.

The refreshed strategy is expressed

through four pillars which describe the

core drivers of value for Kiwi Property

and provide a clear framework for

decision making.

•Assets: We own and operate a

portfolio of the best retail-led

mixed-use assets in the best

locations. For us, the best assets

in the best locations means having

high-performing, sustainable assets

in well-connected, high-growth

locations where we can mitigate

climate-related risk.

•Capital: We actively manage the

balance sheet and allocate capital

with discipline to fund growth and

deliver superior returns. Sources

of capital include both debt and

equity. In response to increasing

investor expectations in relation

to sustainability matters, such as

the sustainability credentials of

our real estate assets, one of our

business strategy initiatives is

to increase our green asset pool

(being assets that are able to

achieve sustainability ratings).

•Customer: We deliver compelling

experiences that meet the evolving

needs of customers and tenants.

We work with our customers

and tenants to drive improved

environmental and sustainability

performance, including through

initiatives such as composting, water

retention and solar panels on our

buildings. This supports the long term

attractiveness of our assets.

•Capability: We operate a high-

performing organisation with the

people and systems to deliver

consistently and adapt with

confidence. This operational

pillar includes the delivery of

the Sustainability Strategy.

Sustainability, including climate-related

issues, was considered during the

strategy refresh process and has been

integrated into our core pillars.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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To t a l p o r t fo l i o
Geographic diversification

BY PORTFOLIO VALUE

Auckland89%

Hamilton9%

Wellington5%

Sector diversification

BY PORTFOLIO VALUE

Retail-led mixed-use74%

Office20%

Other1%

Development land5%

$2.60b

Auckland – 3 retail-led mixed-use assets, 2 office assets,

1 development landholding

$263m

Hamilton – 1 retail-led mixed use asset, 1 other asset

$147m

Wellington – 1 office asset

AUCKLAND

WELLINGTON

HAMILTON

Climate-related risks that may

impact our strategy

Through an analysis of the impacts of

climate scenarios, we have identified

the following material climate risks to

our business and strategy:

•Intense rainfall events

•Sustainability ratings for our assets

•Insurance premiums and retreat

•Increased regulation and market

expectation for low carbon and

climate resilient development

More information on each of these

material risks and our response to those

risks can be found on pages 19 to 22.

Our strategic opportunity

As part of our analysis of climate

scenarios, we have identified the

following material climate-related

opportunity:

•Sustainability ratings for our assets

More information on this opportunity

and our response can be found on

page 23.

Transition plan aspects of our

strategy

For Kiwi Property, having the best places

in the best locations means focusing on

•Resilience

•Decarbonisation of our assets, and

•Asset performance

For more information on our transition

planning please see page 24.

Note: ASB North Wharf excluded as held for sale.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Our material climate-related
risks and opportunities

Intense rainfall events

1

Anticipated impacts if risk materialises:

Increased severity and frequency of rainfall, including from storm events, could result in physical damage to and interruption at our assets

across New Zealand. These weather events may also disrupt tenants’ onshore supply chains and impact customers’ ability to travel to

our assets.

Increased intense rainfall events could:

• Place stress on existing assets and cause delays and disruption to developments.

• Close or damage transportation routes and infrastructure necessary to access our assets.

• Increase capital expenditure for repairs and mitigation initiatives that cannot be recovered from tenants.

• Result in a decrease of revenue due to inaccessibility of assets during and following intense rainfall events.

Risk type:

Physical

Asset type:

Most material for shopping centre

assets with complex roof structures

and/or aging infrastructure.

Time horizon:

Long term (10-30 years)

Management response:

• Operations and capital investment: Operational teams carry out physical risk assessments on assets to plan mitigation initiatives such as

increased capacity of guttering for our existing shopping centres. These initiatives are built into capex budgets each year.

• Development design decisions: When undertaking new developments, we consider resilience to weather events. For example, when

designing Geneva House we built above the Council’s recommended minimum freeboard to mitigate against pluvial flooding.

Risk rating:

Medium

Likelihood: Possible

Impact: Moderate

Assessment methodology:

Qualitative assessment

• High level review undertaken by Beca Limited in FY25.

• Asset level operational assessment – reviewed annually.

Potential impacts are most

material under:

Scenarios 2 and 3 in the long term

Current impacts:

An increase in the intensity of storm events has meant we are

planning for more frequent high intensity rainfall, for example by

implementing increased capacity for guttering on our existing

shopping centres. When undertaking new developments, we also

consider resilience to weather events through risk assessments

and modelling. Kiwi Property did not experience any material

damage to its assets as a result of climate change in FY26. However,

Kiwi Property has experienced current financial impacts associated

with its risk mitigation programme, being increased capital

expenditure to deliver on the planned intense rainfall mitigations.

Current financial impacts:

FY26 $1,295,252 FY25 $789,467 FY24 $340,984

These figures represent actual spend. Kiwi Property spent

$1,295,252 in FY26 mitigating the impact of extreme weather/

intense rainfall events, primarily roofing projects to better

accommodate for increasing rainfall intensity during storm events.

The expenditure in FY24 and FY25 also related to roofing.

1. See page 23 for an explanation of the change in this risk compared to FY25.

Through the climate scenario analysis process, we identified the material climate risks set out on

this page and the following pages. The risks outlined are based on our current information and

understanding. There may however be risks that develop that Kiwi Property is not aware of, and risks that

have been considered may have impacts that Kiwi Property does not currently anticipate. We use short,

medium and long term for the purposes of our climate-related risks and opportunities, consistent with

the time horizons considered for the purposes of our scenario analysis as described on page 36.

Climate-related risks

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Strategy

Sustainability ratings for assets
Anticipated impacts if risk materialises:

Failure to meet investor, shareholder and tenant expectations to maintain and/ or improve the sustainability ratings of our assets could

impact the value of our portfolio. Increased emphasis on sustainability ratings could lead to:

• Change in attractiveness of our portfolio to tenants.

• Equity investors may seek to exit their investment in Kiwi Property if there is a failure to meet their expectations regarding asset

sustainability performance, potentially resulting in weaker share price performance and impacting the ability to support further

investment and growth.

• Increase in the cost of debt from banks and bond holders if there is a failure to meet lenders’ expectations regarding asset

sustainability performance.

• Acceleration of decarbonisation initiatives to meet market expectations e.g. removal of gas.

• Increased cost of development to keep pace with sustainability ratings for new buildings i.e. as a result of shortage of expertise,

materials and alternative products.

Risk type:

Transition

Asset type:

Currently most material for commercial

buildings, where tenant expectations

for sustainability ratings are higher.

To date retail tenants have not

shown strong demand for building

certifications.

Time horizon:

Short term (0-3 years)

Medium term (3-10 years)

Management response:

Kiwi Property has implemented sustainability ratings targets for its properties to respond to this risk. These targets are focused on both

existing assets and assets being developed. These targets can be found in the Targets & Metrics section on page 26.

Decarbonisation and energy efficiency initiatives that positively impact on NABERSNZ ratings are a focus at our assets and the capital

expenditure required to undertake those initiatives is included in budget planning.

Risk rating:

Medium

Likelihood: Possible

Impact: Moderate

Assessment methodology:

Qualitative assessment

• Tenant and market feedback.

Potential impacts are most

material under:

Scenario 1 in the short term

Scenario 2 in the medium term

Current impacts:

Anchor tenants expect us to continue improving the energy

efficiency performance of our existing assets and new

developments, particularly in our commercial portfolio. We expect

this to continue as awareness of possible climate impacts grows.

Our continuing efforts to develop and upgrade to highly rated,

high-performing and climate-resilient assets are considered ‘no

regrets’ actions that improve both their current appeal and future

performance. The recently announced introduction of a NABERSNZ

rating tool for shopping centres will enable more properties in the

Company’s portfolio to obtain a sustainability rating.

Current financial impact:

Decarbonisation initiatives

FY26 $509,921 FY25 $813,326 FY24 $163,028

These figures represent actual spend. Kiwi Property spent $509,921

in capital expenditure in FY26 to reduce operational emissions

including the removal of gas from base build, lighting upgrades

and recycling centre upgrades.

HVAC replacement programme

FY26 $604,198 FY25 $1,034,884 FY24 $77,322

These figures represent actual spend. Kiwi Property spent $604,198

in FY26 replacing HVAC units to progress our programme of

preventing leakage of refrigerants and moving to refrigerants with

lower global warming potential.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

Risk managementGovernanceMetrics and targets

Strategy

Insurance premiums and retreat
Anticipated impacts if risk materialises:

Risk that insurance premiums may increase substantially as insurers attempt to cover losses from major events. Insurance retreat, where

insurers decline to cover assets exposed to certain hazards, such as flooding and coastal inundation, could also be a risk and should be

considered as part of portfolio acquisition and divestment decision making.

Insurance premiums and retreat could:

• See the cost of insuring assets increase significantly, with potential flow-on effects for tenant’s total cost of occupancy, which can result

in tenants seeking to reduce rents to manage the total cost of occupancy. This can then impact the value of the assets.

• Potentially affect the value of an asset(s) in the event of an insurance retreat because there would be a very limited market for the sale of

an asset which is uninsurable.

Risk type:

Transition

Asset type:

Not specific to asset type –

more relevant to location of asset.

We do not consider the portfolio

to currently be at risk of insurance

retreat given the location of assets.

Time horizon:

Medium term (3-10 years)

Long term (10-30 years)

Management response:

To mitigate the risks of rising insurance premiums and insurance retreat, Kiwi Property maintains relationships with a diverse range of local

and overseas insurers and implements proactive risk management practices (including loss modelling) to help inform insurance buying

decisions. At an operational level our teams carry out physical risk assessments for assets and plan mitigation initiatives with the aim of

reducing the risk of having to make insurance claims.

Risk rating:

Medium

Likelihood: Possible

Impact: Moderate

Assessment methodology:

Qualitative

• Regular discussions about drivers of insurance premiums, including climate, with our insurance broker

Current impacts:

In recent years, the costs associated with Kiwi Property’s insurance

programme have increased. While Kiwi Property understands that

a range of considerations are taken into account by its insurers

in determining pricing, our understanding is that the increased

frequency and severity of extreme weather events is one factor

placing upwards pressure on insurance prices. This, in turn, has

impacted Kiwi Property’s operational expenditure, where increased

insurance costs cannot be fully recovered from tenants.

Current financial impact:

The financial impact of this risk is increasing insurance costs.

However, Kiwi Property is not able to quantify this impact, because

it is not possible to isolate the extent to which increasing insurance

premiums are attributable to climate-related factors.

Potential impacts are most

material under:

Scenario 2 in the medium term

Scenario 3 in the medium and long term

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Increased regulation and market expectation for low carbon and climate resilient development
Anticipated impacts if risk materialises:

The introduction of new climate-related regulation or policy for the built environment and increased expectations from the market for low

carbon and climate-resilient development could:

• Increase capital expenditure due to higher procurement costs for development, refurbishment/retrofit and upgrades.

• Result in feasibility of new developments not meeting return on capital hurdles due to increased cost.

• Result in delays from supply and expertise shortages which would constrain supply and increase cost of low carbon building materials

and expertise.

Risk type:

Transition

Asset type:

New developments and major

refurbishments e.g. Drury

Time horizon:

Short (0-3 years)

Medium (3-10 years)

Long term (10-30 years)

Management response:

We are preparing for an increased requirement for low-carbon and climate resilient development by:

• Monitoring regulatory and legislative trends and developments. This helps us to understand potential regulatory change and any

associated risks, opportunities and impacts.

• Working closely with industry bodies and our partners to understand potential regulation and future market expectations.

• Building and expanding expertise in our project teams to include design of low carbon buildings and use of low carbon materials so that

we meet market expectations and any upcoming regulation or policy change.

• Updating our 10-year capital expenditure forecast on an annual basis to reflect changes in costs and building regulation requirements,

as well as advancements in building technology.

Risk rating:

Medium

Likelihood: Possible

Impact: Moderate

Assessment methodology:

Qualitative

Potential impacts are most

material under:

Scenario 1 in the short and medium term

Scenario 2 in the medium and long term

Current impacts:

No impacts in this year as there are no asset development projects

underway. We are not aware of any prospective legislation and

nothing that we could reliably isolate to the impact of market

expectations, as we are incorporating sustainability initiatives into

our developments as part of our normal business approach.

Current financial impact:

FY26 $0 FY25 $20,804,998 FY24 $126,674,142

These figures represent actual spend.

During FY25, Kiwi Property deployed a gross amount of

$20,804,998 in capital expenditure towards our Build To Rent

Homestar development - Resido. This gross expenditure figure

does not separate between those costs that are climate-related

and those which are general costs associated with the Resido

development, and accordingly includes costs that are not linked

to climate-related risks and/or opportunities. This development is

now complete.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

Risk managementGovernanceMetrics and targets

Strategy

Sustainability ratings
Implications:

Kiwi Property has assessed that achieving Green Star and Homestar ratings for new buildings and maintaining and/ or improving NABERSNZ

ratings for existing assets is an opportunity. These sustainability ratings may improve value by attracting premium tenants and help secure

new sources of capital. We believe that advancements in building materials, processes and technology present an opportunity to improve

ratings or create opportunity to obtain ratings, that could not otherwise be obtained.

Focusing on achieving, maintaining and improving sustainability ratings for existing and new assets could:

• Provide access to a wider pool of capital through our Sustainable Debt Framework.

• Help us to secure finance to support sustainability ambitions and building certification targets.

• Reduce consumption of energy and water, reducing expenditure.

• Have flow-on effects on asset values and the attractiveness of the portfolio to investors and tenants.

Opportunity type:

Transition

Time horizon:

All time horizons

Potential impacts are most

material under:

Scenario 1 and 2

Management response:

Kiwi Property is focused on maintaining and, where possible, growing our pool of assets that achieve sustainability certifications and

improving ratings for those assets that have them. Kiwi Property is implementing this through energy efficiency initiatives and emissions

reductions for existing assets and through targeting Green Star and Homestar certifications for our new developments.

We have been advocating for a New Zealand version of the NABERS Shopping Centre Energy rating to allow us to benchmark the performance

of our retail assets, and were pleased to see the announcement from the New Zealand Green Building Council in April 2026 that a NABERSNZ

Energy rating tool for shopping centres is being introduced to New Zealand.

Assessment methodology:

Qualitative

• Tenant and market feedback.

Current impacts

The current impact for this opportunity - both operational and

financial – are reflected in the corresponding risk on page 20.

Capital deployment and investment

• Reflecting increased demand for buildings

with sustainability ratings, primarily

commercial assets, we have set targets in

relation to the achievement of sustainability

ratings for new and existing assets. These

targets in turn influence capital allocation

decisions for new and existing assets.

• We established a green bond programme

in 2021, with total outstanding issuance

of $400 million as at 31 March 2026. The

most recent green bond was $125 million

issued in December 2024 for a 5.5-year

term. Green bonds are use of proceeds

instruments where borrowed funds are

notionally used for specific sustainability-

related purposes. In the case of our most

recent green bond issue, this purpose was

to notionally finance or refinance low carbon

and energy efficient buildings. The green

bonds are underpinned by our Sustainable

Debt Framework, which sets out how we

intend to use sustainable debt and the

external principles and standards we use

to govern their management, reporting and

assurance. Other sources of expenditure

related to emissions reductions and climate

risk mitigation occur primarily through capital

expenditure budgets for our assets.

Kiwi Property takes a long-term strategic

approach to asset management and

undertakes detailed financial forecasting

and planning - allowing for climate-related

risk and opportunity to be factored into

planning. Development feasibility and

operational asset planning is where we

can best incorporate those risks and

opportunities into our decision-making

and capital deployment.

Our climate-related risks and opportunities

have informed our internal capital deployment

and funding decision-making processes in

the following ways:

MATERIAL CHANGES TO FY25

Following our FY26 climate risk assessment

review Kiwi Property has amended the

material risk that in FY25 was described

as “Extreme weather events” to “Intense

rainfall events”. This change was made

to provide more specificity about which

weather-related risks could potentially

have a material impact on the business.

In FY26 we have amended the format and

grouped each individual risk, its potential

impacts, our response and current

impacts together as we believe it provides

a more easily understood and holistic

view of the material climate risks that

may impact our business and strategy.

Climate-related opportunity

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Strategy

Transition planning
Our transition planning is focused on

protecting the long-term value of our

assets and aiming to deliver superior

returns for investors. Key priority areas

of the transition plan are:

•Decarbonisation of our assets with a

particular focus on energy efficiency

and waste reduction. Having energy

efficient buildings enables us to

attract high-quality tenants, reduce

operational costs and access diverse

sources of capital through our

sustainable debt framework

•Mitigating the impact of climate

risk in existing assets and adapting

them where needed, and designing

climate resilience into new

asset developments.

These priority areas are embedded

into our Sustainability Strategy and

we expect they will help us to mitigate

our identified climate-related risks.

Due to the long-term nature of

property asset ownership and our

focus on mixed-use assets that meet

our sustainability objectives and are

based around transport hubs, we do

not currently anticipate that we will

need to fundamentally change our

current business model to address

our identified climate-related risks

and opportunities. We do recognise

the need for the ongoing development

of our transition planning and that our

business model and strategy need

to continue to take into account our

climate-related risks and opportunities.

An overview of the transition plan

aspects of our strategy is set out in

the table on page 25.

Our transition planning priorities are

underpinned by the principles of

collaboration and partnership. We

understand that it will take a collective

effort to transition to a low-emissions,

climate resilient economy. We will

continue to particularly focus on

collaboration in the following areas:

•Tenants and suppliers on

emissions reduction

•Local councils in relation to

extreme weather risk mitigations

and waste management

•Property Council NZ and New Zealand

Green Building Council in relation to

industry regulation and certifications

•Local and national government on

industry regulation and legislation.

While we acknowledge the challenges

ahead and the many variables involved,

Kiwi Property aims to continue to drive

change through collaborating with

partners across our value chain.

Information about how the transition

planning aspects of our strategy are

linked to our capital deployment and

funding is outlined on page 23, with

specific information about capital

deployment outlined in the tables on

pages 19-23.

Our transition plan serves

an important role in aligning

our business plans with

our climate goals and

provides transparency

and accountability,

internally and externally.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

Risk managementGovernanceMetrics and targets

Strategy

Transition planning
AmbitionDelivering superior returns for investors by protecting the long-term value of our assets, minimising our impact on the environment, and playing

a meaningful role in addressing climate change.

Transition aspects

of our strategy

We own and operate a portfolio of the best retail-led mixed-use assets in the best locations. For us, that means having high performing, sustainable assets

in well-connected, high-growth locations where we can mitigate climate-related risk.

Ta rge t sWe are measuring and monitoring our performance on these key priorities with targets. Our targets are outlined in the Metrics and Targets section

on page 26.

Key prioritiesActions to address the specific climate-related risks and opportunities identified through our climate scenario analysis includes the following initiatives

in the short and medium term:

Resilience

FY24FY25FY26FY27FY28FY29FY30

Building resilience in

existing assets

Physical climate risk assessments undertaken, operational mitigation plans in place and reviewed annually for all key assets including Drury site

Resilience designed into

new asset developments

Resilience aspects designed into Resido

Upgrades to existing

infrastructure

Roof gutter upgrades at The Base

Ongoing roof maintenance and repairs as required across the portfolio

Decarbonisation

FY24FY25FY26FY27FY28FY29FY30

Phasing out fossil fuels from

the base build of our assets

Phasing out gas at Vero

Removed gas from

Sylvia Park base build

Removed gas from

The Plaza base build

Measuring and reporting on

Scope 3 emissions in FY26

Reporting on Scope 3 emissions

categories relevant to Kiwi Property

Measuring embodied carbon

in new asset developments

Measured embodied carbon

in Resido development

Reducing refrigerants with

high global warming potential

Continuing programme of removing refrigerants with high global warming potential

Waste reduction

Ongoing focus on waste management, seeking to work with tenants to reduce waste

92% diversion from landfill waste (by weight) for Resido

development

LED programme

Ongoing programme to ensure all lighting is low energy LED lighting

More detail on the specific actions that we are taking in response to our climate-related risks and opportunities are set out in the tables on pages 19 to 23 of this climate statement.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Strategy

Metrics and targets
This section outlines the

metrics and targets relating

to the measurement and

management of Kiwi Property’s

climate-related risks and

opportunities.

Decarbonisation and reducing our footprint

Scope 1

We have achieved a further reduction

in Scope 1 in FY26, primarily driven by

a reduction in gas consumption. This

reduction is a result of our ongoing

efforts to remove natural gas from our

base builds.

Scope 2

Scope 2, emissions from electricity

consumption, has increased in FY26

compared with our base year FY24.

This increase is largely attributable

to the Resido BTR apartments, which

experienced their first full year of high

occupancy following completion in

June 2024, driving higher electricity

consumption. The increase was

further influenced by a higher average

electricity emission factor (increase of

38%) published by MfE during FY26.

Scope 3

Compared with our FY24 base year,

Scope 3 emissions increased in FY26

primarily due to expanded reporting

coverage. This includes the addition

of new Scope 3 categories

2

and the

inclusion of waste from operations

at Northlands Shopping Centre. The

increase was further driven by waste

to landfill associated with operations

at Resido.

FY26FY25FY24

Scope 1273.13315.44

3

327.7 1

Scope 2

(location-based)

962.14655.49727. 26

Scope 3 26,761.79

2

830.26

3

796.20

Operational emissions

1


(Scope 1, 2 and selected scope 3)

2,101.981,801.201,851.19

Total scope 1, 2 and 327,997.061,801.201,851.19

Ta r ge t20% reduction in operational GHG

emissions (Scope 1, 2 and selected Scope 3

1

)

by 2030.

Base yearFY24

Type of targetAbsolute target

TimeframeShort

Medium

FY26 progress14% increase from FY24

1. Operational emissions are the emissions attributed to the day-to-day activities of our buildings and operations. Kiwi Property’s selected scope 3 emissions include waste from our operations, water,

business travel (taxis, mileage, accommodation, flights) and transmission and distribution losses from energy (electricity and gas). Refer to Appendix 3 for our breakdown.

2. FY26 is the first year that Kiwi Property has measured and disclosed a number of new Scope 3 categories, meaning that the total reported Scope 3 emissions has increased significantly. Refer to

Appendix 3.

3. The FY25 comparative figures have been updated for immaterial errors in the emissions reported last year.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Metrics and targets

For further information on the
methods and assumptions used

to calculate or (where applicable)

estimate Kiwi Property’s GHG

emissions, the limitations of those

methods, and uncertainties relevant

to the quantification of Kiwi Property’s

GHG emissions, please refer to

Appendix 3 of this report.

Although Kiwi Property has prepared

a Decarbonisation Plan and has been

implementing emission reductions

initiatives as outlined in this report,

it has not to date set a target that

includes all GHG scopes or which aligns

with scientific pathways to limiting

global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Kiwi Property developed its target

in FY25 as a “next step” in maturing

its approach to climate-related

targets. Kiwi Property recognises

that decarbonising the construction

sector in line with scientific pathways

to achieve 1.5 degrees of warming is

challenging, in part due to embodied

carbon in construction materials being

a significant source of emissions.

Carbon pricing and offsetting

We currently do not use an internal

emissions price and no emissions

have been offset to date. Kiwi Property

is aiming to be in a position whereby

its net Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions

are fully offset by the purchase of

voluntary carbon credits in 2030. This

corresponds to Kiwi Property’s GHG

emissions reduction target outlined

above. The final quantity of offsets

is not yet known, nor have particular

offset schemes been chosen.

Kiwi Property is conscious of the

need to explore options for reducing

emissions before utilising offsets and

may review its approach to offsetting

in future.

Emissions intensity

GHG emissions per net lettable area (NLA) is an emissions intensity measure used

in the property sector to allow like-for-like comparisons between different sized

assets. NLA is the amount of space (sqm) in a property available for leasing.

FY26FY25FY24

GHG emissions intensity

Scope 1 + 2 GHG emissions

(tCO

2

e) / square metre net

lettable area

0.00326 tCO

2

e0.00236 tCO

2

e0.00283 tCO

2

e

Emissions intensity has increased slightly in FY26 due to an increase in Scope 2

emissions from electricity consumption.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Climate-related metrics and targets for managing climate risks
Resilience

Ta rge tBase yearTimeframeFY26 progressComment

100% of our assets to have climate risk

mitigation and/or adaptation plans by 2027.

2024ShortAchieved for current portfolio.

Ongoing for future developments.

All key assets, excluding development land and Sylvia Park

adjoining properties, have climate risk mitigation and adaptation

plans in place.

100% of new asset developments to

be designed for climate resilience

(i.e. flooding, extreme heat, storm surges).

2024Short

Medium

Long

Achieved for current portfolio.

Ongoing for future developments.

Climate resilience was considered and incorporated into the design

of Resido which opened in FY25.

Asset performance/sustainability ratings

Ta rge tBase yearTimeframeFY26 progressBuilding ratings as at 31 March 2026

All wholly owned office buildings to target

a minimum 4.5 star NABERSNZ rating.

2021Short

Medium

Long

Achieved for current portfolio.

Ongoing for future developments

ANZ Raranga

• 6 star Green Star Office Design

• 5.5 star NABERSNZ

Vero Centre

• 4.5 star NABERSNZ

Geneva House

• 6 star Green Star Design & As Built

NZv1.0 Built

• 5.5 star NABERSNZ

Aurora Centre

• 5.5 star NABERSNZ

ASB North Wharf

• 5 star Green Star Office Design

• 5 star NABERSNZ

Resido

• 9 star Homestar v 4.1 Built

New office and retail buildings to target

a minimum 5 star Green Star rating.

2021Short

Medium

Long

Achieved for new developments since target was set.

Ongoing for future developments.

New residential buildings to target

a minimum 7 star Homestar rating.

2021Short

Medium

Long

Achieved for new developments since target was set.

Ongoing for future developments.

For information on our metrics relating to capital deployment toward climate-related risks and opportunities (together with comparatives for FY25 and FY24), please refer to pages 19 to 23 of this

Climate Statement. In terms of trends, Kiwi Property’s capital deployment metrics have varied year-to-year in line with our strategic (including transition planning) priorities outlined on page 25.

A description of the overall management remuneration linked to climate-related risks and opportunities is set out in the governance section of this report on page 31. This is unchanged since FY24.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Exposure to climate-related risks and opportunities
Kiwi Property undertook a high-level, qualitative process to assess the potential exposure of its portfolio to climate-related physical and transition risks and opportunities. Our approach and

understanding of how climate-related risks and opportunities could impact our portfolio and business will develop over time, and this may allow for more detailed reporting on these metrics in the future.

MetricFY26FY25FY24Comment

Percentage of portfolio

by value

1

that has a

sustainability rating i.e.

NABERSNZ, Green Star

and Homestar.

This is an industry-

based metric.

41%40% 36% Our ambition is to increase our green asset pool by certifying our retail assets using the NABERS Shopping Centre energy

rating tool.

Our sustainability performance and ratings provide the opportunity to access ESG-focused capital markets and sustainability

ratings help to attract quality tenants into our office portfolio.

The percentage of our portfolio (by value) that has a sustainability rating has increased slightly over time due to the

divestment of shopping centre assets and changes in asset valuations.

Amount of portfolio

vulnerable to

transition risks.

All owned

assets are

vulnerable

to

transition

risks to

some

extent.

All owned

assets are

vulnerable

to

transition

risks to

some

extent.

All owned

assets are

vulnerable

to

transition

risks to

some

extent.

In recent years Kiwi Property has experienced an increase in insurance premiums which has increased operating expenses.

Kiwi Property understands that this increase is attributable to a number of factors, including matters relating to climate change.

Flooding and extreme weather events have contributed to a challenging insurance market. We expect that, over the medium

to long term, particularly under a >3C scenario, properties with proximity to the waterfront and in known flood zones will be

continually reviewed by our insurers and may be subject to changes in availability of insurance. Kiwi Property has put in place a

decarbonisation plan for each office asset with a view to mitigating the risk of not meeting expectations in relation to sustainability

ratings, i.e. NABERSNZ ratings. Under the new Green Star Buildings tool, all new developments will be required to achieve a minimum

reduction in embodied carbon. In order to achieve a Green Star Rating, Kiwi Property will need to meet this requirement through

design and use of low-carbon building materials.

Amount of portfolio

vulnerable to

physical risks.

All owned

assets are

vulnerable

to physical

risks to

some

extent.

All owned

assets are

vulnerable

to physical

risks to

some

extent.

All owned

assets are

vulnerable

to physical

risks to

some

extent.

In FY24, Kiwi Property undertook a high-level, qualitative assessment of potential risk to our assets from extreme weather

events. In FY25, Beca Limited undertook a further high-level assessment of potential physical risk to our assets from extreme

weather events. They reviewed the following data and information to inform their view:

• SSP climate change projections compiled using the MfE Climate Projections Map

• RCP climate change projections have been compiled using Niwa’s Climate Change Adaptation Toolbox

• Rainfall intensity projections (RCP) have been sourced from Niwa’s High Intensity Rainfall System (HIRDs)

• They reviewed the available flooding and sea level rise mapped data from the following sources:

- Auckland City Council Geomaps,

-Hamilton City Council Floodviewer,

-Horizons Regional Council GIS,

- Wellington City Council GIS, and

-the Greater Wellington Regional Council Sea Level Rise & Storm Surge Model.

The assessment found that our portfolio has Low to Medium risk from the physical impact of extreme weather events out to

2040. Due to the nature of the assessment undertaken there are inherent limitations and uncertainties involved with this metric.

New developments are being designed to mitigate risk from surface flooding and mitigation plans are in place at all existing

assets. These include guttering and roofing upgrades as well as pumps for basement carparks where required. Because this

assessment was last undertaken in FY24, Kiwi Property has not identified a relevant trend over time for this metric.

Other key performance indicators

Kiwi Property does not currently use any key performance indicators other than the metrics outlined in this report to measure and manage climate-related risks and opportunities.

1. Excluding Sylvia Park adjoining properties and Drury development land held within investment properties and inventories in the FY26 consolidated financial statements.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Governance
This section sets out how

Kiwi Property’s Board oversees

climate-related risks and

climate-related opportunities,

and the role our management

plays in assessing and managing

those climate-related risks

and opportunities.

Kiwi Property’s Board of Directors

Kiwi Property’s Board of Directors (Board)

has overall responsibility for oversight

of business risks and opportunities,

including in relation to climate. The

Board establishes Kiwi Property’s

strategic direction and financial and

non-financial objectives, including

approving Kiwi Property’s Sustainability

Strategy. The Sustainability Strategy

contains targets, internal metrics and

workstreams aligned with managing

climate-related risks and opportunities.

In addition, the Board is responsible

for understanding and ensuring the

management of the risks facing Kiwi

Property in achieving its objectives,

including climate-related risks.

The Board is supported in its

oversight of climate-related risks and

opportunities by the Audit, Risk and

Sustainability Committee (ARSC).

The ARSC:

•Approves material climate-related

risks and opportunities annually

•Reviews progress against

climate-related metrics and targets,

outlined in the Sustainability Strategy,

six monthly

•Recommends the Climate Statement

for Board approval

•Provides oversight of Kiwi Property’s

risk management framework and the

monitoring of compliance within that

framework, including in relation to

climate-related risk

•Conducts six-monthly enterprise

risk reviews which may incorporate

climate-related risks

•Reviews the material and emerging

business risk register, including

any climate-related risks, on a

quarterly basis.

Board skills and competence

The Board aims to ensure that it has

the appropriate mix of skills and

competencies to provide effective

governance of Kiwi Property, including

in relation to climate-related risks and

opportunities. The ARSC accesses

expertise in climate-related issues

from management and from external

consultants as required. Kiwi Property

uses a Board skills matrix to assess the

skills and competency of the Board,

which includes a category related to

ESG sustainability and social licence to

operate. The Board skills matrix provides

insights on skills aligned to the strategic

needs of the organisation and enables

the Board to identify potential gaps

to focus on for future succession and

targeted learning. In FY26, the Board

skills matrix identifies that four of Kiwi

Property’s directors are an expert in the

area of “ESG, sustainability and social

license to operate”, while the remaining

two directors have a good general

awareness and understanding of these

areas as relevant to Kiwi Property.

The Board-approved strategy

incorporates sustainability as

described on page 17 of this report.

Management’s role in assessing

and managing climate-related

risks and opportunities

Day-to-day management of Kiwi

Property’s business is undertaken

by the Executive Team. In FY26, the

Executive Team was involved in Kiwi

Property’s climate risk review process,

including attending a workshop with

Beca to discuss the high-level physical

risk assessment undertaken for

the portfolio.

The Executive Team is responsible for:

•Ensuring material risks are identified,

assessed and appropriately managed

•Identifying and communicating

emerging risks and opportunities for

inclusion in the risk register.

Kiwi Property has a management level

Risk and Compliance Committee (RCC)

which meets quarterly. This Committee

is responsible for:

•A quarterly review of the risk register.

The review includes confirming the

current status of each key risk and

providing commentary on any change

to risk ratings

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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•Ensuring quarterly risk register
reports are provided to the ARSC

on the status of material risks

and controls

•Developing, managing, implementing

and monitoring the implementation

of the risk management policy

and framework and compliance

management policy and framework

•Monitoring risks and controls to

ensure their effectiveness, including

ensuring risks are escalated as

appropriate in accordance with

the escalation principles in the

Risk Management Framework.

Kiwi Property’s GM Asset Management

is responsible for the execution of

the Sustainability Strategy, including

management of climate-related

risks and opportunities. These

responsibilities include implementation

of the Sustainability Strategy and

reporting progress against the Board-

approved sustainability workstreams

(including any climate-related

initiatives) relating to that strategy

to the Board.

The GM Corporate Services is

responsible for enterprise risk,

including establishing the framework

and procedures for management of risk

across the organisation, reporting on

current and emerging risks and controls

to the Risk and Compliance Committee

and ARSC quarterly and identifying

where risk may be deviating from the

Board-approved risk appetite for the

Company. The GM Corporate Services

also chaired the Responsible Executive

Committee (REC) appointed by the

Board to undertake due diligence of

this Climate Statement.

Both the GM Asset Management and

GM Corporate Services are members

of the Executive Team.

The Head of Sustainability leads

the annual climate-related risk and

opportunity review, aided by senior

functional managers with expertise in

development, facilities management

and asset management. These

functional managers are responsible

for operational implementation of

sustainability and climate-related

initiatives across the business.

Management informs the Board and the

ARSC about climate-related risks and

opportunities in the following ways:

•Providing papers outlining the

material climate-related risks and

opportunities review process and

the outcome of that process annually

•Performance dashboard including

progress towards climate-related

targets reported six-monthly

•Quarterly updates from the Risk and

Compliance Committee (RCC) on the

status of business risks, including

climate-related risks.

Performance and incentivisation

Our Board-approved Sustainability

Strategy incorporates a number

of targets and plans for managing

climate risks and opportunities. These

targets and progress towards those

targets are outlined in the Metrics

and Targets section.

Remuneration for selected members

of the Asset Management Leadership

Team was linked to progress towards

our sustainability targets through our

short-term incentive framework. Those

team members had sustainability

and climate-related goals included

as part of the KPIs on which the

employee’s short term incentive

was based, including delivering the

FY26 decarbonisation initiatives to

target reductions in grid electricity

consumption by our assets and a

reduction of waste to landfill. These

goals drove greater integration of

sustainability into business operations.

Performance against those goals was

taken into account in the short-term

incentive portion of remuneration for

those team members.

ARSC

KP Board

RCC

Executive

Te a m

Senior

Functional

Managers

Head of

Sustainability

MATERIAL CHANGES FROM FY25

In early FY26, Kiwi Property

decided to consolidate the three

Board committees into two, which

resulted in the Environmental,

Social and Governance Committee

(ESGC) being dissolved and the

responsibilities of the ESGC

primarily being reallocated to the

Audit and Risk Committee which

changed its name to the Audit, Risk

and Sustainability Committee. This

demonstrates a maturing of our

approach to sustainability, where it

becomes a part of how we operate.

Instead of a formal ESG Leadership

Team, senior functional managers

worked directly with the Head of

Sustainability on sustainability

and climate-related issues.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Risk management
This section sets out how

Kiwi Property identifies,

assesses and manages climate-

related risks and opportunities,

and how these processes are

integrated into existing risk

management processes.

Kiwi Property risk management

framework

Kiwi Property has adopted a risk

management framework which aligns

with the New Zealand and Australian

Risk Management Standard (AS/NZS

ISO 31000:2009). Our Risk Management

Policy includes our risk management

principles. The key objectives of this

policy are to ensure:

•we manage effectively the risks we

face in achieving our objectives, and

•our people are aware of and meet

their responsibilities to identify,

evaluate and control the risks that

may prevent or restrict us from

achieving our objectives.

As outlined in the Governance section

of this report, our Board is ultimately

responsible for ensuring we manage the

risks we face and the Audit, Risk and

Sustainability Committee assists the

Board in relation to the oversight of our

risk management framework and policy.

Identifying and assessing

climate-related risks

Kiwi Property undertakes an annual

review of its climate-related risks

and opportunities.

Yea rActivity

FY24In FY24, Kiwi Property undertook a detailed climate risk assessment using its

Risk Management Framework (RMF). The assessment included the following:

• An internal ‘current climate impacts’ survey which asked relevant individuals within

Kiwi Property to provide information about the impacts of climate change on the

parts of the business in which they were involved.

• A facilitated exploration of the three scenario narratives customised for our business.

• Asset level climate risk assessments. These asset-level assessments were

undertaken by the operational team, with oversight from the Head of Sustainability.

• A consideration of the climate risk longlist provided in the NZGBC sector-specific

scenarios work.

• Risks from these sources were screened for relevance to our business. In a

workshop setting, the ESG Leadership Team then used a software platform (Menti)

to assess the likelihood and potential impact of these risks, with reference to our

RMF and our risk timeframes.

FY25The climate risk review process that Kiwi Property undertook in FY25 built on the

process that it undertook in FY24, which involved consideration of the following

sources and methods to identify potential climate-related risks:

• Updated scenario development work as outlined on page 35 in the Scenario

Analysis appendix.

• Beca Limited undertook a high-level assessment of potential physical risk to our

assets from extreme weather events.

• Following the development of new scenario narratives, Kiwi Property’s ESG

Leadership Team attended two workshops to review the risks that had been

identified in FY24 to consider whether they remained appropriate. As part of those

workshops, the ESG Leadership Team also considered the impacts and strategic

implications of the climate-related risks that had been identified.

• The Board were involved in a workshop to consider mitigations for two of Kiwi Property’s

most significant climate-related risks. This workshop was facilitated by KPMG.

FY26In FY26 the annual climate-related risk review process involved the following:

• The Executive Team attended a workshop with Beca to review their high-level

physical risk assessment and to discuss potential impacts and mitigations.

• Beca Limited undertook a review of the underlying data of the three NZGBC scenarios.

This review was used by the Head of Sustainability and the GM Corporate Services to

review the climate risks and opportunity and revise the scenario narratives.

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Kiwi Property’s process for identifying
and assessing climate-related risks is

led by the Head of Sustainability with

input from senior functional managers

and the Executive Team.

Our process outlined in the table on

page 32 considered both physical risks

and transition risks (being risks related

to the transition to a low-emissions,

climate resilient economy). No parts of

our value chain were excluded from this

assessment however, many suppliers in

our value chain are still developing their

climate risk maturity and as such Kiwi

Property’s current understanding of

climate-related risks across the whole

value chain, particularly the supply

chain, is limited by availability and

quality of data and information.

Managing climate-related risks

Decisions as to how specific climate-

related risks will be managed are made

by Kiwi Property in the following ways:

•At the asset level, decisions about

improvements to assets or processes

are made by Kiwi Property’s

operational teams, with oversight

from the GM Asset Management.

This includes, for example, decisions

to undertake roofing projects which

increase the resilience of our assets

to intense rainfall.

•At the business level, decisions as to

the management of climate-related

risks and opportunities are made

by management. For example, this

included the decision to implement

targets for the achievement of

NABERSNZ and Green Star ratings

where buildings are eligible for these

(with these targets subsequently

being approved by the Board as part

of the Sustainability Strategy).

More information on this is set

out in the Governance section.

Specific actions that Kiwi Property is

undertaking to respond to our material

climate-related risks are set out in the

Strategy section of this report.

Integrating climate risks into our

risk management process

Climate risk is integrated into our

enterprise-level risk processes

and treated equivalently to other

enterprise-level risks with oversight

from the Risk and Compliance

Committee and the ARSC. The same

risk impact definitions that are used

to categorise our enterprise risks are

used to categorise our climate-related

risks, although the timeframes for

a consideration of the risk rating of

climate-related risks varies due to the

longer term over which climate-related

risks are expected to arise. The RMF

is the primary tool that Kiwi Property

uses to prioritise climate-related

risks relative to other types of risk

by enabling comparison between all

categories of risk.

Time horizons

Our time horizons used for our risk

assessment are detailed under

the Scenario Analysis section on

page 35 of this report.

MATERIAL CHANGES FROM FY25

During FY26 the Risk and

Compliance Committee and

Audit, Risk and Sustainability

Committee reviewed and revised

the risk impact definitions for the

Company’s risk matrix to ensure

an appropriate categorisation of

risks for the Company. The Audit,

Risk and Sustainability Committee

has also been reviewing the Risk

Management Framework as part

of its review of the Company’s risk

appetite, to ensure a consistent

approach between risk appetite

and risk categorisation.

33

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate Statement

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Risk management

Appendices
34

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 AppendicesClimate StatementAppendices

Kiwi Property has undertaken scenario analysis which is used to review our climate-related risks and opportunities and to test the resilience of our business model and strategy. The three climate
scenarios adopted are not intended to identify the ‘most likely’ outcomes of climate change or to be predictive; they are intended to provide challenging, plausible future states that allow us to better

assess potential impacts.

Yea rActivity

FY24Kiwi Property conducted a standalone scenario analysis process in 2024. Together with other industry participants, we participated in the development of climate scenarios for the

construction and property sector through a technical working group established in 2022 by the New Zealand Green Building Council (NZGBC). Beca facilitated and provided technical

expertise to the working group. The scenarios used in our analysis are based on the Climate Scenarios for the Construction and Property Sector which were published in May 2023,

and we refer to these in this report as the “Sector Scenarios”.

In our FY24 climate statement, we described the process that we undertook with our external advisers (BWD Strategic) to customise the Sector Scenarios for our business, including

through analysing Kiwi Property’s ‘key drivers’ (or critical uncertainties) for our business across a range of possible climate futures.

FY25External advisors, Te Whakahaere, facilitated a review of the key drivers that had been identified as potentially impacting our business. By examining these driving forces – such

as technological advancements, policy changes, economic trends, and environmental shifts – the ESG Leadership Team were able to better understand and discuss anticipated

future impacts and uncertainties. This review led to a change in the narratives used in our scenario analysis to more closely align them to the language of the sector scenarios, while

emphasising the drivers most critical to Kiwi Property. We also updated the Scenario labels to “Scenario 1”, “Scenario 2” and “Scenario 3”.

FY26External advisors, Beca Limited, were engaged to review the climate data that underpins the NZ Green Building Council’s Climate Scenarios for the Construction and Property Sector

(published May 2023). The underlying data was compared against updated data (where available) to provide insights on how the scenario narratives may have evolved over the last

two years. Any material changes have been reflected in the FY26 narratives on page 37 and following.

Appendix One:

Scenario analysis

Scenario analysis – Methods and assumptions

We used three scenarios to test the resilience of our business strategy and to identify our climate

risks and opportunities. We believe that the scenarios that we have used, which are based on

the Sector Scenarios with further development for our business, are relevant and appropriate for

assessing the resilience of Kiwi Property’s business model and strategy to climate-related risks

and opportunities.

As mandated in The New Zealand Climate Standards we have used a 1.5°C and >3°C scenario

and chosen a third scenario at ~2.0°C degrees. The 1.5°C degree scenario is weighted towards

transition risk, while the >3°C degree scenario represents predominantly physical risk, and using

these two scenarios accordingly enables Kiwi Property to explore the resilience of our business

and strategy to these different types of risk.

The other scenario at ~2.0°C captures a strong combination of physical and transition effects and

is a plausible pathway. By adopting scenarios consistent with the Sector Scenarios, our choice of

scenarios also maximises the use of existing resources and creates stronger comparability with

the results of our peers.

Our scenario analysis process was overseen by the ESG Leadership Team. The Board approves

the output of the climate risks and opportunities process and the climate scenarios used.

35

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Time horizons
Each of our scenario narratives is bounded by the end date of 2050, rather than 2100 as used in the Sector Scenarios. We consider that 2050 is sufficiently far away to allow for physical risks to

materialise and escalate, but still within a timeframe relevant to our pipeline of work. For example, this timeframe provides sufficient time to substantially progress our Drury masterplan and Sylvia Park

precinct development programme. The following table sets out the short, medium and long-term time horizons we used for our scenario analysis:

0-3 years Short-term3-10 years Medium-term10-30 years Long-term

Our short-term time horizon of 0-3 years is aligned with our

Risk Management Framework and focused on cost reduction

opportunities and meeting organisational priorities, such as

installing solar arrays where applicable at our assets.

Our medium-term time horizon of 3-10 years reflects the

typical tenant lease cycle (6-12 years). This is also the

timeframe over which substantial upgrades to buildings

are planned and delivered.

Our long-term time horizon of 10-30 years reflects building

life expectancy (typically up to 50 years) and also reflects

the long term nature of property development such as our

Drury development.

No modelling was undertaken as part of the scenario analysis process. The scope of operations covered in our scenario analysis process was Kiwi Property’s full supply chain, including tenants,

suppliers, contractors and investors.

36

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Scenario 1
Policy ambition1.5°C

Policy reactionImmediate and smooth

Socio-political instabilityLow – moderate

Technology changeFast change

Behaviour changeFast change

Physical risk severityModerate

Transition risk severityLow to moderate

Pathways

1

NGFS ‘Net Zero 2050’

IPCC SSP 1-1.9

IEA ‘Net Zero Emissions’

MBIE’s Environmental

scenario

IPCC RCP 2.6

Appendix Two:

Climate scenarios

A narrative for each scenario is outlined in the table below, with

a detailed description, methods, assumptions, and sources

of data used to construct the Sector Scenarios, on which Kiwi

Property’s scenarios are based, available on NZGBC’s website:

www.nzgbc.org.nz/research-and-reports

1. These pathways refer to existing scenarios used as “building blocks” in development

of the Sector Scenarios, which have also formed the basis for our scenarios.

These include global scenarios developed by the Intergovernmental Panel on

Climate Change (SSP and RCP, with the RCP scenarios having been downscaled for

New Zealand by Earth Sciences New Zealand (formerly the National Institute of Water

and Atmospheric Research)), scenarios developed by the Network for Greening the

Financial System (NFGS) and the International Energy Agency (IEA), and New Zealand

scenarios developed by the Climate Change Commission (CCC). More information

about each of these building block scenarios and how they were used to develop

the Sector Scenarios is available in the sector scenarios document published by the

NZGBC and available here. The sector scenarios are referred to for additional context

and are not incorporated into this climate statement by cross-referencing.

The Government invests heavily in public transport and

continues transport resilience efforts. Combined with

congestion charging and ever-rising petrol prices, people

rely far more heavily on public transport. This in turn affects

the value of housing and other assets according to their reach

within transport modes.

The construction sector grows significantly as carbon supporting

infrastructure is replaced with greener infrastructure. Due

to higher margins and greater certainty of forward workload,

this becomes a preferred market and reduces capacity and

contractor appetite for other types of construction work, leading

to increased costs and reduced margins for developers.

Regulation

The Government tightens building standards, requiring gas

to be phased out from both existing non-residential and

residential buildings as well as preventing the installation of

fossil gas infrastructure and connections in buildings except

where there are no technically viable low emissions alternatives.

New builds are required to meet stringent energy standards

in design and operation as well as report on its whole-of-life

embodied carbon.

Insurance

In response to continued high intensity rainfall events, properties

in floodplains experience increasing insurance premiums

and experience insurance retreat by 2050. The threat of late

century sea-level rise is being priced into property valuations

in the short term. Properties in denser areas experience

negligible increases in insurance premiums, as they benefit

from surrounding publicly funded adaptation defences.

Market

Due to increasing market awareness of climate change risks,

entities that fail to set and meet ambitious science-based

emission reduction targets also face reputational risks, loss of

market share, and scrutiny. These reputational and market risks

affect the sector significantly in the short to medium term.

Building occupiers and purchasers also begin demanding more

energy efficient, low carbon buildings as consumer awareness

(and prices of higher carbon materials) increase. Demand is

refocused towards existing building re-use and adaptive reuse

over new construction.

Emissions trajectory

The world succeeds in limiting global temperature increase

to 1.5°C above pre-industrial temperatures. Global emissions

decline steadily but do not reach net zero CO

2

emissions globally

by 2050. New Zealand climate policies are ambitious and in line

with the rest of the world’s, with the building and construction

sector adopting and prioritising decarbonisation policies.

By 2050 New Zealand is dealing with severe climate-related

weather events although the outlook is looking more positive.

Although the full impact of baked-in sea level rise is yet to be

experienced it is being factored into decision-making for land

use, infrastructure and insurance.

Energy Transition

The New Zealand grid is increasingly driven by renewable

energy, trending towards near 100% renewable by 2050. The

grid capacity rapidly expands in response to demand but it

cannot keep pace in the short to medium term. Shortfalls in

generation capacity become more frequent, increasing risk

of blackouts.

In the short to medium term New Zealand’s highly renewable

grid becomes more attractive internationally, with energy

intensive industries seeking the lowest absolute grid emissions,

relocating here.

Social change

Rates of people working from home increase for office-based

jobs, as transport modes shift, and employers encourage their

employees to reduce emissions by commuting less. The shift to

working from home for some sectors means increased demand

for residential dwellings and local shared working spaces.

Globally aligned efforts to reduce warming results in manageable

levels of climate-related refugees and modest net migration to

New Zealand, which is home to 6.63 million people by 2050. An

ageing population (22.2% of the population is over 65 by 2050)

increases pressure on aged care.

Land use and infrastructure

Decarbonisation policy at the central and local government

level drives rapid densification of urban areas to reduce new

community development.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Scenario 2
Policy ambition~2.0°C

Policy reactionDelayed

Socio-political instabilityModerate

Technology changeSlow / fast change

Behaviour changeSlow / fast change

Physical risk severityModerate

Transition risk severityHigh

Pathways

1

NGFS ‘Delayed Transition’

IPCC SSP 1-2.6

IEA ‘Sustainable Development’

MBIE’s Growth scenario

IPCC RCP 2.6

Land use and infrastructure 

Continuing new community development and investment in

road-based transportation throughout the 2020s has created

an infrastructure network that is more entrenched and difficult

to transition to a low carbon alternative. 

The impacts of climate change around 2030 cause a change in

population distribution as residents and businesses retreat to

lower risk areas. 

Regulation 

At 2030, the significant regulatory changes demand an

immediate step change in building energy and carbon

requirements. New technologies haven’t been developed in

time for the spike in demand in 2030, leading to disruption of

building and materials markets and competition for materials and

products. This impacts new buildings and retrofit development.

It leads to significant price escalations and construction delays,

with financially marginal market segments becoming unviable. 

Assets developed prior to 2030 are at increased risk of stranding

once new regulations are introduced in 2030.

Insurance

Properties in floodplains experience increasing insurance

premiums and experience insurance retreat by 2040. The threat

of late century sea-level rise is priced into property valuations

in the short term. Properties in denser areas (e.g. in a CBD)

experience a slower increase in insurance premiums, as they

benefit from surrounding publicly funded adaptation defences.

Market

Through the 2020s, many organisations reduce their carbon

reduction ambitions and unlock capital to focus on adaptation.

Investors and customers increase pressure on entities to

prioritise climate resilience as physical impacts accelerate and

directly impact on the financial viability of some organisations.

The rapid change in tenant and investor demands post 2030

means some assets rapidly lose value.

This coincides with commercial building demand reduction due

to an increase in working from home, as transport modes shift,

and employers encourage their employees to reduce emissions

by commuting less.

Globally the shadow price of carbon remains low, rising to

$111/tCO

2

e by 2050.

Emissions trajectory 

The world fails to implement the changes required to limit

warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Global emissions

continue to rise during the 2020s as historical social, economic,

and technological trends continue. However, the increasing

frequency of climate-related physical events, and concerns

about meeting Paris Agreement Goals drives a sudden shift

in global policy around 2030, when abrupt and stringent

decarbonisation policies are enacted. 

New Zealand follows suit with the majority of the world, leading

to abrupt policy and market changes for the property and

construction sector post-2030. 

New Zealand still faces moderately severe physical impacts of

climate change with an increase in rainfall intensity (4%), and

number of hot days (80%) by 2050.

Energy Transition

In New Zealand, the relative affordability of low carbon

generation means the grid is already steadily decarbonising

throughout the 2020s.

In the short-term, there is limited-to-no change in fossil fuel

use or energy transition for the property sector. Stringent

decarbonisation policies enacted in 2030 include the

introduction of energy efficiency requirements for buildings. In

2030 all new buildings are 40% more efficient than current code

requirements for operational energy efficiency. Many existing

buildings still rely on fossil fuels but are transitioning over the

period 2030-2050 and become fully decarbonised by 2050.

Social change

Minimal social changes occur prior to 2030, however the

pace of change around 2030 is unprecedented. Communities

impacted by this rapid change are not well supported to

adapt. This results in increasing wealth inequality, feelings of

injustice and political polarisation. Some parts of society feel

increasingly left behind or marginalised and this leads to unrest,

crime and an overall reduction in safety and security for both

individuals and organisations. 

This occurs over the backdrop of modest net migration to

New Zealand and an ageing population (>20% of pop. over 65

by 2040). 

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Scenario 3
Policy ambition>3°C

Policy reactionNone – current policies

Socio-political instabilityHigh

Technology changeSlow change

Behaviour changeSlow change

Physical risk severityExtreme

Transition risk severityLow

Pathways

1

NGFS ‘Current Policies’

IPCC SSP 3-7.0

IEA ‘Stated Policies’

MBIE’s Reference scenario

IPCC RCP 8.5

Emissions trajectory

Global emissions continue to grow until 2080, which leads to

greater than 3°C of physical warming above pre-industrial levels

by 2100. Exploitation of fossil fuel resources and the adoption of

resource and energy intensive lifestyles continues to increase

around the world. The world sees increasingly severe physical

risks. Historical social, economic, and technological trends

continue until the physical impacts of climate change disrupt

our ability to maintain the status quo. As with the rest of the

world, New Zealand does not enact any additional climate

policy, including for the property and construction sector.

Regulatory changes are slow and focus on adaptation and

managing climate-driven immigration/refugees. As the risk of

asset loss and stranding increases, the focus of the property and

construction sector becomes climate adaptation and supporting

the resilience of communities as they are forced to either adapt

or retreat. New Zealand faces severe physical impacts of climate

change with an increase in rainfall intensity (5%), and a material

increase in the number of hot days (145%) by 2050.

Energy transition

Aotearoa follows global trends in not introducing additional

policies and both technology and behaviour change remain slow

across all sectors. New Zealand’s electricity grid is gradually

decarbonised but does not achieve neutrality in the long

term. This means buildings wishing to achieve net zero carbon

emissions must invest in their own zero carbon generation.

Increasing frequency and severity of acute weather events

(e.g. storms) result in more frequent and severe damage to

electricity assets and more frequent and longer blackouts.

Building energy efficiency improves in the medium term as

passive design solutions, which are more resilient to electrical

network failures, become more popular.

Social change

Increasing severity and frequency of weather events causes

disruptions to global food supplies in the medium-term (2031-

2050). Social cohesion starts to degrade and conflict and

unrest become increasingly common. A large increase in net

migration to New Zealand (8.33 million people by 2050) means

that the growth rate of people aged over 65 slows considerably

from 2040, with minimal change over the following decade

(to 2050). There are changes in population distribution and

land use over the medium-term as people begin to retreat

from areas at risk from physical impacts (e.g. coastal areas at

risk from sea level rise and storm surges, floodplains, regions

vulnerable to drought). Food insecurity due to physical impacts,

that affect growing areas as well as the ability to transport food,

leads to large scale retreat out of cities and toward self-resilient

lifestyles with less consumption.

Land use and infrastructure

The sector must actively manage the risk of increasingly

disrupted supply chains as extreme climate events occur

across the world. This risk is moderate in the short term but

becomes increasingly extreme in the medium and longer

terms. Populations that live in floodplains and regions

vulnerable to drought also experience significant relocation.

Spikes in demand for housing occur due to climate-driven

immigration from other parts of the world and increasing

numbers of climate refugees. Populations concentrate around

regions that are more climate resilient.

Regulation

National policy shifts towards addressing national and regional

security and resource scarcity. Increasing frequency and

severity of acute weather events drive an increasing need for

climate adaptation, for example, the need to retrofit buildings

and infrastructure to be more heat and flood resilient. There

are strong measures to address resource scarcity, with access

to energy and other resources being restricted for non-critical

functions, for example, carless days, water restrictions, limits

on air conditioning or heating use, etc. There is more demand

for buildings that are resilient to direct climate-related

physical events, infrastructure failures, and any resulting

resource scarcity. Local councils also increase rates to invest

in protection and restoration of certain assets in locations

where retreat is not an option. This increase in adaptation

spending reduces the level of discretionary spending, which

impacts on non-essential infrastructure and building activity

related to retail premises.

Insurance

Properties in floodplains experience increasing insurance

premiums and likely experience insurance retreat by 2040.

Properties lose value and become stranded assets. Premiums

on coastal commercial properties may increase to the point of

permanent unprofitability, leading to them being stranded by

2030. Construction in hazardous areas becomes increasingly

dangerous and some commercial property owners experience

liability risk as heatwaves cause fatalities to occur onsite.

Market

Changes to building codes are focused on the response to

physical impacts and tragic events. This increases the cost of

development with limited whole of life cost benefits. Resilience

requirements also capture existing buildings which need to be

upgraded to be considered safe. The need to improve building

resilience causes many assets (especially in smaller/remote/

less resilient settlements) to be stranded/ abandoned.

39

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Below is our complete FY26 inventory, covering our Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions. Where available, the data includes comparisons to both the prior year and our FY24 base
year. Additional details on our calculation approach, organisational boundary and consolidation approach, base year and restatements, assurance report and assumptions and methodologies can be

found from page 41.

This document is the annual greenhouse gas (GHG) report for Kiwi Property Group Limited. It covers the period 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026.

This report has been written in accordance with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol: A Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, Revised Edition, and the Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting

and Reporting Standard (2011) (‘the GHG Protocol’).

Table 1: KP Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory

ScopeOperational

emissions

FY26FY25FY24

(base year)

Scope 1 emissions

tonnes of CO

2

e

Stationary dieselY8.088.345.64

Natural gasY137.88191.85

1

174 .7 7

Fugitive emissions from air conditioning systemsY127.18115.25147. 30

Total Scope 1273.13315.44327.7 1

Scope 2 emissions

tones of CO

2

e

Electricity consumption (location-based)

2

Y962.14655.49727.26

Total Scope 2 962.14655.49

3

727.26

Total Scope 1 & 2 1,235.27970.931,054.97

Scope 3 emissions

tones of CO

2

e

Category 1. Goods and services purchased8,648.66not measurednot measured

Category 1. Water consumptionY16.377. 397.19

Category 2. Capital goods purchased7,400not measurednot measured

Category 3. Fuel and energy related activitiesY76.7155.9289.07

Category 5. Waste generated in operationsY666.56676.40

4

593.50

Category 6. Business travelY107.0890.56106.44

Category 7. Employee commuting172not measurednot measured

Category 13. Downstream leased assets9,674 .42not measurednot measured

Total Scope 3 26,761.79

5

830.26796.20

Total operational emissions2,101.981,801.201,851.19

Total Scope 1, 2 and 327,997.0 6

5

1,801.201,851.19

1. FY25 comparative figures have been updated for immaterial errors in the emissions reported last year. In FY25 we reported 153.74 tCO

2

e.

2. Emissions are reported using a location-based methodology.

3. For FY26 (and as disclosed in Table 3: Emissions sources included on page 43) we have used the latest MfE guidance for the emissions factors which were released on 16 May 2025. If we used the same emissions factors used in FY26 for FY25 the tonnes of CO

2

e for Scope 2

emissions would have been 924.40. We did not consider that this constituted a reason to amend the prior year comparative above as an appropriate emissions factor was used at the time.

4. FY25 comparative figures have been updated for immaterial errors in the emissions reported last year. In FY25 we reported 515.57 tCO

2

e.

5. FY26 is the first year that the Kiwi Property has measured and disclosed a number of new Scope 3 categories meaning that the total reported Scope 3 emissions has increased significantly.

Appendix Three:

Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory Report

40

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

New Scope 3 categories for FY26
Scope 3 categories that have been reported in FY26 for the first time are:

• Scope 3 Category 1 Goods and Services Purchased,

• Scope 3 Category 2 Capital Goods Purchased,

• Scope 3 Category 7 Employee Commuting and

• Scope 3 Category 13 Downstream Leased Assets.

Organisational boundary

Consolidation approach

Kiwi Property applies an operational control approach to identify and determine the boundary

of our GHG inventory.

A company has operational control over an asset/operation if it has the authority to introduce

and implement operating policies at the operation. This consolidation approach allows us to focus

on those emission sources over which we have operational control and can therefore implement

management actions consistent with Kiwi Property’s sustainability strategy. Organisational

boundaries were set with reference to the methodology described in the GHG Protocol.

Table 2 shows what has been included in the context of the overall structure.

Table 2: Kiwi Property structure

Kiwi Property Group Limited

Head office – Level 7 Vero Centre

Retail-led mixed-

use assets

Office assets

Assets under

management

3

Other assets

Sylvia Park PrecinctASB North Wharf

2

Northlands

Shopping Centre

Development Land –

Sylvia Park adjoining

properties

LynnMallThe Aurora CentreCentre Place South

Development Land -

Drury

The Base Vero CentreThe Plaza

1

65 Bryce StreetCentre Place North

50:50 JV partnership ownership with Tainui Group Holdings. Kiwi Property accounts for

100% of operational emissions for these assets.

Where a single tenant occupies most or all of an asset Kiwi Property may have limited or

no operational control over some or all aspects e.g. ASB North Wharf and the Sylvia Park

adjoining properties on development land.

Sylvia Park Precinct comprises Sylvia Park Shopping Centre, Sylvia Park Lifestyle,

ANZ Raranga, Geneva House and Resido.

1. The Plaza was divested on 12 December 2025. Emissions for the financial year up to that date have been included.

2. ASB North Wharf is held for sale. Emissions for the financial year have been included.

3. Assets under management are assets that are not owned by Kiwi Property but where we hold an operational management contract

with the property owner.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Assets under management
Centre Place South – shopping centre in Hamilton, owned by Silverfin Capital. Kiwi Property has

a limited operational management contract for this building, which does not include decision

making on capital investments, energy contracts or building operation hours. Centre Place South’s

electricity, gas and refrigerants are included in Scope 3, Category 13. Kiwi Property manages and

sets waste disposal processes which the tenants are encouraged to follow. Waste data for Centre

Place South is captured in Centre Place North’s reporting.

Northlands – shopping centre in Hamilton, owned by a syndicate managed by Mackersy

Property. Kiwi Property has a limited operational management contract for this building, which

does not include decision making on capital investments, energy contracts or building operation

hours. Northlands electricity, gas and refrigerants are included in Scope 3, Category 13. Kiwi

Property manages and sets waste disposal processes which the tenants are encouraged to follow.

Waste data for Northlands is captured in Scope 3, Category 5.

Sylvia Park adjacent properties

There are residential and industrial properties adjacent to Sylvia Park. Kiwi Property has no

operational control over the residential properties and they are excluded from the inventory. Kiwi

Property does have some operational control over the industrial properties, so electricity, gas and

refrigerants used by tenants in those buildings are included in Scope 3, Category 13.

Development land - Drury

Development activity undertaken on development land such as Drury is included in Scope 3

Category 2 – Capital Goods.

Mackersy Property

During the year, Kiwi Property’s loan to Mackersy was converted into equity, resulting in Kiwi

Property holding a 50% ownership interest in Mackersy Property. The investment in Mackersy

is equity-accounted and is not consolidated into the financial statements of Kiwi Property.

Emissions from Mackersy operations are not included in Kiwi Property’s emissions for FY26.

Organisational boundary

The FY26 GHG emissions inventory report covers scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions where the group

has sufficiently reliable data for scope 3 categories. Improving the quality and certainty of our

scope 3 data is an ongoing area of focus.

Scope 1 and 2 emissions include the “base build” emissions (refrigeration and natural gas

associated with heating and cooling, and stationary diesel and electricity).

Scope 3 emissions are indirect emissions. Emissions sources included in the Kiwi Property

inventory are described in Table 3 on page 43.

Base year

For this report the reporting period covers the period 1st April 2025 to 31st March 2026 and is

referred to as FY26. In FY24 Kiwi Property reset its base year from 2012 to FY24 to account for

significant changes to the portfolio, i.e. our Drury site and our Sylvia Park Resido development.

Kiwi Property’s base year measurement period is 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024.

Our Baseline Recalculation policy states that if Kiwi Property’s net lettable area changes by more

than 10% due to development, acquisitions or divestments then a recalculation of the scope 1

and scope 2 baseline emissions is required.

Emission factors and calculation approach

Emissions have been quantified using the calculation-based method based on activity

multiplied by greenhouse gas emission factors. The emissions factors used are sourced from

the New Zealand Ministry for the Environment MfE Guidance for Voluntary Greenhouse Gas

Reporting and ThinkStep ANZ. The Global Warming Potential (GWP) rates are sourced from the

Toitū emanage system, with quantities of each greenhouse gas converted to tonnes CO

2

e using

the global warming potential from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fifth

Assessment Report. Further information on exclusions is available in Table 4 on page 47.

Estimates have been used when reliable data has not been available. Estimates were used for

the following:

For Scope 3, Category 13 in FY26, 81% of data was from supplier records, 17% was from Kiwi

Property comparative asset data and 2% was from estimates calculated using average data

provided by Beca New Zealand.

The total estimates make up 7% of the total emissions profile.

Information on offsets

Kiwi Property has not purchased nor retired carbon offsets during this reporting period.

Assurance of GHG Inventory

A limited level of assurance has been undertaken by Deloitte Limited over selected Scope 1,

2 and 3 GHG Emissions disclosures included in the Group Climate Statement and the GHG

Inventory Report included as Appendix 3 within the Group Climate Statement, for the year

ended 31 March 2026. Refer to the Independent Limited Assurance Report on page 49 for

further details.

Person responsible: Gillian Wordsworth, Head of Sustainability, Kiwi Property Group Limited

Prepared for: Kiwi Property Group

For the period: 1st April 2025 to 31st March 2026

Prepared by: Gillian Wordsworth

Head of Sustainability

Kiwi Property Group Limited

Date: 18 May 2026

Approved for release by: Michele Embling

Director

Kiwi Property Group Limited

Date: 18 May 2026

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Inclusions and methodologies
Kiwi Property includes scope 1, 2 and scope 3 emissions from all relevant Kyoto Protocol gases in our inventory, expressed as carbon dioxide equivalent (CO

2

e). The emissions sources in the table below

have been included in the GHG emissions inventory.

Table 3: Emissions sources included

GHG emissions

category

GHG emissions

source Data Source Emissions factor Data quality Uncertainty Methodology

Scope 1

Natural gas -

stationary


Natural gas used

for heating within

common areas


Supplier invoices

Check meters

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Low Gas suppliers invoice Kiwi Property for consumption

across the building. Check meters in the building

provide readings for tenant usage. Common area

usage is calculated as the residual amount after tenant

usage is subtracted from whole building consumption.

Stationary diesel Diesel is used in

pumps for sprinkler

systems and in

back-up generators

Supplier records MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Low Suppliers provide reports and invoicing for diesel

usage on an annual basis.

Fugitive

emissions from

air conditioning

units

Leakage of

refrigerants from

HVAC systems in

common areas

Supplier records MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Low Refrigerant losses are reported by suppliers on an

annual basis.

Scope 2

Electricity Electricity

consumption from

common areas

Records from

embedded network

operator and

invoices from

electricity suppliers

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Low Where there is an embedded network, reliable

records of electricity consumed are sourced

from an independent third party. If there is no

embedded network, suppliers provide an invoice

with consumption data.

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Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

GHG emissions
category

GHG emissions

source Data Source Emissions factor Data quality Uncertainty Methodology

Scope 3

Category 1:

Purchased goods

and services

Water consumption Supplier invoices

Check meters

MfE guidance for

Voluntary Greenhouse

Gas Reporting

Very good LowWater suppliers invoice Kiwi Property for consumption

across the building. Check meters in the building

provide readings for tenant usage. Common area

usage is calculated as the residual amount after tenant

usage is subtracted from whole building consumption.

Operational

emissions related

to business and

development activity

i.e. office supplies,

legal, insurance,

consultants and

development

activities not related

to a new building

Expenses report

extracted from

accounting software

Thinkstep-ANZ. (2025)

Emission Factors

for New Zealand:

Greenhouse Gas

Emission Intensities

for Commodities and

Industries. V3.0

Very good

Internal finance

system is

considered

reliable

High

Spend-based

model relies on

assumptions around

categorisations

Spend data is extracted from the finance system

and categorised as operational (purchased goods

and services). The emissions factors are multiplied

against the operational spend. The model provides

an estimate only, and this model relies on the quality

of the statistical data used to calculate emissions

factors and the categories aligning with Kiwi Property’s

accounting codes.

Category 2:

Capital goods


Upstream emissions

from capital goods

purchased including

development activity

spend not related to a

specific new building

e.g. masterplanning

activity and

infrastructure

spend at Drury

Capex report

extracted from

accounting software

Thinkstep-ANZ. (2025)

Emission Factors

for New Zealand:

Greenhouse Gas

Emission Intensities

for Commodities and

Industries. V3.0

Very good

Internal finance

system is

considered

reliable

High

Spend-based

model relies on

assumptions around

categorisations

Spend data is extracted from the finance system and

categorised as capital expenditure. The emissions

factors are multiplied against the capital spend. The

model provides an estimate only, and this model relies

on the quality of the statistical data used to calculate

emissions factors and the categories aligning with

Kiwi Property’s accounting codes.

Category 3:

Fuel and energy

related activities

Electricity

distributed T&D

losses, Natural Gas

distributed T&D

losses

Supplier invoices MfE guidance for

Voluntary Greenhouse

Gas Reporting

Very good Low Transmission & distribution losses from electricity and

gas consumption are reported as the same kWh value

as actual consumption. Methodology for collecting

data for electricity and gas is described on page 43.

44

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

GHG emissions
category

GHG emissions

source Data Source Emissions factor Data quality Uncertainty Methodology

Category 5:

Waste generated

in operations

Waste generated

from building

operations

Supplier reports MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Good

Some suppliers

estimate weights by

using average weight

per bin calculations

LowMonthly reports from suppliers.

Waste data collected is waste to landfill that is

controlled through Kiwi Property loading docks. Waste

that is controlled by tenants with their own loading

docks, where Kiwi Property has no operational control,

is excluded. Construction waste is currently included

in Category 2 of this inventory.

All landfill waste is sent to landfills with gas recovery.

Category 6

Business travel -

Tra n spor t

Flights Supplier report MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very goodLow Kiwi Property uses Flight Centre to book all business

travel. Flight and accommodation information is

recorded in our internal finance system and that is

used to calculate the emissions.

Accommodation Supplier reportMfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Medium

Spend based

calculations

inherently have

some uncertainty

Mileage Internal accounting

software

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good MediumTaxis and mileage are recorded in our internal

financial tracking system. There is a medium level of

uncertainty as kms are reported by the employee (for

mileage claims only) and information on the type of

vehicle used is not collected. This represents a small

proportion of the emissions.

Taxis and rental cars Internal accounting

software

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Medium

Spend based

calculations

inherently have

some uncertainty

Category 7

Employee

commuting

Employee

commuting

Survey MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Fair

Based on FY25

survey responses

and extrapolation.

Impacted by

number of

responses and

interpretation of

survey questions

Medium

Types of vehicles

are unknown so

averages have

been used

A 2025 employee survey captured commuting

distance, mode, and frequency. Responses were

used to estimate FY26 behaviour, with average

annual distances by transport mode extrapolated

across all staff.

45

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

GHG emissions
category

GHG emissions

source Data Source Emissions factor Data quality Uncertainty Methodology

Category 13

Downstream

leased assets

Fugitive emissions

from air conditioning

units in tenancies

– owned by Kiwi

Property

Supplier records MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

Very good Low Refrigerant losses are reported by suppliers on an

annual basis.

Tenant gas Supplier invoices,

check meters

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

High Low Check meters are used to record tenant gas

consumption. The consumption is multiplied by

the emissions factor (EF).

Tenant gas (where

tenant has their own

direct connection)

Tenant supplier or

estimate

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

High quality if

provided by tenant

supplier and low

quality if estimated

Medium uncertainty

where estimates

are used

Tenant gas consumption is provided by the tenant or

tenant supplier. This consumption is multiplied by the

EF. If data is missing or unavailable then an estimate is

used. Estimates would use average gas consumption

for asset type (sourced from comparable Kiwi

Property owned assets) x NLA x EF.

Tenant electricityEmbedded network

provider

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

High quality data

from embedded

network provider

Low uncertaintyTenant electricity consumption is provided by the

embedded network provider. This consumption is

multiplied by the EF.

Tenant electricity

(majors or not on

embedded network)

Tenant supplier or

estimate

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

High quality if

provided by tenant

supplier and low

quality if estimated

Medium uncertainty

where estimates

are used

Tenant electricity consumption is provided by the

embedded network provider. This consumption is

multiplied by the EF. If data is missing or unavailable

then an estimate is used. Estimates would use average

electricity consumption for asset type (sourced from

comparable Kiwi Property owned assets) x NLA x EF.

For the Sylvia Park adjoining industrial properties

average electricity consumption data has been

sourced from Beca Limited.

Electricity, gas and

refrigerant of assets

under management

Supplier records,

invoices, check

meters or estimate

MfE guidance

for Voluntary

Greenhouse Gas

Reporting

High quality if

provided by

suppliers and low

quality if estimated

Medium uncertainty

where estimates

are used

Whole of building electricity and gas consumption

is provided by suppliers and embedded network

provider. If data is missing or unavailable then an

estimate is used. Estimates would use average

electricity/gas consumption for asset type

(sourced from comparable Kiwi Property owned

assets) x NLA x EF.

46

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Scope 3 GHG emissions sources excluded
Emissions sources in Table 4 have been identified and excluded from this inventory.

Table 4. Exclusions

Scope and CategoryGHG Emissions SourceReason for exclusion

Included in other categories

Scope 3 – Category 11Use of sold products – public EV chargingIncluded in scope 2 emissions

Scope 3 – Category 4Upstream transportationRelated to development activity included within Scope 3 –

Category 2

Excluded as not applicable to Kiwi Property’s business

Scope 3 – Category 9Downstream transportation and distribution

Scope 3 – Category 8Upstream leased assets

Scope 3 – Category 10Processing of sold products

Scope 3 – Category 12End of life treatment of sold products

Scope 3 – Category 14Franchises

Scope 3 – Category 15Investments

Excluded due to other reasons

Scope 3 – Category 4Upstream transportationEmissions from couriers used by Kiwi Property fall below the 1%

threshold and are excluded

Scope 3 – Category 2Embodied carbon in asset development projectsEmbodied carbon emissions will vary from year to year,

depending on the volume, type, and timing of development

completions. There were no developments completed in FY26.

Biogenic carbon

Kiwi Property does not use any biofuel, burn biomass or have any agriculture or forestry activities so has no biogenic emissions or carbon removals.

47

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Table 5. Direct GHG emissions and removals, quantified separately for each applicable gas
CategoryCO

2

CH

4

N

2

ONF

3

SF

6

HFCsOther

Emissions

total

(tCO

2

e)

Stationary combustion145.520.350.080.000.000.000.00145.95

Leakage of refrigerants0.000.000.000.000.00127.180.00127.18

Fugitive emissions0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00

Electricity generated and consumed onsite0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00

Exported electricity0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00

Total net emissions145.520.350.080.000.00127.180.00273.13

48

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Independent Limited Assurance Report on Selected Greenhouse Gas
(‘GHG’) Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report included within the

Group Climate Statements.

To the Shareholders of Kiwi Property Group Limited

Limited assurance conclusion

Based on the procedures we have performed and the evidence we have obtained, nothing has

come to our attention that causes us to believe that:

• the gross GHG emissions, additional required disclosures of gross GHG emissions, and

gross GHG emissions methods, assumptions and estimation uncertainty, within the scope

of our engagement (as outlined below), included in the Group Climate Statements of Kiwi

Property Group Limited (the ‘Company’) and its subsidiaries (the ‘Group’) for the year ended

31 March 2026 (the ‘Selected GHG Disclosures’), are not fairly presented and not prepared, in

all material respects, in accordance with Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards (‘NZ CSs’)

issued by the External Reporting Board (‘XRB’); and

• the Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory Report included as Appendix 3 to the Group Climate

Statements for the year ended 31 March 2026 (the ‘GHG Inventory Report’), is not prepared

in all material respects, in accordance with the requirements of the Greenhouse Gas Protocol:

A Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard (Revised Edition) (the ‘Applicable Criteria’).

For scope 3 emissions the Applicable Criteria includes the Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3)

Accounting and Reporting Standard (2011).

Appendix Four:

Independent Limited Assurance Report

Scope of assurance engagement

We have undertaken a limited assurance engagement over the following Selected GHG

Disclosures prepared in accordance with NZ CSs, that is required to be the subject of an

assurance engagement per section 461ZH of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 (‘FMCA’).

Subject matter: Selected GHG DisclosuresReference

GHG emissions: gross emissions in metric tonnes of Carbon dioxide equivalent

(‘CO

2

e’) classified as:

• Scope 1

• Scope 2 (calculated using the location-based method)

• Scope 3

Page 26

Additional requirements for the disclosure of gross GHG emissions per

paragraph 24 (a) to (d) of Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standard 1: Climate-

related Disclosures (‘NZ CS 1’), being:

• The statement describing the GHG emissions have been measured in

accordance with the requirements of the Applicable Criteria;

• The statement that the GHG emissions consolidation approach used is

operational control;

• Sources of emission factors and the global warming potential (‘GWP’) rates

used or a reference to the GWP source; and

• The summary of specific exclusions of sources, including facilities, operations

or assets with a justification for their exclusion.

Appendix 3

Pages 40

to 47

Disclosures relating to GHG emissions methods, assumptions and estimation

uncertainty per paragraphs 52 to 54 of Aotearoa New Zealand Climate

Standard 3: General Requirements for Climate-related Disclosures (‘NZ CS 3’):

• Description of the methods and assumptions used to calculate or estimate

GHG emissions, and the limitations of those methods.

• Description of uncertainties relevant to the Group’s quantification of its

GHG emissions, including the effects of these uncertainties on the GHG

emissions disclosures.

Appendix 3

Pages 43

to 46

49

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

In addition, we have undertaken a limited assurance engagement in relation to the GHG Inventory
Report of the Group, comprising the emissions inventory and the explanatory notes set out on

pages 40 to 48 of Appendix 3 to the Group Climate Statements for the year ended 31 March 2026.

The GHG Inventory Report is based on historical information and provides further disclosures

about the Scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions of the Group for the year ended 31 March 2026 to meet

the requirements of the Applicable Criteria, in addition to the minimum disclosure requirements

of NZ CSs.

Our limited assurance engagement does not extend to any other information included, or

referred to, in the Group Climate Statements on pages 1 to 25, 27 to 39 and 52 to 54. We have not

performed any procedures with respect to the excluded information and, therefore, no conclusion

is expressed on it.

Other matter – comparative information

The comparative Scope 3 GHG disclosures (that is Scope 3 GHG disclosures for the periods

ended 31 March 2025 and 2024) have not been the subject of an assurance engagement

undertaken in accordance with New Zealand Standard on Assurance Engagements 1: Assurance

Engagements over Greenhouse Gas Emissions Disclosures (‘NZ SAE 1’). These disclosures are not

covered by our assurance conclusion.

Director’s responsibilities

Directors are responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of the Selected GHG

Disclosures in accordance with NZ CSs, which includes determining and disclosing the

appropriate standard or standards used to measure its GHG emissions. In addition, the Directors

are responsible for the preparation of the GHG Inventory Report included as Appendix 3 to the

Group Climate Statements in accordance with the requirements of the Applicable Criteria. This

responsibility includes the design, implementation and maintenance of internal controls relevant

to the preparation of the Selected GHG Disclosures and GHG Inventory Report that are free from

material misstatement whether due to fraud or error.

Inherent uncertainty

Non-financial information, such as that included in the Group Climate Statements, is subject to

more inherent limitations than financial information, given both its nature and the methods used

and assumptions applied in determining, calculating and sampling or estimating such information.

Specifically, as discussed on pages 16 and 43 to 46 of the Group Climate Statements, GHG

quantification is subject to inherent uncertainty because of incomplete scientific knowledge used

to determine emissions factors and the values needed to combine emissions of different gases.

As the procedures performed for this engagement are not performed continuously throughout

the relevant period and the procedures performed in respect of the Group’s compliance with

NZ CSs and/or the requirements of the Applicable Criteria are undertaken on a test basis, our

limited assurance engagement cannot be relied on to detect all instances where the Group may

not have complied with the NZ CSs or the requirements of the Applicable Criteria. Because of

these inherent limitations, it is possible that fraud, error or non-compliance may occur and not

be detected.

In addition, we note that a limited assurance engagement is not designed to detect all instances

of non-compliance with the NZ CSs or the requirements of the Applicable Criteria, as it generally

comprises making enquires, primarily of the responsible party, and applying analytical and other

review procedures.

Our responsibilities

Our responsibility is to express an independent limited assurance conclusion on the Selected

GHG Disclosures and GHG Inventory Report, based on the procedures we have performed and

the evidence we have obtained.

We conducted our limited assurance engagement in accordance with NZ SAE 1 and the

International Standard on Assurance Engagements (New Zealand) 3410: Assurance Engagements

on Greenhouse Gas Statements issued by the XRB (‘ISAE (NZ) 3410’). These standards require that

we plan and perform this engagement to obtain limited assurance about whether the Selected

GHG Disclosures and GHG Inventory Report are free from material misstatement.

Our independence and quality management

We have complied with the independence and other ethical requirements of NZ SAE 1, which is

founded on fundamental principles of integrity, objectivity, professional competence and due

care, confidentiality and professional behaviour.

We have also complied with the following professional and ethical standards:

• Professional and Ethical Standard 1: International Code of Ethics for Assurance Practitioners

(including International Independence Standards) (New Zealand);

• Professional and Ethical Standard 3: Quality Management for Firms that Perform Audits or

Reviews of Financial Statements, or Other Assurance or Related Services Engagements which

requires us to design, implement and operate a system of quality management including policies

and procedures regarding compliance with ethical requirements, professional standards and

applicable legal and regulatory requirements; and

• Professional and Ethical Standard 4: Engagement Quality Reviews.

Our firm is the statutory auditor of the financial statements and also carries out other

assignments for the Group in relation to other assurance-related services (such as review of the

consolidated interim financial statements, audits of joint venture financial statements, audits of

special purpose financial information in accordance with tenancy agreements, and agreed upon

procedures in respect of a specified remuneration metric) and non-assurance-related services

(such as the Finance Business Partner training programme and assurance readiness over Scope 3

GHG emissions). These services have not impaired our independence as assurance practitioner of

the Group. In addition to this, partners and employees of our firm deal with the Group on normal

terms within the ordinary course of trading activities of the business of the Group. Our firm has no

other relationship with, or interest in the Group.

As we are engaged to form an independent conclusion on the Selected GHG Disclosures and GHG

Inventory Report prepared by the Group, we are not permitted to be involved in the preparation

of the GHG information as doing so may compromise our independence.

Summary of work performed

Our limited assurance engagement was performed in accordance with NZ SAE 1 and ISAE (NZ)

3410. This involves assessing the suitability in the circumstances of Group’s use of NZ CSs and the

Applicable Criteria as the basis for the preparation of the Selected GHG Disclosures and the GHG

Inventory Report respectively, assessing the risks of material misstatement of the Selected GHG

Disclosures and GHG Inventory Report whether due to fraud or error, responding to the assessed

risks as necessary in the circumstances, and evaluating the overall presentation of the Selected

GHG Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report.

50

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

A limited assurance engagement is substantially less in scope than a reasonable assurance
engagement in relation to both the risk assessment procedures, including an understanding of

internal control, and the procedures performed in response to the assessed risks.

The procedures we performed were based on our professional judgement and included enquiries,

observation of processes performed, inspection of documents, analytical procedures, evaluating

the appropriateness of quantification methods and reporting policies, and agreeing or reconciling

with underlying records. In undertaking our limited assurance engagement on the Selected GHG

Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report, we:

• Obtained, through inquiries, an understanding of the Group’s control environment, processes

and information systems relevant to the preparation of the Selected GHG disclosures and

GHG Inventory Report. We did not evaluate the design of particular control activities or obtain

evidence about their implementation.

• Evaluated whether the Group’s methods for developing estimates are appropriate and had been

consistently applied. Our procedures did not include testing the data on which the estimates

are based or separately developing our own estimates against which to evaluate the Group’s

estimates.

• Performed analytical procedures on particular emission categories by comparing the

expected GHGs emitted to actual GHGs emitted and made inquiries of management to obtain

explanations for any significant differences we identified.

• Considered the presentation and disclosure of the Selected GHG Disclosures and the GHG

Inventory Report.

The procedures performed in a limited assurance engagement vary in nature and timing from,

and are less in extent than for, a reasonable assurance engagement. Consequently, the level of

assurance obtained in a limited assurance engagement is substantially lower than the assurance

that would have been obtained had we performed a reasonable assurance engagement.

Accordingly, we do not express a reasonable assurance opinion about whether Selected GHG

Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report are fairly presented and prepared, in all material

respects, in accordance with NZ CSs or the requirements of the Applicable Criteria respectively.

Use of our Report

Our limited assurance report (‘our Report’) is intended for users who have a reasonable

knowledge of GHG related activities, and who have studied the GHG related information in

the Group Climate Statements with reasonable diligence and understand that the Selected

GHG Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report are prepared and assured to appropriate

levels of materiality.

Our Report is made solely to the Company’s shareholders, as a body. Our limited assurance

engagement has been undertaken so that we might state to the Company’s shareholders those

matters we are required to state to them in our Report and for no other purpose. To the fullest

extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the

Company’s shareholders as a body, for our work, for our Report, or for the conclusions we

have formed.

Andrew Boivin

Partner

for Deloitte Limited

Auckland, New Zealand

18 May 2026

This limited assurance report relates to the Selected GHG Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report included within the Group Climate Statements for the year ended 31 March 2026 included on the Group’s website. The Directors are responsible for the maintenance and

integrity of the Group’s website. We have not been engaged to report on the integrity of the Group’s website. We accept no responsibility for any changes that may have occurred to the Selected GHG Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report included within the Group Climate

Statements since they were initially presented on the website.

The limited assurance report refers only to the Selected GHG Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report included within the Group Climate Statements named above. It does not provide an opinion on any other information which may have been hyperlinked to/from these

disclosures. If readers of this report are concerned with the inherent risks arising from electronic data communication, they should refer to the published hard copy of the Group Climate Statements that include the Selected GHG Disclosures and the GHG Inventory Report and

related limited assurance report dated 18 May 2026 to confirm the information presented on this website.

51

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

Index to climate statement
The table below identifies the location of disclosures required by Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards. This includes the specific disclosure requirements in NZ CS 1 (as amended by relevant

paragraphs of NZ CS 2) and paragraphs 51 to 55 of NZ CS 3.

NZ CS ReferenceDetailPage numberRelated discussion in

Sustainability Report

1


(page number)

Governance

7(a)-(b) and 8(a)-(d)Governance body oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities30, 31

7(c) and 9 (a)-(c)Management’s role in assessing climate-related risks and opportunities30, 31

Strategy

11(a) and 12(a)-(c) Current climate-related impacts19-2310

11(b), 13, and NZ CS 3,

51 (a)-(b)

Scenario analysis process, including process, methods and assumptions35, 36

11 (c) and 14(a)-(c)Climate-related risks and opportunities, time horizons, and input into internal capital deployment and funding 19-23 , 3610

11 (d)-15(a)-(d)Anticipated impacts of climate-related risks and opportunities reasonably expected19-23

11 (e) and 16(a)-(c)Business model and strategy, and transition planning (including alignment with capital deployment and funding)17-19, 24-25

Risk management

18(a)-(b) and 19(a)-(e)Processes for identifying, assessing and managing climate-related risks and integration into risk

management process

32, 33

Appendix Five:

Detailed index of climate-related disclosures

1. This column is included to identify instances where climate-related information is included in this Sustainability Report outside of the climate statement. This information is not included by cross-reference into the climate statement.

52

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

NZ CS ReferenceDetailPage numberRelated discussion in
Sustainability Report

1


(page number)

Metrics and targets

21(a)-(c), 22(a)-(h) and

NZ CS 3, 40

Climate-related metrics (cross-industry and industry-based) and key performance indicators, including

comparatives for metrics and relevant methods, assumptions and uncertainties

26-29

21 (d) and 23(a)-(e)(iv)The targets used to manage climate-related risks and opportunities, and performance against those targets26-297-10

24(a)-(d)GHG reporting standard, consolidation approach, source of emissions factors and global warming (GWP) rates used,

summary of specific exclusions of sources

40-47

NZ CS 3, 42Analysis of trends26, 40

NZ CS 3, 52-53GHG emissions methods, assumptions, limitations and uncertainties 43-46

NZ CS 3, 54Explanation for any base year GHG emissions restatementsna

Adoption provisions

NZ CS 2, 23Adoption provisions relied on16

Statement of compliance

NZ CS 3, 55Statement of compliance with Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards16

53

Sustainability reportKiwi Property 2026 Climate StatementAppendices

kp.co.nz
Disclaimer

This disclaimer relates to the Sustainability

Report on pages 4 to 14 of this document,

prepared by Kiwi Property Group Limited.

By accepting this document and to the

maximum extent permitted by law,

you acknowledge and agree to the

following matters.

No liability: Kiwi Property Group Limited, its

advisers, affiliates, related bodies corporate,

directors, officers, partners, employees and

agents (together ‘Kiwi Property’) expressly

exclude and disclaim any and all liability

which may arise from this document, any

information provided in connection with this

document, any errors in or omissions from

this document or otherwise in connection

with this document. Kiwi Property makes no

representation or warranty, express or implied,

as to the accuracy, completeness, reliability or

sufficiency of the information in this document

or the reasonableness of the assumptions in

this document.

Not advice: This document does not constitute

advice of any kind whatsoever (including

investment, financial, tax, accounting or legal

advice) and must not be relied upon as such.

You should assess whether the information in this

document is appropriate for you and consider

talking to a professional adviser or consultant.

This document is not an invitation or offer of

financial products for subscription, purchase

or sale in any jurisdiction. This document is not

a prospectus or product disclosure statement

or other offering document under New Zealand

law or any other law. No contract or other legal

obligations shall arise between Kiwi Property and

any recipient of this document.

Past and future performance: Past performance

information in this document should not be relied

upon as (and is not) an indication or guarantee

of future performance. This sustainability report

contains both current and forward-looking

information that is based on:

• Incomplete and estimated data; and

• Our judgements, opinion and assumptions

about matters relating to sustainability

(including, but not limited to, climate change)

and its impact on Kiwi Property.

The information in this report is given in good

faith and has been obtained from sources

believed to be reliable and accurate at the

date of preparation. However, matters relating

to sustainability (including, but not limited

to, climate change) and related governing

frameworks are subject to uncertainties and data

challenges, and this gives rise to uncertainties as

to the impact of these matters on Kiwi Property’s

business and the conditions in which it operates.

This document contains certain “forward-looking

statements” such as indications of, and guidance

on, future earnings and financial position and

performance, including performance against

sustainability metrics, targets and initiatives.

The forward-looking statements are given in

good faith and have been based on estimates,

judgements, assumptions and data that Kiwi

Property considers to be reliable, accurate and

appropriate as at the date of this document.

However, forward looking statements involve

known and unknown risks and uncertainties

and other factors, many of which are beyond

the control of Kiwi Property, and actual

outcomes may materially differ from these

forward-looking statements.

Investment risk: An investment in the financial

products of Kiwi Property Group Limited is

subject to investment and other known and

unknown risks, some of which are beyond the

control of Kiwi Property Group Limited. Kiwi

Property does not guarantee its performance or

the performance of any of its financial products.

No duty to update: Statements made in this

document are made only as at the date of this

document unless another date is specified.

Except as required by law or regulation (including

the NZX Listing Rules), Kiwi Property undertakes

no obligation to provide any additional or

updated information or revise or reaffirm the

information in this document whether as a result

of new information, future events, results or

otherwise. Kiwi Property Group Limited reserves

the right to change any or all of the information in

this document at any time and from time to time

without notice.

Copyright: The copyright of this document and

the information contained in it is vested in Kiwi

Property Group Limited. This document should

not be copied, reproduced or redistributed

without the prior written consent of Kiwi Property

Group Limited.

---

Kiwi Property Group Limited
Use of Proceeds Report

As at 31 March 2026


1.0 Introduction

Kiwi Property Group Limited (Kiwi Property) allocates an amount equal to the proceeds of Green Bonds or Loans to finance or refinance Eligible Projects as

defined in the Kiwi Property Sustainable Debt Framework (as updated from time to time, the Framework). Eligible Projects include energy efficient buildings

that meet one or more of the following criteria:

• Certified as obtaining, or targeting, a minimum 5-star NZGBC Green Star Design and/or Built rating;

• Certified as obtaining, or targeting, a minimum 4-star NABERSNZ Energy Base Building rating or Energy Whole Building rating;

• Certified as obtaining, or targeting, a minimum 7-star Homestar rating; or

• Any other Green Building rating that is an equivalent standard to one of those above.

This report must be read together with the Framework, which can be found here: https://www.kiwiproperty.com/investors/sustainable-debt-framework/

2.0 Green Bond issuance

As at 31 March 2026, Kiwi Property’s Green Bonds on issue are as follows:

NZX ticker KPG050 KPG060 KPG070 Total

ISIN

NZKPGD0050L3 NZKPGD0060L2 NZKPGD0070L1 n/a

Amount (NZ $m) 150 125 125 400

Issue date 19 July 2021 27 March 2023 19 December 2024 n/a

Maturity date 19 July 2028 27 September 2029 19 June 2030 n/a


2
3.0 Eligible Projects

An amount equal to the aggregate amount of all outstanding Green Bonds has been allocated to the following Eligible Projects:

Property

Location Use


Ownership

interest/type

[A]


Rating

Basis of

determination

[B]


Total value of

eligible projects

[A] x [B]


31 March 2026

valuation

ANZ Raranga

286 Mount Wellington

Highway, Auckland

Office

100% direct

5.5 Star NABERSNZ

5 Star Green Star Office Design

$88,400,000 $88,400,000

ASB North Wharf

1

12 Jellicoe Street, Auckland Office

100% direct

5 Star NABERSNZ

5 Star Green Star Office Design

$205,000,000 $205,000,000

The Aurora Centre 56 The Terrace, Wellington Office

100% direct

5.5 Star NABERSNZ $147,000,000 $147,000,000

Geneva House

3 Te Kehu Way, Mount

Wellington, Auckland

Office

100% direct

5.5 Star NABERSNZ

6 Star Green Star Design & As

Built NZv1.0 Built rating

$64,800,000 $64,800,000

Resido 27 Lynton Road, Auckland Residential

100% direct

9 Star Homestar rating $200,000,000 $200,000,000

Vero Centre

48 Shortland Street,

Auckland

Office

100% direct

4.5 Star NABERSNZ $450,000,000 $450,000,000

Total Eligible

Projects



$1,155,200,000 $1,155,200,000

1


ASB North Wharf is held for sale as of 31 March 2026. The value of Total Eligible Projects excluding ASB North Wharf is $950,200,000.

Kiwi Property confirms that there are currently no unallocated proceeds.

Eligible Projects are consistent with the ICMA Green Bond Principles eligible project categories and are consistent with UN Sustainable Development

Goals 9 and 11. The criteria for Eligible Projects in the Framework will be regularly reviewed against the recommendations in the NZGBC Green Finance

Guidelines. The Guidelines introduce progressively higher certification thresholds over time. While all assets currently meet applicable criteria, future

thresholds may impact the eligibility of certain assets and Kiwi Property continues to monitor certification pathways and asset composition to

maintain alignment with the Guidelines.

3
4.0 Ongoing reporting

In accordance with the Framework, Kiwi Property commits to undertaking annual ‘use of proceeds’ reporting and will include impact information as

applicable over time.

5.0 Assurance

The information in this report has been independently reviewed by an approved limited assurance provider.

6.0 Contacts

For further information or feedback, please contact Kiwi Property at:

Kiwi Property Group Limited

Level 7, Vero Centre

48 Shortland Street

PO Box 2071

AUCKLAND 1140

T: +64 9 359 4000

W: kp.co.nz

E: info@kp.co.nz

Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

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