The real estate investor's passing yield fell to 6.09 per cent from 6.21 per cent a year earlier due to valuation changes, and CBRE estimates prime and secondary industrial yields are respectively 5.17 per cent and 6.08 per cent.
Woodhams said the market has firmed over the past six months, with sales evidence showing a capitalisation rate of sub-5 per cent. A lower cap rate indicates a higher value.
The shares were unchanged at $2.295, with more than a million shares changing hands for the first time since late March.
The board declared a second-quarter dividend of 1.8 cents per share, payable Sept. 4 to registered shareholders on Aug. 26. That first-half dividend of 3.6 cents per share was in line with a year earlier, and PFI maintained guidance for an annual payment of 7.6 cents, up from 7.1 cents in 2018.
Adjusted funds from operation, which are used to set the dividend, rose to $20.5m from $17.5m a year earlier. Net rental income rose 4.3 per cent to $41m.
The property owner's occupancy rate improved to 99.7 per cent from 98.1 per cent a year earlier, and the weighted average lease term rose to 5.71 years from 5.39 years.
Woodhams said despite the caution in the economy, most of PFI's 147 tenants seem content, and that the company's low level of accounts receivable was a good indication of that.
"Everyone is paying their rent and seem pretty happy," he said.