Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 557

Global REITs are on sale

It’s fair to say REITs have not been flavour of the month for some time. The lacklustre investment flows into U.S. REIT mutual funds and ETFs shown in the chart below says it all.

You have to go back quite a way to find the last period the sector was truly in vogue. Curiously, it was arguably in the lead up to the GFC.

Reflecting on this period, the table below shows interest rates in 2007 were broadly similar to current levels, yet REITs at that time enjoyed materially higher earnings multiples.

Whilst in 2007 major parts of the REIT industry were on unstable footings thanks to higher exposure to property development, higher financial leverage, shorter term debt profiles, and greater reliance on bank lenders.

Today, as the table below highlights despite a stark difference in sentiment surrounding the sector, broadly speaking, REIT fundamentals are very clearly in better shape than in 2007.


Source: Factset, NAREIT, FTSE EPRA NAREIT, US Federal Reserve, Citi

Notes:
1. REIT development pipeline as % of undepreciated book value
2. US Construction Start % of Inventory (prior 10 yrs avg pa)
3. Net % of lenders tightening standards for CRE loans (last 4Q avg)

Over the past quarter, many REITs provided guidance for calendar 2024 earnings. On average we see the REIT sector positioned to deliver approximately 3-4% earnings growth in 2024, ranging from over 10% for US healthcare and logistics REITs, to -10% for office REITs and Hong Kong residential developers.

But what’s more significant is that REIT portfolios continue to demonstrate elevated occupancy levels (often above overall industry levels) which we believe points to superior quality real estate and operating platforms.

Most REITs report only modest levels of new supply impacting leasing conditions. U.S. sunbelt apartments and industrial are the exceptions where supply has been in response to elevated tenant demand in recent years.

The significant increase in avenues to sector diversify within listed REITs also shouldn’t be overlooked when reflecting on the 2007 period. Active investors can now increase portfolio exposure to once-considered niche areas such as healthcare and data centre and move away from the riskier office building segment (which accounted 22% of the GREIT index in 2007 and now accounts for just 10%).


Source: Factset, FTSE EPRA NAREIT

What about the uncertainty surrounding interest rates?

Interest rates may remain elevated, but if this is attributable to better-than-expected economic growth, landlords should benefit from greater pricing power in a more constrained environment for development.

The strong performance of Japanese property companies in advance of and after the first interest rate rise that country has seen in 17 years is a notable testament to these dynamics.

We are not factoring in a return to the very low interest rate regime that prevailed in the QE and post pandemic era.

More importantly, for the most part, real estate demand and supply fundamentals remain favourable. Better than expected economic growth underpins tenant demand, and supply is constrained by rising construction costs, higher costs of debt and equity capital – or an outright a lack of developer finance.

While 2024 will see elevated levels of completions in the US industrial and sunbelt multi-family sectors, construction starts in these segments have fallen materially as the following chart illustrates. This should bode well for landlord pricing power, provided demand conditions do not deteriorate.

Construction starts – US industrial and multifamily


Source: Citi Research, Dodge

And when it comes to financing, the past quarter has again demonstrated that debt and equity capital remain available for REITs, enabling them to play investment offense and take advantage of the distress of others.

Perhaps the best example of profitably taking advantage of duress is evident in the Resolution Capital Global Property Securities Fund (Managed Fund (ASX:RCAP) portfolio’s largest holding – U.S healthcare REIT Welltower (NYSE:WELL).

In 2023 WELL deployed US$4.8 billion into seniors housing properties at significant (30%+) discounts to replacement cost. The combination of higher interest rates, a pullback of traditional lenders, and real operational distress in seniors housing during Covid, has led to a broad opportunity set.

WELL has highlighted that ~US$16 billion of seniors housing faces refinancing in 2024-2025 likely providing further acquisition opportunities. For WELL, external growth activity has occurred at attractive yields, with the US$4.8 billion of acquisitions in 2023 yielding 7.2%, well ahead of the company’s 4.9% implied cap rate. The company has rightfully leaned on equity capital to fund its investment activity, sourcing ~US$6 billion of equity capital in 2023, which has the added benefit of further improving its balance sheet.


Affinity Living at Vancouver – A seniors housing asset in Vancouver, Washington State, recently acquired by Welltower.

During the quarter WELL reported a strong finish to 2023 with 12.5% like-for-like rent growth in the fourth quarter. The company guided to 10% earnings per share growth for 2024 excluding prospective investment activity. Welltower benefits from robust growth in seniors housing, with the REIT guiding to 18% same-store net rent growth for this segment that comprises nearly two-thirds of its income.

Time to reassess REITs?

The message surrounding the Global REIT sector right now is simple – REITs are in good shape and represent good value.

They trade at or below underlying asset replacement costs, and they have good balance sheets with moderate levels of debt and modest short to medium term debt maturities.

Importantly, REITs have continued to provide investors with liquidity day in and day out.

Publicly listed REITs do not and cannot hide behind the artificial gates of private funds. These dynamics are underappreciated.

Whilst many investment trends come and go, we believe great real estate in the right location is a sensible and compelling investment opportunity in the current market. It’s a sector that’s going to be relevant today, tomorrow, and long into the future.

 

Marco Colantonio is a Portfolio Manager at Resolution Capital, an affiliate manager of Pinnacle Investment Management. Pinnacle is a sponsor of Firstlinks. Resolution’s active GREIT Fund in Australia is ASX:RCAP.

This article is for general information purposes only and does not consider any person’s objectives, financial situation or needs, and because of that, reliance should not be placed on this information as the basis for making an investment, financial or other decision.

For more articles and papers from Pinnacle Investment Management and affiliate managers, click here.

 

RELATED ARTICLES

Property investing but not as most Australians know it

James Maydew on how demographics drives real estate

Australian office property isn’t dead (or dying)

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Meg on SMSFs: Clearing up confusion on the $3 million super tax

There seems to be more confusion than clarity about the mechanics of how the new $3 million super tax is supposed to work. Here is an attempt to answer some of the questions from my previous work on the issue. 

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 566 with weekend update

Here are 10 rules for staying happy and sharp as we age, including socialise a lot, never retire, learn a demanding skill, practice gratitude, play video games (specific ones), and be sure to reminisce.

  • 27 June 2024

Australian housing is twice as expensive as the US

A new report suggests Australian housing is twice as expensive as that of the US and UK on a price-to-income basis. It also reveals that it’s cheaper to live in New York than most of our capital cities.

The catalyst for a LICs rebound

The discounts on listed investment vehicles are at historically wide levels. There are lots of reasons given, including size and liquidity, yet there's a better explanation for the discounts, and why a rebound may be near.

The iron law of building wealth

The best way to lose money in markets is to chase the latest stock fad. Conversely, the best way to build wealth is by pursuing a timeless investment strategy that won’t be swayed by short-term market gyrations.

How not to run out of money in retirement

The life expectancy tables used throughout the financial advice and retirement industry have issues and you need to prepare for the possibility of living a lot longer than you might have thought. Plan accordingly.

Latest Updates

Investment strategies

Investors are threading the eye of the needle

As investors cram into ever narrower areas of the market with increasingly high valuations, Martin Conlon from Schroders says that sensible investing has rarely been such an uncrowded trade.

Economy

New research shows diverging economic impacts of climate change

There is universal consensus that the Earth is experiencing climate change. Yet there is far more debate about how this will impact different economies across the globe. New research sheds more light on the winners and losers.

SMSF strategies

How super members can avoid missing out on tax deductions

Claiming a tax deduction for personal super contributions can end in disappointment if it isn't done correctly. Julie Steed looks at common pitfalls and what is required for a successful claim.

Investment strategies

AI is not an over-hyped fad – but a killer app might be years away

The AI investment trend looks set to continue for years but there is only room for a handful of long-term winners. Dr Kevin Hebner also warns regulators against strangling innovation in the sector before society reaps the benefits.

Retirement

Why certainty is so important in retirement

Retirement is a time of great excitement but it is also one of uncertainty. This is hardly surprising given the daunting move from receiving a steady outcome to relying on savings and investments.

Investment strategies

Have value investors been hindered by this quirk of accounting?

Investments in intangible assets are as crucial to many companies as investments in capital equipment. The different accounting treatment of these investments, however, weighs on reported earnings and could render ratios like P/E less useful for investors.

Economy

This vital yet "forgotten" indicator of inflation holds good news

Financial commentators seem to have forgotten the leading cause of inflation: growth in the supply of money. Warren Bird explains the link and explores where it suggests inflation is headed.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2024 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.