Chicago Sun-Times

U. K.’ S BREXIT FALLOUT COULD BE GOOD THING FOR U. S. REAL ESTATE

- Kevin McCoy @ kmccoynyc USA TODAY

The turmoil roiling the United Kingdom real estate market since the surprise Brexit outcome is unlikely to trigger similar impact for the U. S. real estate sector, industry experts predict.

In fact, some predict U. K pain ultimately could mean U. S. gain.

The June 23 referendum in favor of breaking ties with the European Union has raised uncertaint­y about some U. K real estate prices. UBS analysts tentativel­y project commercial property values could fall 20% for London offices, 15% for U. K. retail and 5% to 10% for London retail and U. K. industrial locations, FTAlphavil­le reported Friday.

The Brexit fallout also prompted a wave of redemption requests at U. K. property funds. Unable to sell properties immediatel­y to raise cash, at least six of the funds blocked retail investors from withdrawin­g

their money amid a wave of redemption requests.

The decisions represent a nearly onemonth lock on an estimated $ 12 billion in U. K. commercial real estate investment­s.

“There’s no indication of anything like that happening in the U. S.,” said Jim Costello, senior vice president of Real Capital Analytics, a data firm focused on commercial real estate investment.

Instead, sovereign wealth funds and other large institutio­nal funds that were drawn to London real estate investment­s may now shift some of that capital to properties in the U. S. market, Costello said.

“The fundamenta­ls of U. S. real estate are positive,” said Cedrik Lachance, director of U. S. REIT research at Green Street Advisors, a California- based real estate research firm. “That seems unchanged to us.”

An average publicly traded U. S. real estate investment trust ( REIT) has outperform­ed the Standard & Poor’s 500 index by approximat­ely 2.5% since the Brexit vote, Lachance said. However a group of roughly 10 U. S. REITs with more exposure to Europe in general have underperfo­rmed their peers, he said.

As U. K. property investors reconsider their holdings, publicly traded U. S. RE- ITs “could be one of the beneficiar­ies” in the long term, said Michael Grupe, of the National Associatio­n of Real Estate Investment Trusts.

Investor uncertaint­y about the global economy, has driven down U. S. Treasury yields to record lows. In turn, that has sent mortgage rates toward record lows.

The 30- year fixed rate mortgage averaged 3.41% for the week ending July 7, down from the 3.48% average a week earlier and 4.04% lower than the average for the same time last year, mortgage giant Freddie Mac reported Thursday.

The lower rates “could provide a boost for lower- income U. S. buyers” hoping to enter the real estate market, said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

Uncertaint­y over the London real estate market could prompt U. S. and over- seas companies with offices in the British financial center to shift those offices to the U. S., further boosting the domestic real estate sector, Yun said.

Nonetheles­s, Yun and other U. S. real estate experts see a few potential weak areas.

National Associatio­n of Realtors data show that U. K. buyers accounted for $ 1.6 billion in April 2015- March 2016 residentia­l housing purchases in Florida, which has a large vacation home market.

The post- Brexit decline of the British pound relative to the U. S. dollar could dry up similar sales for the immediate future, Yun said. Investors already have battered the stocks of U. S.- based real estate services giants CBRE Group and Jones Lang LaSalle amid the Brexit fallout. Both have major U. K. business operations.

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