Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Warehouse, infrastruc­ture owners buck sluggish REIT market

- By Alex Veiga

While the broader stock market has been steadily racking up gains and posting new highs, companies that own real estate have been lagging, with some notable exceptions.

Losses by struggling mall and shopping center owners have weighed on real estate investment trusts, offsetting healthy gains by residentia­l and industrial REITs. Rising interest rates, which can make REITs less attractive to dividend investors, haven’t helped.

“Part of REITs’ modest underperfo­rmance this year has been a function of the ongoing dialogue about rising interest rates,” said Mizuho REITs analyst Richard Anderson. “We’ve have also seen some fairly quick moves in the 10-year Treasury and that has coincided with REITs’ underperfo­rmance as people who are owning the REITs for their dividend yield seek a better option.”

The FTSE Nareit All Equity REITs Index, which is made up of 167 REITs, has a price return so far this year of about 6.7 percent, while its total return, which includes dividends, is about 10.1 percent, according to data from the National Associatio­n of Real Estate Investment Trusts.

That lags the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, which is up about 14.6 percent, or roughly 17.2 percent including dividends.

REITs tend to appeal to investors seeking high yields because the companies’ tax structure requires them to pay out most of their income, which usually comes from rent and lease payments, as distributi­ons to shareholde­rs. But REITs also require a lot of money, and often debt, to operate.

So when interest rates rise, it drives the cost of borrowing up, which can cut into profits and lead to smaller dividend payouts.

The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates twice this year and is expected to do so again next month.

REITs are also vulnerable to an increase in long-term bond yields. That’s because as bonds start paying out more, they can become more attractive alternativ­es to REITs, which are comparativ­ely riskier investment­s.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note declined to 2.34 percent on Friday. It started the year at around 2.45 percent and declined gradually through the first half of the year to a low of about 2.04 percent in early September. It has been moving mostly higher since then.

Still, Anderson notes that REITs have often bounced back strong after a period of rising interest rates. Heading into 2018, he recommends investors take a targeted, rather than broad, approach to investing in REITs.

“There are certainly reasons to own the space, and as you selectivel­y look within sectors and be selective at the stock level, there are definitely ways to make money,” he said.

The outlook for commercial real estate remains largely positive, with a slowdown in constructi­on expected to help keep rents rising modestly next year amid mostly stable vacancy rates, according to a forecast by the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

The store closures and other woes that have weighed on mall owners are expected to continue next year. This year, the sector has a negative total return of 8.4 percent, according to NAREIT data.

Even so, the prospect of a buyout has the potential to drive shares higher. This week, mall owner GGP surged after Brookfield Property Partners offered to buy the rest of the company it doesn’t already own for $14 billion.

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