Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (2024)

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Rising Interest Rates and Impact on REITs

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  3. Rising Interest Rates and Impact on REITs

Over the last 30 years, REITs have become the global standard for owning publicly-traded, investment grade real estate. Over 35 countries, including every G7 nation, have introduced REIT-like legislation to encourage investment in real estate. Investors in REITs have been rewarded with strong risk-adjusted returns on both an absolute and relative basis.

REITs Outperform Other Major Asset Classes

Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (2)

Source: Bloomberg Financial L.P. and Starlight Capital. Data from May 29, 1992 to May 31, 2018. REITs, Stocks, Bonds, and Commodities are represented by the Dow Jones U.S. Select REIT Index, the S&P 500®, Bloomberg Barclays US Corporate Total Return Value Unhedged USD Index, and the S&P GSCI, respectively. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Chart is provided for illustrative purposes and reflects hypothetical historical performance.

However, recently investors have expressed concerns that REITs may underperform significantly as the Federal Reserve Bank continues to raise the Federal Funds Rate. The thinking is that REITs are highly-levered, bond proxies with very little growth. Therefore, if rates begin to rise then REIT cash flows will decline at a time when discount rates are rising. They fear the end result will be capital losses that offset the higher distribution yield and result in negative total returns.

It’s important for investors to remember that REITs have the ability to stagger and extend their debt maturities, mitigating the impact of rising spot rates. Similarly, a homeowner who just closed on a five year fixed rate mortgage will not see their mortgage payments rise if spot rates rise. REITs with long term, fixed rate debt will not see their cost of capital rise immediately should spot rates rise.

The discount rate argument does have merit, but it applies to all businesses, not just REITs. If spot rates are rising then discount rates should rise and, all else being equal, the value of all businesses should be negatively impacted. The reason the denominator in the dividend discount model is “discount rate minus growth rate” is because the offset to a given discount rate is growth -the higher the better. Bonds and bond proxies have little growth with which to mitigate an increase in the discount rate.

Since 1975 there have been six periods where the U.S. 10 year bond yield has risen significantly. As the chart below demonstrates, in four of those time periods, REITs have generated positive returns and in three of those periods, REITs have outperformed stocks. In only two of those periods did REITs generate negative returns and underperform equities.

Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (3)

REIT Performance During Sustained Periods of Rising Interest Rates

Time PeriodU.S 10 Year Treasury YieldCumulative Total Return
Beginning
Yield %
Ending
Yield %
in BPSin %REITs (%)Stocks (%) in %
Dec 1976 - Sep 19816.915.3840121.7137.446.091.4
Jan 1983 - June 198410.513.631029.535.616.519.1
Aug 1986 - Oct 19877.29.523031.9-10.110.9-21.0
Oct 1993 - Nov 19945.38.027050.9-10.30.1-10.4
Oct 1998 - Jan 20014.56.722048.927.427.8-0.4
June 2003 - June 20063.35.118054.5108.237.670.6

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, Bloomberg, The Federal Reserve. REIT total returns are based on the FTSE/NAREIT Equity Index from Dec. 31, 1971, to Dec. 31, 1986, and they are based on the Dow Jones U.S. Select REIT Index after Dec. 31, 1986. Stock total returns are based on the S&P 500. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Table is provided for illustrative purposes and reflects hypothetical historical performance.

During periods where the 10-year bond yield is rising, many other factors are present that are positive for REIT fundamentals. Rising long bond yields are usually associated with increased economic output and inflation, both of which are likely to be positive for REITs. Increased economic growth should result in the demand for more real estate as employment rises. As occupancies rise, rents should follow as growing firms are able to absorb higher rents. All of this should increase REIT cash flows, distributions and valuations.

REIT Income has Outpaced Inflation

Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (4)

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC; The Bureau of Labor Statistics. Data as of Dec. 30, 2016. REIT Income Return is calculated as the annual difference in return between the Dow Jones U.S. Select REIT Index (PR) and Dow Jones U.S. Select REIT Index (TR). Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Chart is provided for illustrative purposes.

Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (5)

Asset & Property Management

Collectively, these are the scale and scope advantages that accrue to a skilled operator with a large and clustered portfolio of assets. Skilled property management (operating individual properties) and asset management (optimizing the value of the portfolio of properties) should yield revenue gains and expense savings that allow for cash flow per unit growth, independent of market factors. These benefits tend to accrue to most of the portfolio and perpetuate into the future. For instance, newer, more efficient appliances purchased at a larger discount, unsecured debt issuances in the capital markets and lower property taxes from assessment appeals should all result in higher rents and/or lower expenses. Rolled out across an entire portfolio this should result in meaningful value creation through the business cycle.

Contractual Rent Increases

These represent return on past negotiations and result in current period revenue gains based on past period expenditures (leasing costs and tenant inducements). A quality real estate portfolio should see annual contractual rent increases across most (if not all) of the portfolio leases that don’t expire that year. Indexing these rent increases to inflation creates a natural inflation hedge to offset some of the impact of rising rates and capture some growth.

Positive Lease Renewals & Occupancy Gains

These levers are similar in that capital is required to retain an existing tenant or acquire a new tenant. Positive lease renewals result in increased revenue from the existing asset. Depending on the capital outlay required, this is generally cheaper and preferable to finding a new tenant. Occupancy gains involve securing a new tenant for an existing and unoccupied space. The capital required is generally higher but partially offset by the impact of taking vacant space off the market and tightening up current supply and demand fundamentals.

Accretive Acquisitions & Developments

Both of these activities grow cash flow per unit by adding new assets to the portfolio. Acquisitions are of existing assets and so more operating information is available to make an accurate assessment of the value of the asset. Developments are usually more lucrative from a return standpoint but they also carry greater risks (budget overages, delays, economic downturn). Both of these options entail significant current capital outlays for at risk future cash flows.

Investors have also questioned the stage of the cycle for REITs and whether a downturn is inevitable. For real estate it is important to gauge both the business and credit cycles to determine where the real estate cycle is headed. Clearly the global economy is in an upswing but we would hesitate to call it an outright economic boom. Similarly, coming on the heels of the Global Financial Crisis (“GFC”), we think credit is expanding but policy rates are still near cyclical troughs. Many global real estate markets were decimated because of rampant over-development leading up to the GFC. The subsequent decline in development (U.S. housing, German residential, Spanish commercial, Irish commercial) has left many markets undersupplied in key real estate sectors. As a result, rents are rising and property cap rates are declining as valuations recover. Accordingly, we see strong potential going forward for real estate returns in the physical and consequently the listed market.

The Real Estate Market is Affected by Changes in Physical and Financial Cycles

Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (6)

Source: AMP Capital, adapted from Barras, R. (1994) Property and the economic cycle: Building cycles revisited. Journal of Property Research, 11(3), 183-197. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. For illustrative purposes only.

Starlight Capital approach

At Starlight Capital, our goal is to add value by concentrating our investments into high quality REITs with several of these value creation levers at their disposal. REITs with more growth potential should outperform through the cycle but their value is especially important when economic activity accelerates, and inflation expectations and spot rates rise. Purchased when they offer us sufficient return for the risk incurred these investments should yield us strong risk-adjusted returns over the long term.

Certain statements in this document are forward-looking. Forward-looking statements (“FLS”) are statements that are predictive in nature, depend upon or refer to future events or conditions, or that include words such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” or “estimate,” or other similar expressions. Statements that look forward in time or include anything other than historical information are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results, actions or events could differ materially from those set forth in the FLS. FLS are not guarantees of future performance and are by their nature based on numerous assumptions. Although the FLS contained herein are based upon what Starlight Capital and the portfolio manager believe to be reasonable assumptions, neither Starlight Capital nor the portfolio manager can assure that actual results will be consistent with these FLS. The reader is cautioned to consider the FLS carefully and not to place undue reliance on FLS. Unless required by applicable law, it is not undertaken, and specifically disclaimed that there is any intention or obligation to update or revise FLS, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees and expenses all may be associated with mutual fund investments. Please read the prospectus before investing. Mutual funds are not guaranteed, their values change frequently and past performance may not be repeated.

Starlight, Starlight Investments, Starlight Capital and all other related Starlight logos are trademarks of Starlight Group Property Holdings Inc.

Additional Information

  • Starlight Global Real Estate Fund
  • The Case for Global Real Estate
  • How REITs Generate Growth
  • Download PDF

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Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs (2024)

FAQs

Starlight Capital - Impact of Rising Interest Rates on REITs? ›

Therefore, if rates begin to rise then REIT cash flows will decline at a time when discount rates are rising. They fear the end result will be capital losses that offset the higher distribution yield and result in negative total returns.

How will rising interest rates affect REITs? ›

Interest Rates. During periods of economic growth, REIT prices tend to rise along with interest rates. The reason is that a growing economy increases the value of REITs because the value of their underlying real estate assets increases.

How are REITs affected by inflation? ›

REITs provide natural protection against inflation. Real estate rents and values tend to increase when prices do. This supports REIT dividend growth and provides a reliable stream of income even during inflationary periods.

Will REITs recover in 2024? ›

With healthy property fundamentals and a favorable interest rate environment, REIT fund managers expect the sector to deliver double digit returns this year.

Is it a good time to invest in REITs? ›

Demand is healthy while supply is constrained. And REIT valuations relative to the broader equity market are meaningfully below the historical median. There are three key reasons to invest in listed REITs right now, starting with the fact that REITs have outperformed stocks and bonds when yields and growth move lower.

Why are REITs underperforming? ›

A high interest rate environment and bearish investor sentiments have made it a tough year for REIT companies. In general, REITs are underperforming the real estate sector, which isn't exactly having the best year of its life either.

Why have REITs crashed? ›

Mortgage REITs were affected by the sharp rise in interest rates during 2022 and 2023, and again have been under pressure on the “higher for longer” news. Even as its floating rate portfolio hasn't been directly squeezed by rising rates, BXMT stock is not out of the woods.

What is the outlook for REITs? ›

Barring a major economic contraction, we expect REIT fundamentals to remain steady for most property types given long lease durations, low supply risk and defensive- and secular-based demand.

Why not to buy REITs? ›

However, REITs are not risk-free: they may have highly inconsistent, variable returns; are sensitive to interest rate changes are liable to income taxes may not be liquid, and can be dramatically affected by fees.

What is the prediction for REIT? ›

REIT 12 Month Forecast

Based on 30 Wall Street analysts offering 12 month price targets to REIT holdings in the last 3 months. The average price target is $27.96 with a high forecast of $30.88 and a low forecast of $24.73. The average price target represents a 12.11% change from the last price of $24.94.

What is the 90% rule for REITs? ›

Even with a challenging market, REITs are considered a staple for many investment portfolios thanks to the 90% rule. As the name implies, this rule stipulates that real estate trusts must distribute 90% of their taxable earnings to existing shareholders.

What is a disadvantage of a REIT? ›

Lack of Liquidity: Non-traded REITs are also illiquid, which means there may not be buyers or sellers in the market available when an investor wants to transact. In many cases, non-traded REITs can't be sold for at least 10 years.

How does a recession affect REITs? ›

The FTSE Nareit All Equity index, consisting of REITs that exclude mortgages, generated a 15.9% annualized return during recessions and 22.7% in the year following the end of a downturn, according to the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts.

Do REITs outperform the S&P 500? ›

Over the long term, our research found that REITs have outperformed stocks. Since 1994, three REIT subgroups stood out for their ability to beat the S&P 500. Here's a closer look at these market-beating REIT types.

What is the effect of rising interest rates on real estate? ›

In general, when interest rates are higher or increasing, the housing market slows down. When interest rates are going up, the cost of owning a home becomes more expensive due to the higher interest rate, which reduces demand.

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