|
||||||
![]() |
EXPO REAL 2009 | 12. Mеждународная отраслевая выставка по коммерческой недвижимости | 5. - 7. октября 2009 | Neue Messe München | Вторник, 02. Декабрь 2008 This is the print version of the exporeal.net offer. For printing, please use the print button of your browser. |
||||
| www.exporeal.net /Главная страница / Информация о рынке / ИНВЕСТИЦИИ | ||||||
|
Initial warnings
Had investors followed Martin Allen’s advice he gave at the beginning of last year, they would have had to do without significant earnings. Analysts of the Dutch bank Kempen & Co calculated that real estate stocks across Europe in 2006 gave their investors a total average return of 41 percent from stock growth and dividends. In the USA, REITs made profits of roughly 35 percent last year. In Asia, the total return of the real estate stock reached an average of over 30 percent. Overheating phases in the stock market can last long, says Anthony Gallea, Managing Director at Smith Barney. “Anticyclics will have to accept that they will be in the wrong for a while.” Price hikes are hardly expected However, the gains of the past year have meanwhile led to a consensus among experts about the statements of Martin Allen. The investment bank Lehman Brothers recently rated the British REITs from “positive” to “neutral”, and were sceptical about the publicly traded real estate stocks in the rest of Europe. Their analysts Mike Prew and Chet Riley warned about the hope for more increasing quotations: “There is no sense in pushing up the target prices more and more like Sisyphus.” Sceptics out there are having weighty debates: In France, real estate stocks and REITs are being traded with a surplus of roughly 40 percent on the NAV (Net Asset Value), with 30 percent in the Netherlands and many German stocks. Great Britain still reached 20 percent after the most recent price declines. Traditionally, real estate stocks were mostly traded under their NAV. The analysts of the Dutch bank Kempen & Co expect an average total return of only four percent for this year with the real estate stocks in Euro values. After this forecast, price increases are out of the question. Most returns will come solely from dividends. The cradle of the real estate stock boom The cradle of the real estate stock boom is the stock market crash of 2001. As the Internet stocks crashed, investors in the USA, the Netherlands, Canada, Australia and Japan rediscovered the so-called boring REITS as “sure moneymaking machines”. Because the real estate trusts do not tax their earnings, but have to give almost all of them to stockholders, the dividend payments were voluptuous. According to the statistics of their industry association, the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT), the average dividends of US REITs were 7.38 percent in 2001. As Federal Reserve President Alan Greenspan lowered the US interest rates to only one percent, the stocks became more attractive. Institutional investors, hedge and private equity funds could now borrow a lot of money cheaply to buy REIT stocks. The dividends were high enough to not just pay for the loans, but also to make returns of more than 20 percent on capital. The fact that private investors jumped on board and the stocks were pushed up even more was icing on the cake for initial investors. This trend soon spread to real estate stocks in the countries still without REITs, but where investors saw an opportunity to introduce REITs through lobbying: in France, where REITs made their debut in 2004, Great Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain. Price losses for US REITs Meanwhile, this strategy no longer works. The reserve banks have raised their interest rates again, which has curbed the dividends from high stock rates of the real estate stocks. Currently, the dividend earnings of the US REITs according to NAREIT calculations are only 4.08 percent. Safe US bonds with only a two-year period are earning a more attractive 4.75 percent.
Source: EPRA; Date: March 30, 2007
|
|||||||||||||||||||