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Funding Real Estate Development:. Real Estate Investment Trusts. WB/IFC Housing Finance Conference Washington, D.C. March 15 – 17, 2006 Michael Bookstaber. What is a REIT (1) ?. An Investment Club Needing cash in big, irregular increments, not a steady stream of cash flow
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Funding Real Estate Development: Real Estate Investment Trusts WB/IFC Housing Finance Conference Washington, D.C. March 15 – 17, 2006 Michael Bookstaber
What is a REIT (1) ? • An Investment Club • Needing cash in big, irregular increments, not a steady stream of cash flow • Can be open ended or closed ended • Vertically integrated: property development, property management, and portfolio • Sources of Funds: • Capital markets, equity subscriptions • Private investors • Little or no debt (“equity” REITs) • Uses of Funds: • Buys land and develops projects, rents out units • Expenses in staff costs are minimal • Expenses for property management are incremental costs to the hard asset.
What is a REIT (2) ? • The balance sheet consists of • Investment in developed properties on the asset side, and • Equity capital on the liability side • Profitability, measured by two items: • Cashflow from operations: equals….rents less: (a) cost of property maintence. (b) payments on any mortgage debt, (c) staff expense • Gains from sales of (matured) properties • Staff costs are minimal because • REITs outsource many key functions: property maintenance, project management of development of new properties • Property management function is highly leveraged, similar to mortgage loan servicing • As a result, REITs don’t need to retain “earnings”, they do need access to large pools of cash on an intermittent basis
The Disconnect • Mortgage finance and property development are out of synch: Developers not producing due to lack of long term mortgage takeout Lack of Affordable and Bankable Housing Solutions (supply/demand imbalance) Mortgage markets are under-developed due to scarcity of housing stock
The Need • Investment in real estate development • Needs patient, long-term capital • Can be highly risky, calling for equity-like returns • Requires a focus on property type to leverage experience and expertise of management • Capital is needed for • Land acquisition • Land development • Funding soft costs • In-site infrastructure These expenses typically comprise 35 to 50 percent of total project costs
The Projects • Large scale, expensive to execute • Commercial income-producing properties • Residential, community format • Large scale projects (1,000 housing units or more) delivered in rational production stages • Achieve economies of scale • Utilize mass production techniques • Spread cost of infrastructure over many housing units, financed in the mortgage • World class urban design, incorporating • mix of housing styles and options, • mix of socio-economic groups, • providing for quality of life amenities, green areas, recreation and community facilities, • retail and commercial spaces • Ongoing support services will be incorporated into each project: Waste management, Maintenance of common areas, security CONCLUSION: Value of housing will be perserved and enhanced by design and urban planning, ensuring good storehouse of value for lenders and homeowners (avoiding the creation of future slums)
The Problem Investment vehicles to effectively fund and manage projects are typically not available in developing markets. Why? • Absence of long-term capital • Governmental investment in urban planning and in big-ticket infrastructure is often lacking in developing markets • Nascent equity markets • Reluctance to use tax policy to foster investment
The Solution Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs, USA-style) • Attract long-term, patient capital • Offer specialization by property type • Offer development and on-going management • Tax pass-through feature offers dividend-like returns to investors and equity-like upside of a medium to long-term horizon • Attract investors who need current income and can shelter it for tax purposes • Attract total return investors who benefit from upside stemming from turnover of value-enhanced properties
The REIT World The REIT concept is gaining acceptance around the world, in many developed countries, but also some emerging markets….
The Rationale Why are REITs the right investment vehicle for real estate development? PRINCIPLE ONE: Value enhancement comes from refurbishing old properties or creating new properties, and managing either until cash flow is established. • PRINCIPLE TWO: Dividend yield from REITs is a payout of current cash flow, which does not need to be retained. • maintenance of properties is an expense item offsetting rental income • cash from creation of new properties is obtained from selling mature properties in portfolio or raising new equity from investors. CONCLUSION: Fixed income and medium to long-term upside combine to give investors a unique total return package, WHICH IS A GOOD PROXY FOR DIRECT INVESTMENT IN REAL ESTATE
The Risk Real estate development can be risky, yet REITs can offer risk mitigating features: • Equity REITS use little or no debt, except for construction finance • Focus on property type, leveraging management experience and expertise • Diversification in funding sources stemming from either: • pooled investment from a closed group of investors • sale of stock to many, diverse individual shareholders • Diversification in multiple property investments • Income is generated from income produced via rents, fees from management of properties, and capital appreciation of properties
The Tax Angle Under U.S. REIT law: Payment of tax on REIT net earnings occurs only once, at the shareholder level, not at the corporate level… …provided that the REIT distributes at least 90 percent of its net income in dividends to shareholders. How critical is this tax “break” to the successful use of REITs as investment vehicles for real estate development?
The Tax “Break” Value WITH THE TAX “BREAK”… • Pension funds (not taxable) can boost their investment yields using REITs. Real estate development thus draws on a significant pool of long-term investment funds • Listed REITs add additional value of liquidity, thus becoming a form of securitized real estate. Their trading value is determined by dividend yield. • REITs represent an efficient use of capital • by taxing returns only once • earnings from investment in income-producing properties is recycled immediately, not warehoused for new projects.
The Tax “Break” Value WITHOUT THE “TAX BREAK”… • Encourages short term holdings in long-term assets. • Encourages property development and divestiture before properties have matured, or before they have started to generate income. • Long-term investors are disuaded from participating due to quick property turnover • REITs of this type will undertake more risky investments, stemming from quick turnover.